The remote job market in 2026 is confusing. Companies announce RTO mandates every week, yet remote job postings are at an all-time high. What's going on?
Short answer: the companies forcing RTO and the companies hiring remote are different companies. Big tech is pulling people back to offices. Startups, agencies, and international teams are hiring remote like crazy.
Here's where to actually find them.
The Job Boards That Work for Remote
Tier 1 — High signal, lower volume
- We Work Remotely — Curated, mostly tech. Companies pay to post, which filters out spam.
- RemoteOK — Tag-based search, salary data included. Great for filtering by stack.
- Wellfound (formerly AngelList) — Startup-focused. Many remote roles, especially seed-to-Series-B.
- Turing — Matches developers with US companies. Vetting process, but pay is above average.
Tier 2 — High volume, more noise
- LinkedIn — Use "Remote" filter + specific job titles. Turn on "Open to Work" privately.
- Indeed — "Remote" keyword + location filter. Lots of false positives ("remote until office reopens").
- Glassdoor — Good for salary research + company reviews before applying.
Tier 3 — Niche / underrated
- Himalayas — Clean interface, remote-only companies. Underrated.
- Remotive — Newsletter + job board. Good for staying informed.
- Working Nomads — Curated remote jobs, email digest format.
- FlexJobs — Paid ($10/mo), but vetted listings. Worth it if you're serious.
The Search Strategy
Don't browse job boards. That's how you waste 3 hours feeling productive while accomplishing nothing.
Step 1: Define your search box
- What roles? (Be specific: "Senior Frontend Engineer" not "developer")
- What stack? (React? Vue? Node? Python?)
- What company size? (Startup? Mid-market? Enterprise?)
- What timezone overlap? (US hours? EU? Async?)
- What salary? (Have a number. Research on Levels.fyi or Glassdoor.)
Step 2: Set up alerts, not searches
Every board above has email alerts or RSS feeds. Set them up with your exact criteria. Check once daily. Don't scroll aimlessly.
Step 3: Apply with intention
For each application:
- Extract keywords from the posting — a keyword tool makes this faster
- Tailor your resume to match (you only need to adjust 3-5 bullets)
- Run it through an ATS checker to verify the match
- Write a short, specific cover letter referencing something unique about the company
5 tailored applications beat 50 spray-and-pray submissions.
The "Hidden" Remote Market
The best remote jobs aren't on job boards. They're found through:
Open-source contributions
Companies like Vercel, Supabase, and Cloudflare hire from their contributor communities. If you use their tools, contribute a bug fix or docs improvement. You'll be visible when they have openings.
Developer communities
- Discord servers for your stack (React, Rust, Go communities)
- Dev.to discussions
- GitHub Discussions on popular repos
- Slack communities (Rands Leadership, LaunchDarkly, etc.)
People hire people they've interacted with. Show up, be helpful, and opportunities follow.
Direct outreach
Found a company you love that isn't hiring? Email the engineering lead:
"I noticed [specific thing about their product]. I've built [relevant project] using a similar approach. If you're ever looking for a [your role], I'd love to chat."
This works surprisingly often. Most companies have a "we'll create a role for great people" policy.
What Remote-Friendly Companies Look For
Beyond technical skills, remote companies specifically evaluate:
- Written communication — Can you explain complex ideas in writing? (Your Dev.to profile or blog counts as evidence.)
- Self-direction — Can you manage your own time without a manager checking in daily?
- Async awareness — Do you understand that not everyone is online at the same time?
- Documentation habit — Do you write things down? PRs with good descriptions, READMEs, decision docs?
If your resume says "excellent communicator" but your GitHub has zero READMEs and your LinkedIn has no posts — that's a contradiction.
The Interview
Remote interviews have their own quirks:
- Video setup matters. Good lighting, clean background, stable connection. Test beforehand.
- Time zone courtesy. Propose times in THEIR timezone. Shows you understand remote dynamics.
- Async exercises > live coding. Many remote companies prefer take-home assignments. Treat them seriously — your code quality, commit messages, and README matter.
- Ask about their remote culture. "How does your team handle async communication?" is a great signal that you get it.
Prepare role-specific questions with an interview prep tool so you're not caught off guard.
Red Flags in Remote Job Posts
Watch for these:
- "Remote but must be within 30 minutes of the office" — That's not remote.
- "Remote for now" — They'll call you back when the lease renews.
- No mention of timezone expectations — Could mean "we expect you online during US business hours" which is fine if that's you, painful if it's not.
- "Competitive salary" — Usually means "we don't want to tell you it's below market." Ask early.
- Required to use monitoring software — Run. Companies that track keystrokes don't trust their people.
The Negotiation Edge
Remote positions have a unique negotiation angle: location-based pay.
Some companies pay based on your location. Others pay market rate regardless. Always ask which policy they use. If they pay by location, factor that into your ask.
A "below market" salary in San Francisco might be amazing if you're in a lower-cost-of-living area. But if the company adjusts down for your location, negotiate from their HQ rate, not yours.
Use salary negotiation scripts to prepare your counter before the offer call.
Tools That Save Time
If you're applying to 10+ remote positions per week, the manual approach gets old fast.
- JobCopilot ($29/mo) auto-applies to matching remote positions across 200+ boards. Tailors each application to the posting. Good for volume without sacrificing quality.
- Huntr (free tier available) tracks applications in a Kanban board. Stops the "wait, did I apply there already?" problem.
- Free tools for tailoring: resume checker, keyword extractor, cover letter generator — no signup, no data collection.
Action Items
- Pick 2-3 job boards from the list above. Set up alerts today.
- Update your LinkedIn headline to signal "open to remote"
- Run your resume through an ATS check against a remote job you'd apply to
- Join 1-2 developer communities in your stack
- Apply to 5 targeted positions this week
The remote market is bigger than ever. You just have to look in the right places.
Keep Reading
- The 7 Best AI Job Search Tools in 2026 — paid and free tools ranked
- How to Prep for an Interview in 48 Hours — for when you get the callback
- How to Negotiate Your Salary — with the actual email I sent
Free career tools: Resume Checker | Keyword Extractor | Cover Letter | LinkedIn Headlines | Interview Prep | Salary Scripts | Follow-Up Emails
New: Just published a follow-up — 10 Companies Quietly Hiring Remote Devs in 2026
Updated 2026-05: Followed up with What Remote Developers Actually Make in 2026 — Real Data from 50 Offers — percentile numbers by level, total comp shifts, and what moves the number up or down.
Follow-up: Companies Saying "Remote" in 2026 Mean 6 Different Things
More on remote work: The 10 remote companies quietly paying top-of-market in 2026 walks through the specific names. And 15 words that mean not actually remote on a job posting is the filter to apply before you spend time on any listing.
Update May 2026 — see also: I Asked 12 Hiring Managers What 'Truly Remote' Means in 2026 — Their Answers Don't Match Their Job Postings
Beyond this article — the full 2026 job-search stack: I keep a curated 24-tool list (free + paid, ranked by actual use) on my own site. Same methodology, expanded to cover sourcing, ATS, comp research, networking, prep, and tracking — with honest 1-10 scores so you can skip what isn't worth the cost.
Top comments (3)
This is a useful compilation of resources and tips, thanks
very useful thanks
Excelent post, thanks!