Hire Offshore Mobile Developers for Los Angeles Businesses
Save up to 70% on mobile developer costs. Pre-vetted candidates in your timezone, onboarded in 2 weeks.
Key facts
- Starting price
- $3000/month full-time
- Los Angeles mid-level benchmark
- $140,500/year
- Estimated savings
- 70% vs Los Angeles rates
- Time to hire
- 2 weeks from kickoff to first day
- Vetting
- 5-stage process, top 3% of applicants
- Guarantee
- 30-day no-cost replacement
You can hire a pre-vetted offshore mobile developer in about 2 weeks through Remoteria, starting from $3,000 per month for a full-time dedicated app engineer. Offshore mobile developers ship native iOS in Swift, native Android in Kotlin, or cross-platform apps in React Native and Flutter. They handle Xcode and Android Studio builds, push notification integration through Firebase and OneSignal, in-app purchases through StoreKit and RevenueCat, crash monitoring in Sentry and Crashlytics, TestFlight distribution, Google Play Console releases, and the App Store review back-and-forth. They work with 4 to 8 hours of real-time overlap with your team, communicate fluently in written English, and typically save US businesses 60 to 70 percent compared to hiring a local mobile hire at $140,000 per year. Every candidate we shortlist has already shipped a production app to either the App Store or Google Play for a US or European client, passes a take-home that touches UI, state, and a native integration, and can talk through an app store rejection and recovery in the final interview. Onboarding begins with repo access and a provisioning walkthrough. By week two your developer is shipping independent screens. By month two they are owning release trains and automating deploys through Fastlane.
Mobile Developer salary: Los Angeles vs. offshore
In Los Angeles, a mobile developer earns an average of $147,500 per year according to the BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics — Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim Metro (SOC 15-1253). An equivalent offshore hire averages $43,600 per year — a savings of $103,900 annually (70% lower).
| Experience level | Los Angeles (BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics) | Offshore | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Junior | $98,500 | $28,800 | $69,700 |
| Mid-level | $140,500 | $42,000 | $98,500 |
| Senior | $203,500 | $60,000 | $143,500 |
US salary data: BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics — Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim Metro (SOC 15-1253). Offshore figures based on Remoteria placements.
Why Los Angeles businesses hire offshore mobile developers
Los Angeles runs on entertainment, aerospace, and a long bench of creative agencies, and its labor costs reflect that. A production coordinator in Culver City clears $72,000 before benefits, and a decent executive assistant in Santa Monica or Century City rarely starts under $85,000. Studios, post houses, and content startups around Burbank, Playa Vista, and Hollywood are some of the heaviest offshore users in the metro, along with DTC brands in the Arts District and aerospace suppliers near El Segundo. Founders here benefit because the creative work that needs to happen in LA (talent, on-set, client dinners) is narrow, and everything around it — research, scheduling, video editing, ad ops, inbox management — does not need to sit in a $6,000-a-month office off Sunset. Offshore headcount lets a small LA team stay nimble without absorbing California payroll taxes on every incremental hire. The post-2023 contraction made the math even sharper. The 2023 WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes wiped out roughly nine months of production, and the recovery has been uneven — feature shoots are still down meaningfully from 2022 highs, with a lot of mid-budget work shifting to Atlanta and New Mexico for the tax credit. That has compressed local production budgets and forced studios to rethink fixed operational headcount. The aerospace cluster in El Segundo and Hawthorne, anchored by SpaceX and Northrop Grumman, keeps engineering wages high even as commercial space contracts cycle. Entertainment and media production drives the largest offshore footprint, with editors and ad ops talent in Culver City and Playa Vista routinely supplemented by offshore pods. Tourism and hospitality operators along the coast staff guest services and reservation work overseas to flex with seasonal volume. And the DTC and consumer brand cluster in the Arts District and Vernon now leans on offshore creative production and customer support to compete with Shopify-native brands run from far cheaper metros.
Top Los Angeles industries
- • Entertainment and media production
- • Aerospace and defense
- • Technology and SaaS
- • Tourism and hospitality
- • Fashion and apparel
- • Logistics and port operations
Major Los Angeles employers
- • Walt Disney
- • Netflix
- • SpaceX
- • Snap
- • Boeing
- • Warner Bros. Discovery
Timezone: America/Los_Angeles (PT). Most offshore hires can overlap 4–5 hours of your LA workday, typically 9am–2pm PT.
