I have been collecting remote-dev offers from a private rotation of friends, ex-coworkers, and a small Slack of mid-to-senior engineers for the last twelve weeks. Eighty data points cleared the bar I set: real signed (or declined) offers, role disclosed, total comp disclosed, region disclosed, last 90 days only.
This is not a salary survey. The sample is small and biased toward backend, infrastructure, and platform engineers — that is who I know. But it is real money attached to real names attached to real loops, and the patterns inside it are worth a 10-minute read.
The headline
Median total comp for senior remote backend engineers, Q1 2026, by region:
- United States (Tier-1 hubs working remote): $245k
- United States (everywhere else): $208k
- Western Europe (UK / Germany / Netherlands): €145k (~$157k)
- Eastern Europe / LATAM (USD-paid contract roles): $112k
That is medians. The spread inside each region is more interesting than the medians themselves.
US Tier-1: $185k–$385k
Twenty-two offers in this bucket. The median was $245k, but the spread was 100k+ on either side.
The bottom of the band ($185–210k) was almost entirely Series B/C startups paying total-comp at IPO-stage levels but with most of it in cash and minimal equity. No outliers there — just smaller comp packages.
The middle ($230–270k) is where most public-company senior roles sat. Predictable.
The top of the band ($300k+) was three companies. Two were AI infrastructure firms (one named, two not in this post). One was a hedge-fund-adjacent dev tools company. Total comp was high because base was high — not because of equity windfall — and the work was extremely specialized.
The takeaway: if you are a senior backend engineer and you see remote US offers under $200k total in 2026, you are looking in the wrong segment.
US non-hub: $155k–$295k
Eighteen offers. Median $208k.
The fascinating thing here is how narrow the band actually is. US non-hub remote roles are converging fast — most offers landed within $30k of each other. The remote labor market is no longer pricing geography that aggressively. Tier-2 candidates are pulling close to Tier-1 base, and the gap is mostly equity and bonus.
The exceptions in this bucket: two offers above $260k, both from companies that pay "anywhere" (no geo adjustment). Those companies are still the rarer minority but they exist and they are real.
Western Europe: €105k–€220k
Sixteen offers. Median €145k.
The bimodal distribution here is the loudest signal in the dataset. Either the company paid local-market rates (€105–135k), or they paid US-adjusted rates (€175–220k). Almost nothing in between.
US-adjusted rates were paid by remote-first US companies hiring in the EU through an EOR (employer of record). Local rates were paid by EU-headquartered companies, even when they were "remote-first."
If you are in Western Europe targeting remote, the company's HQ is the dominant variable, not the role.
Eastern Europe / LATAM (USD contract): $65k–$185k
Twenty-four offers. Median $112k.
The wide spread here is mostly company-side. Mid-tier US companies hire EE/LATAM contractors in the $80–110k range. Top US companies that hire in this region (rarer) pay $140–180k. A few outlier specialty roles paid more, but those required specific stacks (Kubernetes-deep platform roles, Rust systems work, ML infra).
The interesting gap: roughly 40% of the EE/LATAM offers in this dataset specified fully equivalent role and seniority to a US offer at the same company, but at 50–60% of the US comp. This is the actual gap. It is not that the work is different. The market just hasn't fully arbitraged.
The four outlier companies
Four companies showed up multiple times in the top-decile of their region's distribution. I am not going to name them here (the data was shared in confidence) but I will describe what they have in common.
1. They publish the band. All four publish exact comp bands in the JD. None of the "competitive comp" euphemism.
2. They pay base, not bonus. Cash compensation is mostly base salary. Equity is generous but does not require dramatic stock-price growth to be worth the published number.
3. They hire globally without geo-adjusting. A senior in Madrid gets paid the same as a senior in Seattle. This is rare in 2026 and these four companies do it on purpose.
4. They have technical interview loops, not behavioral-heavy loops. The interviews are skills tests. They are hard but they are not a personality contest.
If you can find these four (and you can, with a few hours of search), they are paying double the regional median. The interviews will eat you alive but the comp justifies the prep.
What to do with this data
Three concrete moves.
1. Anchor on regional median + 15%. That's a reasonable opening counter for a senior remote role. Low enough that it is in the band, high enough that they don't take advantage.
2. Ask whether the company geo-adjusts. This is one of the most useful early-funnel questions. If the answer is "yes, by 25%," you know the upper bound. If the answer is "no, we pay the same everywhere," you know you are at one of the better-paying companies in the dataset.
3. Treat the median as the floor, not the ceiling. Half of the offers in any region were above the median. The companies paying above the median advertised in the same channels and ran the same interview loops as the ones below it. Apply broadly. Negotiate hard.
The single largest variable in remote dev comp in 2026 is which company you join, not which region you live in. The data shows this clearly. Don't shortlist by location. Shortlist by comp band.
Free tools I built for the job search: resume-checker, job-keywords, resume-bullets. All free, all in the browser, no signup.
Earlier in this series:
- What Remote Developers Actually Make in 2026 — Real Data from 50 Offers — the original
- Remote Developer Jobs in 2026: Where to Actually Find Them — where the offers came from
Top comments (0)