Blockchain Engineer in IT — CIS and Europe market
Blockchain Engineer — an engineer who works with blockchain systems and infrastructure: develops and supports nodes, protocols, the backend of blockchain applications, blockchain integration, and sometimes — the blockchain platforms themselves. While a Smart Contracts Developer focuses on code executing in the blockchain (see /research/blockchain/smart-contracts), a Blockchain Engineer works with systems around and underneath the blockchain — this is a more «systems», backend-oriented role. In essence a Blockchain Engineer is a distributed systems engineer applied to the blockchain. Role family: Blockchain Engineer (general — blockchain systems and infrastructure), Blockchain Backend Engineer (backend of blockchain applications), Protocol Engineer / Core Developer (development of blockchain protocols and platforms themselves — the deepest level), Blockchain Infrastructure Engineer (nodes, infrastructure), Senior / Lead Blockchain Engineer, adjacent — Smart Contracts Developer, Web3 Developer, backend developer, DevOps. Responsibilities: development and support of backend of blockchain applications, work with nodes of blockchain networks (launch, support, monitoring), indexing and processing of on-chain data, integration of blockchain with traditional systems, development of protocols and components of blockchain platforms, ensuring performance, reliability and scalability. Stack 2026: strong backend development and distributed systems foundation; languages — often Go and Rust (many blockchain platforms and infrastructure are written in them), also others; deep understanding of blockchain — consensus, cryptography (at applied level), P2P networks, nodes; work with blockchain nodes and their APIs, indexing of on-chain data, databases, queues; cryptography, Docker / Kubernetes. According to Zorky CRM, 5 active openings with median salary $11124/mo. Top skills: blockchain, Go, Rust, nodes, distributed systems. 100.0% — remote. Blockchain Engineer — a highly-paid engineering role at the intersection of backend, distributed systems and blockchain; the market is global and, like all blockchain, tied to crypto cycles.
Comparison with other specializations
The Blockchain / Web3 direction contains 4 specializations. The current one (Blockchain Engineer) is highlighted in blue — compare it with its neighbors by the number of open jobs and median salary.
Demand trend
Blockchain Engineer — a highly-paid engineering role at the intersection of backend, distributed systems and blockchain. The market is global and distributed, tied to crypto cycles. For Russian-speaking engineers — almost always international projects (in RF crypto is restricted). The TON ecosystem is relevant.
How many new jobs appear each week.
Seniority distribution — trend
How the share of Junior/Middle/Senior/Lead in open jobs shifts week over week. A trend toward Senior usually signals a mature specialization where companies look for ready-made talent; the opposite — a rise in Junior — signals expansion and ground-up team building.
Share of each level in % of all jobs with a stated grade per week.
Salary by level
Pure Junior vacancies are few. Career flow: backend developer / distributed systems engineer → master blockchain → Blockchain Engineer → Senior → Protocol / Core Developer. The backend foundation remains valuable always — reduces risk in the volatile segment.
Median salary (USD/month) at each grade plus the jump vs the previous one.
Salary distribution — trend
Median Blockchain Engineer salary — $11124/mo — high (global market, pay at world level): Middle $2,800-5,500, Senior $5,500-11,000, Protocol / Core — higher; the level of a top backend / distributed systems engineer plus a premium for blockchain expertise. The main caveat — volatility, attachment to crypto cycles.
What share of jobs each price band holds week over week.
50% of jobs are in the $5–8K range (the core market). High-end $8K+ segment: 50% — usually US-remote or senior-international roles.
Hiring geography
Blockchain development is a global distributed market, weakly tied to geography. EN — 3 positions in the sample, but the real market is global; for Russian-speaking engineers — almost always international projects on remote (in RF crypto is restricted by regulation). The TON ecosystem is relevant.
Job distribution by country.
These numbers reflect the distribution across the sources we parse. Poland often looks dominant because of dense NoFluffJobs / JustJoin.it / Pracuj coverage — the Polish IT market is genuinely large, but in our sample its share is overweighted relative to the real volume of all IT jobs in the region. Same caveat for other top countries: this is «where our parsers look», not «the true size of the market».
Remote / Hybrid / Office — trend
100.0% of vacancies — remote; full remote is the norm (blockchain industry is global and distributed, English mandatory). Access to the world market and high salaries, but employment is unstable (crypto cycles). The plus of a Blockchain Engineer — the backend foundation easily converts back into regular backend.
How the share of each work format shifts week over week.
100% — remote. Specialisation is well-adapted to remote format.
Technology combinations
Common pairs: Go / Rust + blockchain, backend + distributed systems, nodes + JSON-RPC API, indexing + on-chain data, blockchain + Kubernetes. Learning roadmap: become a strong backend developer → master Go or Rust → understand blockchain engineering-wise (consensus, nodes, P2P, cryptography) → work with nodes and APIs → on-chain data indexing → understand smart contracts (at least interaction) → English → pet project and portfolio.
