Web3 Developer in IT — CIS and Europe market
Web3 Developer — a developer of decentralised applications (dapps) who builds their client side: the user interface, crypto-wallet connection, interaction with smart contracts from the browser. In essence a Web3 Developer is a frontend developer for blockchain applications: they take an ordinary web frontend (most often in React) and add a Web3 layer to it — wallet connection, reading data from the blockchain, sending transactions, calling smart contracts. If a smart-contract developer writes logic on the blockchain (see /research/blockchain/smart-contracts), and a Blockchain Engineer builds the infrastructure (see /research/blockchain/blockchain-engineer), then a Web3 Developer builds the application that a human uses — what the user interacts with the blockchain through. Role family: Web3 Developer (general — dapp client side), Web3 Frontend Developer (frontend of decentralised applications), Web3 Full-stack Developer (frontend + integration with smart contracts and blockchain backend), Senior / Lead Web3 Developer, adjacent — frontend developer, smart-contract developer, Blockchain Engineer. Areas of responsibility: building the frontend of decentralised applications, integrating crypto wallets (connection, authorisation via wallet), interacting with smart contracts from the application (reading state, sending transactions), displaying on-chain data, working with transactions and their states in the UI, ensuring a good user experience for a Web3 application (a known pain point — UX in Web3 is hard). Stack 2026: ordinary frontend — JavaScript / TypeScript, React (dominates in Web3 frontend), HTML/CSS — the foundation; Web3 libraries — ethers.js, viem, wagmi (React + blockchain combo — the modern standard), web3.js; wallet integration (MetaMask, WalletConnect and others); understanding of blockchain, transactions, smart contracts at the interaction level. According to Zorky CRM, 2 active openings with a median salary of $6521/mo. Top skills: JavaScript, React, ethers.js, wagmi, wallets. 100.0% remote. Web3 Developer — the most accessible blockchain role to enter (base — ordinary frontend); the market is global and tied to crypto cycles.
Comparison with other specializations
The Blockchain / Web3 direction contains 4 specializations. The current one (Web3 Developer) is highlighted in blue — compare it with its neighbors by the number of open jobs and median salary.
Demand trend
Web3 Developer — the most accessible blockchain role to enter (base — ordinary frontend). Builds the client side of dapps. Market is global, tied to crypto cycles. For Russian-speaking developers a noticeable segment is the TON ecosystem (Telegram apps and games, a boom 2024-2026).
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
Junior openings here are more realistic than in smart contracts (base — frontend). Career flow: frontend developer → learn the Web3 layer → Web3 Developer → Senior; possible movement into smart contracts or Blockchain Engineer.
Median salary (USD/month) at each grade plus the jump vs the previous one.
Salary distribution — trend
The median Web3 developer salary — $6521/mo — frontend base plus premium for Web3 specialisation: Middle $2,500-5,000, Senior $5,000-9,000+. Lower than smart-contract developers and DeFi (the frontend side of blockchain is paid more modestly than on-chain development), but above average frontend. Tied to crypto cycles; the frontend base is insurance against volatility.
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
Web3 — a global distributed market weakly anchored to geography. EN — 1 positions in the sample, but the real market is worldwide; for Russian-speaking developers — almost always international projects on remote (crypto is regulated in Russia). Noticeable segment — the TON ecosystem.
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 jobs are remote; full remote is the norm (the Web3 industry is global and distributed, English is mandatory). Access to the world market; employment depends on crypto cycles, but the frontend base of a Web3 developer easily converts back to ordinary frontend — built-in insurance against volatility.
How the share of each work format shifts week over week.
100% — remote. Specialisation is well-adapted to remote format.
Technology combinations
Common pairs: React + wagmi / viem, JavaScript / TypeScript + ethers.js, frontend + wallets, dapp + smart contracts, Web3 + TON. Learning roadmap: first become a frontend developer (React, TypeScript — foundation, 70-80% of the profession) → blockchain basics → Web3 libraries (ethers.js → viem / wagmi) → wallet integration → smart-contract interaction → Web3 UX → English → pet project (simple dapp) → hackathons.
Which pairs of technologies appear together most often in a single job.
Where we see these jobs
Web3 jobs: specialised Web3 and crypto job boards, LinkedIn, Telegram communities for blockchain and TON, hh.ru, Habr Career. The role is called "Web3 developer", "Web3 frontend developer", "dapp developer", part of it goes as "frontend developer" on a blockchain project. NB: the Blockchain direction has had difficulties with auto-classification, Web3 frontend is often counted as frontend — the visible number may understate the market.
