Developer jobs — 64
All active Developer positions in affiliate marketing. Direct employer contacts.
64 open positions · updated 4 June 2026
📖 What a Developer Does in Traffic Arbitrage ▾
A Developer in traffic arbitrage means front-end/back-end developers working on the infrastructure behind affiliate projects: trackers (in-house or custom Keitaro/BeMob setups), landing pages, pre-landers, anti-bot systems, cloaking, and API integrations with CPA networks. The stack is usually PHP+MySQL for trackers, JavaScript/React for landing pages, and Python for analytics. Some teams use Go for high-load servers handling millions of requests per day. If you’re looking for developer jobs in arbitrage, this is a very specific corner of the IT market: less money than at Yandex or Tinkoff, but more freedom and a much more informal vibe.
Salary
Middle $2500–4500, Senior $5000–9000, Lead $9000–14 000. Salaries are lower than in mainstream IT — Yandex, Tinkoff, and Sber pay more — but it’s often balanced out by remote work, a relaxed environment, and sometimes a share in the team or equity/options. Knowing the niche specifics — cloaking, anti-bot logic, ZRD — is valued separately and can easily add +30% on top of a regular developer’s market rate.
Frequently asked
- What stack is used in arbitrage development?
- Backend: PHP (Laravel), Python (Django/FastAPI), Node.js, less often Go. Frontend: React, Vue, sometimes plain JS on landing pages. Databases: MySQL/MariaDB for trackers, PostgreSQL for analytics, Redis for cache and queues. Containerization and DevOps are a must for Senior roles. Many teams run their own bare-metal servers at Hetzner or OVH instead of AWS because traffic costs get expensive at scale.
- What’s specific about affiliate development?
- High traffic with a low infrastructure budget. Anti-bot logic — showing different content to the Google bot, the FB reviewer, and a real user. GEO-based rules. Integrations with dozens of CPA networks via postbacks. A legal gray area: some projects work around ad platform rules, which can feel uncomfortable sometimes. But it’s definitely never boring.
- Can you move into affiliate development from regular IT?
- Yes, experienced developers can move into affiliate pretty easily. But the entry barrier is understanding the business logic — what FTD, RevShare, postback, and click-id are. Without that, the first 2–3 months are mostly adaptation. Many teams include industry questions in interviews, not just coding questions, so they don’t hire a developer who realizes a month later that “this isn’t for me.”