Which pairs of technologies appear together most often in a single job.
Where we see these jobs
Blockchain Engineer vacancies: specialized Web3 and crypto platforms, LinkedIn, Telegram communities on blockchain and TON, hh.ru, Habr Career. The role is called «blockchain engineer», «blockchain engineer / developer», «Protocol Engineer». The blockchain market is global, poorly reflected in regular sources. NB: the Blockchain direction had difficulties with autoclassification — the visible number is conditional and depends on the crypto market phase.
27% of jobs we see only via Telegram. That is our unique selling point — traditional ATSs don't parse TG channels.
Blockchain Engineer vs other directions
Blockchain Engineer — the «systems» role of the Blockchain / Web3 direction. Borders Smart Contracts Developer (on-chain logic — /research/blockchain/smart-contracts), Web3 Developer (dapp frontend — /research/blockchain/web3); career source and «insurance» — backend development (/research/backend), adjacent to DevOps (/research/devops). Comparison — in the SiblingSubnichesChart above.
Volume of open jobs across IT directions.
Latest jobs
Latest open Blockchain Engineer jobs — most recent 10 positions with adequate description quality. NB: a narrow, volatile segment, vacancies mainly on international distributed projects — full list in our CRM or via the «see all» link below.
What we can offer
If you work with Blockchain Engineer jobs or you're in this role yourself — we can close a specific task. Pick a format, leave a contact — we reply within 24 hours.
Frequently asked questions
The most common questions about Blockchain Engineer: pay, grades, stack and skills, Blockchain Engineer vs Smart Contracts Developer, how blockchain development differs from regular backend, what a Blockchain Engineer does, remote, companies, how to start, how many vacancies, Senior skills. Answers recompute automatically.
How much does a Blockchain Engineer earn in 2026?
Median Blockchain Engineer — $11124/mo per Zorky CRM (5 active openings — a narrow segment). Blockchain Engineer — a highly-paid engineering role: the market is global, pay is at the world level. Real 2026 bands: Middle Blockchain Engineer — $2,800-5,500/mo, Senior — $5,500-11,000, Protocol / Core developers — higher. Pay level — like a top backend / distributed systems engineer plus a premium for scarce blockchain expertise. Honest caveat: like all blockchain, the market is volatile and tied to crypto cycles — high pay is accompanied by employment instability.
What's the Junior, Middle, Senior, Lead salary for Blockchain Engineer?
Pure Junior vacancies are few — the role requires already accumulated strong backend foundation; people come into it as experienced backend developers who have mastered blockchain. Middle independently develops the backend of blockchain applications, works with nodes and on-chain data. Senior designs blockchain infrastructure and systems, solves performance and reliability problems. Protocol Engineer / Core Developer — the highest level: developing blockchain platforms themselves. Career flow: backend developer / distributed systems engineer → master blockchain → Blockchain Engineer → Senior → Protocol / Core Developer.
How much do Blockchain Engineers earn in Moscow, SPb, remote?
100.0% — remote: blockchain is a global distributed market, city attachment is weak. Projects are international, hire worldwide, pay at world level — so there's a global market, not «Moscow» bands. Senior Blockchain Engineer — approximately $5,500-11,000/mo, with significant spread by project and crypto market phase. English mandatory. As with Smart Contracts developers: in RF crypto is restricted by regulation, so Blockchain Engineers from RF work mainly on international projects on full-remote — this is access to high world bands, but also segment instability. The TON ecosystem is relevant for the Russian-speaking market.
What stack and skills does a Blockchain Engineer need?
Top skills: blockchain, Go, Rust, nodes, distributed systems. Blockchain Engineer is at its core a strong backend engineer with blockchain specialization. Backend and distributed systems foundation: server application development, APIs, databases, queues, understanding distributed systems, reliability, scalability — the foundation. Languages: often Go and Rust (many blockchain platforms and infrastructure are written in them), also other backend languages. Blockchain internals: deep understanding — how consensus, blocks, transactions, P2P networks, nodes work; applied cryptography (hashes, signatures, keys — at understanding level, not math). Work with nodes: launch and support of blockchain network nodes, their APIs (JSON-RPC etc.), monitoring. On-chain data: indexing and processing of data from the blockchain (special indexing tools). Integration: connecting blockchain with traditional systems. For Protocol level: deep understanding of consensus algorithms, blockchain platform structure. Infrastructure: Docker, Kubernetes, clouds. English — mandatory. The main thing: a Blockchain Engineer needs a solid engineering foundation (backend + distributed systems) plus deep understanding of how blockchain is structured inside.
Blockchain Engineer vs Smart Contracts Developer — what's the difference?