27% of jobs we see only via Telegram. That is our unique selling point — traditional ATSs don't parse TG channels.
Web3 Developer vs other directions
Web3 Developer — the client-side role of the Blockchain / Web3 direction, essentially frontend development for blockchain applications. Borders closely with frontend development (/research/frontend — the base and career source, convenient insurance), with Smart Contracts Developer (/research/blockchain/smart-contracts) and Blockchain Engineer (/research/blockchain/blockchain-engineer). Comparison — in the SiblingSubnichesChart above.
Volume of open jobs across IT directions.
Latest jobs
Latest open Web3 Developer jobs — the most recent 10 positions with adequate description quality. NB: the role is often called "Web3 frontend developer" or is included in frontend openings of blockchain projects — the full list is in our CRM or via the "see all" link below.
What we can offer
If you work with Web3 Developer 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 Web3 developers: pay, grades, stack and skills, Web3 Developer vs Smart Contracts Developer vs ordinary frontend, what a dapp is and why a wallet is needed, what a Web3 developer does, remote, companies, how to start, how many openings, Senior skills. Answers recompute automatically.
How much does a Web3 developer earn in 2026?
The median Web3 Developer salary is $6521/mo per Zorky CRM data (2 active jobs — narrow segment). Web3 Developer is essentially a frontend developer with a blockchain specialisation; pay combines the frontend base and a premium for Web3 skills, plus is anchored to the global market. Realistic 2026 ranges: Middle Web3 developer — $2,500-5,000/mo, Senior — $5,000-9,000+. This is lower than for smart-contract developers and DeFi engineers (the frontend side of blockchain is paid more modestly than on-chain development), but higher than average frontend, thanks to the scarce Web3 specialisation. Caveat: like all of blockchain, the market is volatile and tied to crypto cycles.
What does a Web3 developer Junior, Middle, Senior, or Lead earn?
Web3 Developer — the most accessible blockchain role to enter: its base is ordinary frontend, and a frontend developer can move into Web3 by picking up the blockchain layer; so Junior openings here are more realistic than in smart-contract development. Middle independently builds dapp frontends with wallet integration and smart contracts. Senior designs Web3 application architecture, solves complex UX and blockchain-interaction problems. Career flow: frontend developer → learn the Web3 layer → Web3 Developer → Senior; possible further movement towards smart contracts (becoming Web3 Full-stack or moving to on-chain development) or into Blockchain Engineer.
How much do Web3 developers earn in Moscow, St Petersburg, remote?
100.0% remote: Web3, like all of blockchain, is a global distributed market. Web3 projects are international, hire worldwide, pay at world rates — there is a global market, not local ranges. Senior Web3 Developer — roughly $5,000-9,000+/mo, with significant spread across projects and crypto-market phase. English is mandatory. For Russian-speaking Web3 developers: crypto in Russia is regulated, work is mostly on international projects on full-remote. Good news specifically for Web3 Developer: their frontend base easily converts back to ordinary frontend development, which reduces the risk of the volatile crypto market.
What stack and skills does a Web3 developer need?
Top skills: JavaScript, React, ethers.js, wagmi, wallets. Web3 Developer = frontend developer + Web3 layer. Ordinary frontend — the foundation: JavaScript and TypeScript, React (dominates in Web3 frontend), HTML/CSS, understanding of modern frontend development, application state, working with APIs; without a solid frontend base you can't become a Web3 developer. Web3 libraries: ethers.js, viem (modern library for blockchain interaction), wagmi (a set of React hooks for Web3 — the modern standard for the React + blockchain combo), web3.js. Wallet integration: connecting crypto wallets (MetaMask, WalletConnect and others), wallet authorisation. Smart-contract interaction: call contract functions, read their state, send transactions from the application. Blockchain understanding: at the interaction level — what a transaction is, gas, confirmations, accounts, networks; you don't need to write smart contracts, but you need to understand what you're working with. Blockchain UX: the ability to make a clear interface on top of complex blockchain (display of transaction states, errors, waits) — a known pain point of Web3. English — mandatory. The main point: a Web3 Developer is a strong frontend developer who can connect a web application to the blockchain; a solid frontend plus a confident Web3 layer.
