Aircraft Design Engineer — Development
Do you love design engineering and want your work to truly take flight?
In Kunovice, our aircraft are born from the first concept to the test flight. Modern technology meets honest craft here and every detail counts. When the aircraft takes off, you know a piece of you flies with it. We are looking for an aircraft design engineer who can work in CATIA and wants to work on a product that has a name and flies around the world.
What you will do
- Design proposals and 3D modelling of parts and assemblies in CATIA
- Creating and revising drawing documentation (2D/3D), bills of materials and technical data
- Cooperation with production, process engineering, quality and assembly
- Handling design changes and improvements
- Supporting development and prototypes — you will see your designs turn into a real aircraft
What we expect
- Proficiency in CATIA — required
- University degree with a focus on aviation
- Technical thinking, precision and the ability to see things through
- You communicate directly and work with production (design is not an isolated office)
- An advantage: experience in aircraft design / engineering, knowledge of aviation standards, English for documentation
What we offer
- A stable job at a Czech family company where things get solved quickly and without unnecessary bureaucracy
- Work on a product with global reach. You will see the aircraft you work on in the air
- Five weeks of holiday, a meal contribution
- A base right by the Kunovice airfield, a modern environment and direct contact with production and testing
Why this could be the job for you
- You do not design for the drawer — your design is actually built and flies
- You see the impact of your work every day: from drawing to part to aircraft
- A smaller company means more autonomy, quick decisions, and your voice counts
Sounds like your discipline? Write to us with a few lines about yourself and your experience — and attach your CV if you have one. We will get back to you quickly to agree the next steps.