Two main blockchain development roles working at different levels. Smart Contracts Developer writes code executing inside the blockchain — smart contracts (in Solidity and others); their world is on-chain logic, and the main thing in it is the security of code managing assets (see /research/blockchain/smart-contracts). Blockchain Engineer works with systems around and underneath the blockchain: backend of blockchain applications, nodes, infrastructure, on-chain data indexing, integration, sometimes the blockchain protocols themselves; their world is distributed systems and infrastructure. Roughly: a Smart Contracts Developer writes «logic in the blockchain», a Blockchain Engineer builds «systems that work with the blockchain and which make up the blockchain itself». By background: a Smart Contracts Developer — a specific Solidity skill with emphasis on the security of on-chain code; a Blockchain Engineer — a backend engineer / distributed systems engineer who went into blockchain. In practice: in small projects one person can cover both roles; a full-fledged Web3 application requires both smart contracts and a blockchain backend and a frontend (Web3 Developer). Career choice: smart contracts — if drawn to on-chain logic and security; Blockchain Engineer — if closer to backend, infrastructure and distributed systems. Transitions between roles happen.
How does blockchain development differ from regular backend?
A Blockchain Engineer is largely a backend engineer, and the basic skills are common, but there are essential differences. 1) Nature of data — in regular backend, data is stored in your database, which you control; in blockchain, a significant part of «state» lies in a decentralized network that you don't control, and you have to work with it through nodes and specific APIs. 2) Distribution and consensus — blockchain is a distributed system with consensus algorithms; you need to understand how the network reaches agreement, what transaction finality is, forks, chain reorganizations. 3) Immutability and publicity — on-chain data is immutable and public; this changes architectural decisions. 4) Cryptography — daily work with signatures, keys, hashes. 5) Economic layer — blockchain has money and incentives right in the system (gas, tokens), and this affects engineering decisions. 6) Special reliability — the cost of errors in blockchain systems is high. 7) Immaturity and rapid change — blockchain technologies are younger and change faster than the mature backend stack. What's common: the foundation — the same strong backend (server development, APIs, databases, distributed systems, reliability, scaling). Therefore a good backend engineer can transition to blockchain, picking up blockchain specifics; and vice versa — Blockchain Engineer skills largely convert back to regular backend, which is important as «insurance» in the volatile crypto segment.
What exactly does a Blockchain Engineer do?
A Blockchain Engineer builds and supports the systems through which blockchain applications work. 1) Blockchain application backend — the server part of Web3 applications: APIs, business logic that interacts with the blockchain and smart contracts, serves the frontend. 2) Working with nodes — launching, configuring, supporting and monitoring nodes of blockchain networks; ensuring reliable application access to the blockchain. 3) On-chain data indexing — data in the blockchain is stored inconveniently for queries; the Blockchain Engineer sets up indexing — extracts, structures and makes data from the blockchain (events, transactions, contract state) accessible to the application. 4) Integration — connects blockchain with traditional systems: payment, accounting, external services. 5) Infrastructure — deploys and supports blockchain infrastructure, ensures its reliability and scalability. 6) Protocol / Core development (for deep level) — development of components of blockchain platforms themselves: consensus, network layer, virtual machine. 7) Performance and reliability — blockchain systems must be resilient, the cost of failure is high. Key: a Blockchain Engineer ensures that a blockchain application works as a system — smart contracts by themselves are useless without backend, infrastructure and access to data, and all this is the Blockchain Engineer's zone.
Can you work Blockchain Engineer remotely?
Yes, and it's the norm: 100.0% of vacancies — remote. The blockchain industry is global, distributed, fully remote — projects are international, teams worldwide. For Blockchain Engineers from CIS this is largely the only format: in RF cryptocurrencies are restricted by regulation, so work is mainly on international projects on full-remote, by world bands, English mandatory. The remote global format is a big plus (access to the world market and high salaries). But, as for all blockchain development, it must be considered together with the volatility of the segment: blockchain projects depend on crypto cycles. The good news for a Blockchain Engineer specifically — their backend foundation easily converts back into regular backend work, which reduces risk.
Which companies hire Blockchain Engineers?
Top: blockchain platforms, crypto projects, crypto exchanges. Blockchain Engineers are needed by projects of the Web3 ecosystem — the market is global. Blockchain platforms and protocols — companies developing blockchain networks themselves (for Protocol / Core Developer). Crypto exchanges — major hirers of Blockchain Engineers (integration of multiple blockchains, nodes, infrastructure). Web3 applications and DeFi projects — need a blockchain backend. Blockchain infrastructure companies — providers of nodes, indexing, developer tools. Crypto wallets and blockchain payment services. Blockchain startups of different ecosystems (Ethereum / EVM, Solana, TON etc.). For Russian-speaking engineers the TON ecosystem is relevant (linked to Telegram). The market is global, distributed, strongly depends on the crypto market phase — in a crypto boom there are many projects, in a crypto winter the market contracts. When choosing an employer in blockchain, attentiveness is important — alongside serious projects, there are quite a few short-term ones.