Web3 Developer vs Smart Contracts Developer vs ordinary frontend — what's the difference?
Smart Contracts Developer writes logic on the blockchain (smart contracts in Solidity) — on-chain development, focus on security of code that manages assets (see /research/blockchain/smart-contracts). Web3 Developer builds the client side of a decentralised application — the interface through which the user interacts with those smart contracts; they work with wallets, display on-chain data, send transactions, but don't write smart contracts themselves. Crudely: a smart-contract developer builds the "engine on the blockchain", a Web3 Developer — "the application a person uses". Web3 Developer vs ordinary frontend developer: technically a Web3 Developer is a frontend developer (the same React, JavaScript / TypeScript — see /research/frontend), but with a specialisation: they can connect wallets, work with Web3 libraries, interact with smart contracts, understand the blockchain and Web3 UX specifics. Crudely: an ordinary frontend talks to an ordinary server and API, a Web3 frontend additionally talks to the blockchain and the wallet. On entry difficulty: Web3 Developer — the most accessible blockchain role, because 80% of it is ordinary frontend, and you only need to add the Web3 layer; smart-contract and DeFi development require much more specific and deep preparation. Career flow: ordinary frontend → Web3 Developer — a short and realistic transition; Web3 Developer → smart contracts — the next, harder step.
What is a dapp and why does a Web3 app need a crypto wallet?
Dapp (decentralised application) — an application part of whose logic runs on the blockchain via smart contracts. A dapp usually has the same structure as an ordinary web application — a frontend used by a person — but instead of (or alongside) an ordinary server it interacts with the blockchain: reads data from the blockchain, calls smart contracts, sends transactions. A Web3 Developer builds precisely the dapp frontend. Why a crypto wallet is needed: in an ordinary application the user logs in by email/password, and the server stores their data and acts on their behalf. In a dapp it's different: the wallet is both the user's identity and their way of acting on the blockchain. A crypto wallet (MetaMask and others) stores the user's cryptographic keys; through the wallet the user authorises in the dapp (without login/password — "sign in with wallet") and, most importantly, signs transactions — any action changing state on the blockchain (transfer, swap, contract call) the user confirms with their wallet. So wallet integration is the central task of a Web3 Developer: connect the wallet, handle authorisation, sensibly walk the user through signing transactions. UX complexity: for an ordinary user wallets, transactions, gas, confirmations, errors — are unfamiliar and intimidating; making all this clear is a large and important part of a Web3 developer's work, and it's a known weak spot of Web3 applications.
What exactly does a Web3 developer do?
A Web3 Developer builds the client side of a decentralised application. 1) Dapp frontend — development of the user interface, as in ordinary frontend development (most often React): screens, components, state, navigation. 2) Wallet integration — connect crypto wallets (MetaMask, WalletConnect and others) to the app, implement "sign in with wallet", handle account and network changes. 3) Smart-contract interaction — via Web3 libraries (ethers.js / viem / wagmi) call smart-contract functions, read their state, display on-chain data in the interface. 4) Transaction handling — walk the user through sending a transaction: show what to confirm, wait for network confirmation, display the status (in progress / success / error) — and do it clearly. 5) On-chain data display — balances, NFTs, history, protocol state — fetch from the blockchain and present nicely. 6) Web3 UX — figure out how to make complex blockchain things (gas, networks, confirmations, errors) understandable to an ordinary person — one of the main and hard tasks. 7) Testing, debugging — including on testnets. Key: Web3 Developer is the "face" of the dapp for the user; smart contracts and infrastructure are useless without an application a person can use them through, and that application is built by the Web3 developer.
Can Web3 developers work remotely?
Yes, it's the norm: 100.0% of jobs are remote. Web3, like all of blockchain, is a global, distributed, fully remote industry; Web3 projects are international. For Web3 developers in CIS this is largely the only format: crypto in Russia is regulated, work is mostly on international projects on full-remote, at world rates, English mandatory. The remote-global format is a big plus. And, as for Blockchain Engineer, a Web3 Developer has built-in "insurance" against crypto-market volatility: their frontend base easily converts back to ordinary frontend development — in a crypto downturn you can return to ordinary frontend without losing the profession.
Which companies hire Web3 developers?