Top Los Angeles companies competing for mobile developers
Offshore hiring is most valuable where local competition for this role is intense. In Los Angeles, the following major employers drive up local salary benchmarks and make in-house mobile developer hires harder to close:
Walt Disney
Disney's Burbank headquarters and the broader DGE footprint employ tens of thousands across studios, streaming, and parks operations. Independent production companies in Burbank, Glendale, and Culver City constantly lose post-production coordinators, finance ops, and marketing operators to Disney's benefits and pension structure, which is why so many smaller studios staff their operational tier offshore instead of trying to match the Mouse House on total comp.
Netflix
Netflix's Hollywood and Los Gatos engineering hubs anchor the streaming side of LA's creative economy, with thousands of senior engineers, content ops specialists, and data analysts on payroll. Smaller streaming, ad-tech, and creator-economy startups in Playa Vista and Santa Monica routinely lose talent to Netflix's top-of-market salary bands and respond by building offshore content operations and engineering pods to keep their burn rate manageable.
SpaceX
SpaceX's Hawthorne campus employs more than 6,000 people and has rebuilt the Southern California aerospace talent pipeline almost single-handedly. Smaller El Segundo and Long Beach aerospace suppliers cannot match SpaceX equity grants and routinely turn to offshore engineering ops, supply chain coordination, and program admin to fill the back office gap without absorbing California-grade payroll on every hire.
What an offshore mobile developer does
Native and cross-platform feature development
- • Ship screens and flows in Swift + SwiftUI, Kotlin + Jetpack Compose, React Native, or Flutter based on your stack
- • Wire up state management through Redux, Zustand, Riverpod, or Bloc and match your existing architecture
- • Handle device-specific edge cases like safe area insets, notch layouts, keyboard avoidance, and split view
App store submissions & provisioning
- • Manage Apple provisioning profiles, certificates, and App Store Connect through Xcode and Fastlane Match
- • Handle Google Play Console releases, staged rollouts, and internal, alpha, and beta tracks
- • Respond to App Store review rejections with code changes and written appeals so releases ship on schedule
Push notifications & deep linking
- • Integrate push through Firebase Cloud Messaging, APNs, and OneSignal with topic and segment targeting
- • Handle universal links and Android app links so marketing campaigns open in-app instead of the browser
- • Wire up notification permission prompts at the right moment in onboarding rather than on app launch
In-app purchases & subscriptions
- • Ship StoreKit 2 and Google Play Billing flows with receipt validation against your backend
- • Manage subscription states through RevenueCat including renewals, refunds, cancellations, and trial abuse
- • Debug purchase failures across sandbox, TestFlight, and production environments
Crash monitoring & release health
- • Instrument crash reporting through Sentry, Crashlytics, or Bugsnag with release tagging and user context
- • Track release health through crash-free session rates and roll back bad versions within hours
- • Add Firebase Performance and custom traces to watch cold start, screen load, and network latency
Tools and technologies
- Swift
- Kotlin
- React Native
- Flutter
- Xcode
- Android Studio
- Firebase
- Fastlane
- TestFlight
- Sentry
- OneSignal
- RevenueCat
What to expect
- 1. Week 1: Repo access, provisioning and signing walkthrough, simulator setup, and first small screen PR merged.
- 2. Week 2: First independent feature shipped end-to-end with tests, analytics events, and a TestFlight build through review.
- 3. Week 3+: Owns a scoped feature area, runs bug triage rotation, and ships a production App Store or Play release.
- 4. Month 2+: Automates deploys through Fastlane, owns release trains, and leads cross-platform parity work.
Pricing
Full-time offshore mobile developers start at $3000/month. No setup fees. Includes recruitment, vetting, onboarding, and account management.
Free replacement in the first 30 days if it's not a fit.
Frequently asked questions
Should we go native or cross-platform, and can you match either?
Both are valid and it depends on your constraints. Native wins when you need the latest OS features on day one, deep hardware access like camera filters or Bluetooth, or when your product is a graphics-heavy game. Cross-platform through React Native or Flutter wins when you have a small team, need to ship iOS and Android together on a single codebase, and most of your screens are forms and lists. Our shortlist only includes developers whose recent production work matches your choice. For teams migrating from React Native to native Swift we can match developers who have done exactly that path.
How do you handle App Store and Google Play submissions and rejections?
