Who Gets Remote Work

Entry-level workers are the least likely to be offered remote work: just 40.7% of entry-level US tech postings are remote, versus 60% of senior — a 19.3%-point gap. Remote work is granted with seniority.

If you are early-career and every remote role seems to slip away, it is not your search. The remote-friendly listings are concentrated above your level.

SoviaJobs ResearchData through June 2026

Key findings

  • Entry-level remote share: 40.7% — the lowest of any tier.
  • Senior-level remote share: 60% — the highest of any tier.
  • The seniority remote gap is 19.3% points: remote work is a trust reward, not a baseline.

The remote pyramid: it widens as you climb

Plot the remote share at each level and the shape is unmistakable. The more senior the role, the more likely it is remote. Entry sits at the bottom; senior at the top.

Remote vs not-remote, tier by tier (shared 0–100% scale)

40.7%

Entry-level remote share

n=5,845

56.6%

Mid-level remote share

n=47,854

60%

Senior-level remote share

n=46,043

Remote vs not-remote, by tier

Another way to see it: at each level, what share of postings open the door to remote at all? (We only have a clean remote / not-remote split per tier here — hybrid and onsite are pooled into “not remote”.)

Remote (Entry)40.7%
Hybrid or onsite59.3%
Remote (Mid)56.6%
Hybrid or onsite43.4%
Remote (Senior)60%
Hybrid or onsite40%

Why remote is a trust reward — and what to do about it

Remote work asks an employer to trust that you will deliver without anyone watching. That trust is cheap to extend to a senior engineer with a track record and expensive to extend to someone unproven. So the remote door opens as your seniority rises. None of this is a verdict on your ability — it is risk management on the employer’s side, and you can work it.

The practical playbook for early-career candidates:

  • Use hybrid as the wedge. Hybrid roles are far easier to land than fully-remote and still kill most of the commute. Land hybrid, prove yourself, then renegotiate to remote.
  • Build async proof. A public portfolio, written project write-ups, and visible code make you look manageable from a distance — the exact fear remote-hiring managers have about juniors.
  • Target “Entry, Mid” tags. Postings tagged for a range of levels carry more remote options than strict “Entry Level” ones — and you are often qualified for the lower end.

The deeper reason juniors face silence — most “entry-level” postings quietly require years of experience — is in The Entry-Level Paradox.

How this was measured (n=204,223)

Sample: 204,223 postings · Window: 2026-03-20 – 2026-06-09

Method

  • Remote share = share of postings at each single-tier seniority level tagged remote.
  • Per-tier 'remote vs not-remote' pools hybrid and onsite into the non-remote band (no per-tier hybrid/onsite split exists in this dataset).
  • Combo and untagged seniority rows are omitted from the per-tier charts for clarity.

Limitations

  • Seniority tags come from the posting and can be inconsistent across employers.
  • Hybrid is not separated per tier — 'not remote' includes hybrid roles.
  • Corpus is tech & professional roles, not all US jobs.

Salary figures are platform-estimated posted ranges (posted or estimated), not employer disclosure. Corpus is tech & professional roles.

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Who gets remote work FAQ

Why are there no remote entry-level jobs?
There are some — just far fewer. Only 40.7% of entry-level US tech postings are remote, versus 60% of senior-level postings. Employers grant remote work with seniority, so juniors face the tightest remote market of any tier.
Are entry-level remote jobs hard to find?
Yes, structurally. Entry-level has the lowest remote share (40.7%) of any seniority tier in 204,223 analyzed US tech postings — a 19.3%-point gap below senior roles. It is not that you are searching wrong; the remote-friendly listings are concentrated above your level.
Who is most likely to get a remote job?
Senior-level candidates. Senior roles are remote 60% of the time — the highest of any tier. Remote work behaves like a trust reward: the more years on paper, the more likely the role is offered remotely.
What can entry-level candidates do to get remote work?
Treat hybrid as the wedge (it is far easier to land than fully-remote and still cuts the commute), build async proof — public portfolio, written work samples, documented projects — and target roles tagged 'Entry, Mid' rather than strict 'Entry', which carry more remote options. The goal is to look low-risk to manage from a distance.
Where does this data come from?
From 204,223 deduplicated US tech and professional postings collected by SoviaJobs (window through June 2026). Remote share is the share of postings at each seniority tier tagged remote.