At the top: Web3 projects, dapp startups, crypto companies. Web3 developers are needed by any project with a dapp — a user-facing decentralised application. Web3 projects and dapp startups of all kinds. DeFi protocols — each has a web interface. NFT marketplaces and projects. Crypto wallets and Web3 infrastructure services. Blockchain games (see /research/gamedev/web3-game) — client side. DAO projects. Crypto exchanges — partially (Web3 directions). For Russian-speaking developers the TON ecosystem (linked to Telegram) is relevant — Telegram apps and games with a blockchain component, a boom 2024-2026. The market is global, distributed, depends on the crypto-market phase. Important: in Web3, as in all of blockchain, alongside serious projects there are many short-lived and dubious ones — choosing an employer requires prudence. Web3 Developer advantage: even if a project turns out to be short-lived, the frontend experience remains valuable.
Where to start a Web3 developer career in 2026?
Web3 Developer — the most accessible blockchain role to enter, and the path is shorter than into smart contracts. Roadmap: 1) First — become a frontend developer: this is the foundation of the role. JavaScript / TypeScript, React, HTML/CSS, modern frontend development — without a solid frontend base you can't become a Web3 developer (see /research/frontend). This is 70-80% of the profession. 2) Get the basics of blockchain — how blockchains, transactions, gas, accounts, wallets work, what smart contracts and dapps are; at the level of understanding, without writing contracts. 3) Master Web3 libraries — ethers.js, then modern viem and wagmi (the React + blockchain combo — the current standard); learn to read data from the blockchain and send transactions from the application. 4) Wallet integration — connecting MetaMask, WalletConnect, "sign in with wallet". 5) Smart-contract interaction — call ready contracts from the frontend. 6) Web3 UX — learn to make a clear interface on top of complex blockchain. 7) English — mandatory. 8) Pet project — build a simple dapp (frontend + wallet connection + interaction with a contract on a testnet); this is the best portfolio. 9) Hackathons — Web3 hackathons teach and add to the portfolio. Realistic caveat: entry into Web3 via frontend is realistic; and the frontend base is good insurance: if the crypto segment sags, you remain in demand as a frontend developer.
How many Web3 developer jobs are open across CIS and Europe?
2 active open Web3 Developer positions in the Zorky CRM sample — a narrow segment. The real picture: Web3 development is a global distributed market not anchored to CIS; the number of openings swings with the crypto-market phase. The role is called variously — "Web3 developer", "Web3 frontend developer", "dapp developer", part of it goes as "frontend developer" on a blockchain project. For Russian-speaking developers a noticeable segment is the TON ecosystem (Telegram apps and games, a boom 2024-2026). Geography: EN, 🇷🇺 Russia. Sources: specialised Web3 and crypto job boards, LinkedIn, Telegram communities for blockchain and TON, hh.ru, Habr Career. For Russian-speaking developers — almost always international projects on remote (crypto is regulated in Russia). NB: the Blockchain direction has had difficulties with auto-classification, Web3 frontend is often counted as frontend — the visible number may understate the market.
What skills does a Senior Web3 developer need?
A Senior Web3 Developer designs the client side of complex decentralised applications. Frontend at expert level: deep mastery of JavaScript / TypeScript, React, modern frontend architecture, performance, application state — this is the foundation, and a Senior Web3 Developer is first and foremost a strong frontend engineer (see /research/frontend). Web3 layer at expert level: deep mastery of Web3 libraries (ethers.js, viem, wagmi), wallet integration, smart-contract interaction; understanding the subtleties of working with the blockchain from the application. Web3 application architecture: designing the dapp structure — how to organise interaction with the blockchain, on-chain data caching, state management, working with multiple networks. Web3 UX mastery: making the complex simple — turning tangled blockchain interactions (gas, signatures, confirmations, errors, network switches) into a clear, reliable user experience; this is one of the main and underestimated problems of Web3, and a strong Senior can solve it. Reliability: sensibly handling transaction failures, network instability, wallet errors. Blockchain understanding: deep enough to make correct architectural decisions and, if needed, understand the smart contracts the application works with. Client-side security: phishing, safe handling of the wallet and signatures. English — mandatory. For Lead — technical leadership. The main value of a Senior — combine strong frontend engineering with a deep Web3 layer and build a dapp that's convenient and safe for an ordinary person to use.
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). Web3 Developer in IT: CIS and Europe market. Accessed: 5/29/2026. URL: https://zorky.tech/en/research/blockchain