RU | EN
💻

Developer jobs — 64

🆓 No signup · apply directly

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.”

Open Developer positions (64)

Developer senior ⭐ 96
💰 Salary discussed after interview 12 hours ago →
Developer middle ⭐ 76
💰 Salary discussed after interview 14 hours ago →