Industrial Designer Jobs
19 curated industrial designer roles at companies like Apple, OpenAI, Nothing, and 8 more. Every role is scored and reviewed by our team.
Apple · Cupertino
Apple ID is the design team. Working alongside veterans who shaped iPhone, MacBook, AirPods and Vision Pro. Legendary craft culture and scope across every product Apple makes.
OpenAI · San Francisco
OpenAI is building physical robots, and this role owns how they look and feel in the world — a rare chance to do industrial design at the bleeding edge of embodied AI. Industrial designers almost never get to shape hardware backed by this much research firepower and ambition.
Nothing · London / Shenzhen
Nothing has carved out a genuinely distinctive place in consumer hardware with its transparent, Teenage Engineering-influenced aesthetic. A Senior Industrial Designer here gets to define the physical language of a brand that treats design as its core identity — these roles are rare and highly coveted in the hardware design world.
Plaud · Shenzhen
Plaud is doing something genuinely compelling — turning AI-powered voice recording into beautiful, tactile hardware that people actually want to carry around. This CMF role is perfect for designers who understand that the future of AI isn't just software, but thoughtfully crafted objects that make complex technology feel human and approachable. Working in Shenzhen puts you at the epicenter of hardware innovation, collaborating directly with manufacturers to bring these voice-first AI tools to life.
Meta · Seattle, WA
A hybrid industrial design and mechanical engineering role for Meta's hardware. Designing the physical form of next-generation AR/VR devices — where aesthetics meet thermal management and ergonomics.
Meta · Seattle, WA
Reality Labs is one of the few places building consumer AR/VR hardware at scale, and this role shapes the physical form and feel of those devices. Industrial designers who want their work manufactured and shipped to millions will find few comparable canvases. It blends hands-on craft with frontier technology.
Meta · Seattle, WA
This Reality Labs role centers on the industrial design of Meta hardware: the ergonomics, materials, and form that define how a device feels in the hand and on the face. It is a chance to do tactile, manufacturing-grade design at a company willing to fund moonshots. Best for designers who think in physical objects, not just pixels.
Plaud · San Francisco, CA
Hardware industrial design role for AI voice recorder products. Requires 5+ years ID experience, proficiency in Rhino/SolidWorks/3ds Max. Physical product design focus rather than digital.
Whoop · Boston, MA
Directing industrial design at WHOOP — one of the most coveted wearables in the world. This person shapes the physical product that elite athletes and millions of health-conscious people wear 24/7. Dream role for hardware designers.
Eight Sleep · San Francisco
Designing the physical form of Eight Sleep's Pod — arguably the most talked-about sleep product in tech — is a genuinely exciting industrial design challenge. Hardware design at a company where the object itself is the product, not just a vehicle for software.
Sesame · San Francisco
Sesame is building next-generation wearable AI hardware, and this industrial design role sits at the intersection of consumer electronics and AI. Shaping the physical form factor of products in this space is rare and meaningful work for designers who want to touch atoms, not just pixels.
Whoop · Boston, MA
Lead industrial designer at WHOOP. The wearable is tiny, lives on the body, and needs to perform under extreme conditions — the design constraints are fascinating and the brand cachet is enormous.
Sesame · San Francisco
Sesame is building AI hardware that people actually want to wear — this role shapes the physical product across mechanical, audio, and optical systems. A rare industrial design seat at the frontier of consumer AI devices.
Sesame · San Francisco
Sesame is building AI-powered smart glasses with lifelike voice agents. This eyewear designer role tackles what Google Glass couldn't — making wearable AI something people actually want to put on their face. Hardware meets conversational AI.
Whoop · Boston, MA
WHOOP keeps iterating on a wrist that's on a million elite athletes — getting an ID seat there means working on some of the most-worn consumer hardware out there. The Boston-based team has serious chops, and the product cadence is relentless.
Whoop · Boston, MA
Packaging design at WHOOP is more than dieline work — it's the first physical touchpoint for anyone joining the platform. Niche but strategic, especially as accessories and apparel start carrying real revenue weight.
Atoms
Atoms brings Silicon Valley product thinking to footwear. This color and visualization role is physical product design — a refreshing departure from screens for designers who care about the tangible world.
Human Archive · San Francisco, CA
Human Archive sits at the fascinating intersection of robotics, AI, and physical design—this is where the future gets built. Industrial design for world modeling and robotics data collection is genuinely cutting-edge work that will define how AI systems understand physical reality.
Framework · Taiwan
Framework is one of the rare consumer hardware companies designers actually root for — modular, repairable, opinionated, and built around real materials and tolerances. A senior industrial designer here ships at scale into one of the most product-obsessed user bases in tech.