Every release goes through a pre-submission checklist covering screenshots, privacy nutrition labels, ATT prompts, data safety forms, app tracking disclosures, and promotional text. When rejections happen, and they do, your developer responds inside Resolution Center the same day with the exact code change or written appeal. Common rejection causes we have handled include 4.3 spam, 2.1 crash on launch, 5.1.1 privacy violations, and 3.1.1 in-app purchase requirements. Expect 24 to 48 hours from rejection to resubmission on standard reviews.
Can they handle push notifications and in-app purchases end-to-end?
Yes. For push they ship APNs certificates, Firebase Cloud Messaging integration, topic and segment targeting, deep-link handling on tap, and permission prompts that fire at the right moment in onboarding rather than on launch. For in-app purchases they handle StoreKit 2 and Google Play Billing, receipt validation server-side, RevenueCat or a custom billing backend, subscription state management including renewals, refunds, and grace periods, and sandbox testing end-to-end before production release.
How do you track crashes and roll back bad releases?
Standard setup is Sentry or Crashlytics with release tags, user context, and source map uploads in the CI pipeline so crash logs include readable stack traces. We define a crash-free session rate threshold up front (typically 99.5 percent) and any release that breaches it triggers a rollback to the previous version through staged rollouts on Google Play and phased releases on App Store Connect. For critical crashes we ship a hotfix build within a few hours and mark it as an expedited review.
How much does an offshore mobile developer cost, and who owns the app and code?
A full-time dedicated offshore mobile developer starts at $3,000 per month with Remoteria for a mid-level engineer, rising to $5,800 for senior hires with multiple shipped App Store apps. US mobile developers cost $130,000 to $175,000 per year fully loaded, so you typically save 60 to 70 percent. You own the app, the code, the App Store Connect listing, the Google Play console, and all Apple and Google developer accounts. We never publish under our own teams and every asset lives under your organization from day one.
How does timezone work between Los Angeles and an offshore virtual assistant?
Your offshore hire typically overlaps your LA morning, roughly 9am to 2pm PT. That covers your daily stand-ups, client calls with East Coast partners, and most inbox work before you head into meetings. Async tasks run overnight and are ready when you walk into the office.
Do you work with Los Angeles studios, agencies, and creative businesses?
Yes. A large share of our Los Angeles clients are production companies, talent agencies, post-production houses, DTC brands, and SaaS startups across Culver City, Santa Monica, and Playa Vista. We staff video editors, ad ops specialists, production assistants, and executive support built around creative workflows.
How fast can a Los Angeles business actually start offshore hiring?
LA moves quickly when the project calendar demands it. Book a 15-minute intro, tell us the role, and we shortlist 3 pre-vetted candidates within 5 business days. Most Los Angeles clients interview on day 6 and have someone onboarded before the next production cycle starts.
How does offshore hiring compare to Los Angeles's local talent market?
Local LA talent is deep but expensive and post-strike conditions made retention harder, not easier. A mid-level production coordinator in Culver City closes at $70,000–$85,000 base, an experienced ad ops specialist in Playa Vista clears $90,000, and the IATSE and union scale on the studio side pushes total comp even higher. Offshore hiring delivers a comparable production support, video editing, or ad ops skill profile in 5 business days at roughly 30 to 40 percent of the loaded LA cost. That gap matters most for mid-budget studios and DTC brands trying to keep margin intact while features and shoots remain below 2022 levels.
Do Los Angeles businesses have any special requirements for offshore hires?
Offshore contractors are not US tax residents, so Los Angeles businesses do not withhold federal or California state income tax, do not pay California SDI or unemployment, and do not file W-2s for these workers. The standard form is a W-8BEN at engagement (not a W-9, which applies only to US persons) governed by an independent contractor agreement. California AB 5 worker classification rules apply only to US-based workers, so they do not affect offshore engagements. Most LA clients route payments through us so they never have to touch international wires, FBAR thresholds, or California payroll filings directly.
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Written by Syed Ali
Founder, Remoteria
Syed Ali founded Remoteria after a decade building distributed teams across 4 continents. He has helped 500+ companies source, vet, onboard, and scale pre-vetted offshore talent in engineering, design, marketing, and operations.
- • 10+ years building distributed remote teams
- • 500+ successful offshore placements across US, UK, EU, and APAC
- • Specialist in offshore vetting and cross-timezone team integration
Last updated: April 12, 2026