How to start a Blockchain Engineer career in 2026?
Blockchain Engineer — not an entry role; the right path — through backend development. Roadmap: 1) First — become a strong backend developer: server development, APIs, databases, basics of distributed systems; this is the foundation of the role, without it you can't become a Blockchain Engineer (see /research/backend). 2) Master the language of blockchain infrastructure — Go or Rust (many blockchain platforms are written in them), if you're not already on one of them. 3) Understand blockchain deeply — how consensus, blocks, transactions, P2P networks, nodes work, applied cryptography; not «what's crypto», but how blockchain is structured engineering-wise. 4) Work with nodes and APIs — learn to launch nodes, access them through APIs (JSON-RPC), read on-chain data. 5) On-chain data indexing — master indexing tools. 6) Understand smart contracts — at least at the level of interacting with them (even if you don't specialize in writing them). 7) English — mandatory. 8) Practice and portfolio — pet project (blockchain application with backend), participation in open source, hackathons. Realistic caveat: blockchain is a highly-paid but volatile area; a big plus for a Blockchain Engineer is that their backend foundation remains valuable always — you can enter blockchain on a wave of demand and return to regular backend in a crypto downturn.
How many Blockchain Engineer vacancies are there in CIS and Europe?
5 active open vacancies Blockchain Engineer in the Zorky CRM sample — a narrow segment. The real picture: blockchain development is a global distributed market, not tied to CIS; vacancies are international, their number fluctuates strongly with the crypto market phase. The role is called «blockchain engineer», «blockchain developer», «Protocol Engineer», «blockchain backend developer»; partly overlaps with smart contract development and backend. Geography: EN, INT, 🇺🇦 Ukraine. Sources: specialized Web3 and crypto platforms, LinkedIn, Telegram communities on blockchain and TON, hh.ru, Habr Career. For Russian-speaking engineers blockchain work is almost always international projects on remote (in RF crypto is restricted by regulation). NB: the Blockchain direction had difficulties with autoclassification, the segment is poorly reflected in regular sources — the visible number is conditional and depends on the crypto market phase.
What skills does a Senior Blockchain Engineer need?
Senior Blockchain Engineer designs blockchain systems and infrastructure and solves the most complex engineering tasks. Strongest backend foundation: expert server development, API design, work with data, queues — the foundation. Distributed systems at expert level: deep understanding of distributed systems, consistency, fault tolerance — blockchain is their particular, complex case. Deep blockchain internals: consensus algorithms, network layer (P2P), node structure, virtual machines, finality, forks; for Protocol / Core — the ability to develop components of blockchain platforms themselves. Architecture of blockchain systems: design the backend and infrastructure of blockchain applications — reliably, scalably, taking into account specifics (immutability, chain reorganizations, node specifics). Languages: expert Go and/or Rust. Indexing and work with on-chain data at scale. Cryptography: confident applied use. Performance and reliability: blockchain systems are critical, the cost of failure is high. Multi-chain: understanding of different blockchain ecosystems, their architectural differences. Security: understanding of blockchain infrastructure threats. Infrastructure and DevOps: Kubernetes, clouds. English — mandatory. Sobriety in evaluating projects of a volatile market. The main value of a Senior — design a reliable, performant blockchain system, combining strong engineering of distributed systems with a deep understanding of how blockchain is structured.
Similar specializations
Methodology
- Data period: in the hero and copy — the last 3 months. In the charts — the full available observation period (since parsers were launched, usually 2-3 months).
- Data is collected automatically from 1000+ sources — Telegram channels and job boards across CIS and Europe.
- Only live open jobs with a clear description are counted. Spam and duplicates are filtered out.
- Salaries are converted to USD/month at the current rate. Outlier values (lt;500 or gt;50K) are filtered out.
- Levels are normalized: Mid → Middle, Intern/Trainee → Junior, Principal/Staff/Expert → Lead.
- The first 2 weeks of data (parser ramp-up period) are not shown in the charts.
- Data is recomputed every day.
Authorship and citation
Analytics prepared by Zorky Research Team. Last updated: May 29, 2026 at 7:22 PM.
Data sources and methodology
Data is collected automatically from 1000+ sources — Telegram job channels and job boards across CIS and Eastern Europe (HH, Habr Career, Djinni, DOU, NoFluffJobs, JustJoin.it, Pracuj.pl and others). Parsing runs 24/7, duplicates are filtered by description and URL, salary outliers are stripped. Detailed methodology — on the "How it works" page.
Zorky CRM (2026). Blockchain Engineer in IT: CIS and Europe market. Accessed: 5/29/2026. URL: https://zorky.tech/en/research/blockchain