Hire Offshore UI/UX Designers for New York Businesses
Save up to 70% on ui/ux designer costs. Pre-vetted candidates in your timezone, onboarded in 2 weeks.
Key facts
- Starting price
- $2200/month full-time
- New York mid-level benchmark
- $115,000/year
- Estimated savings
- 74% vs New York 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 UI/UX designer in about 2 weeks through Remoteria, starting from $2,200 per month for a full-time dedicated product designer. Offshore UI/UX designers run user research and discovery, build wireframes and interactive prototypes in Figma, design pixel-accurate high-fidelity mocks with interaction specs, maintain your design system and token library, and run remote usability tests with real users through Maze and UserTesting. They work with 4–6 hours of real-time overlap for design reviews, communicate fluently in written and spoken English, and typically save US businesses 60–70% compared to a local product designer at $95,000 per year. Every candidate we shortlist shows a portfolio of 3+ shipped products for US or European clients, completes a paid test brief on a flow you assign, and walks through their design process and handoff approach during the final interview. Onboarding begins with a product audit, persona review, and first user flows in week one. By week two your designer is shipping high-fidelity mocks. By month two they own the design system, run usability testing sprints, and pair directly with engineers in Figma Dev Mode through the full handoff.
UI/UX Designer salary: New York vs. offshore
In New York, a ui/ux designer earns an average of $120,833 per year according to the BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics — New York-Newark-Jersey City Metro (SOC 15-1255). An equivalent offshore hire averages $32,200 per year — a savings of $88,633 annually (73% lower).
| Experience level | New York (BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics) | Offshore | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Junior | $80,500 | $21,600 | $58,900 |
| Mid-level | $115,000 | $30,000 | $85,000 |
| Senior | $167,000 | $45,000 | $122,000 |
US salary data: BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics — New York-Newark-Jersey City Metro (SOC 15-1255). Offshore figures based on Remoteria placements.
Why New York businesses hire offshore ui/ux designers
New York City is the most expensive labor market in the United States. A full-time executive assistant in Manhattan earns around $82,000 per year before benefits, and mid-level SaaS operators frequently cross $110,000. For a 50-person startup, a single offshore VA can free up 40 hours a week of founder time for less than the cost of a downtown parking spot. Finance, media, legal, and fast-growing tech startups in Brooklyn and SoHo are the biggest users of offshore support in the metro — usually because the alternative is paying New York-grade salaries for work that does not require a New York-grade hire. The pressure has only grown since 2023: Manhattan co-working desks at WeWork or Industrious in Midtown South now start above $500/month, and Class A office leases in Hudson Yards run north of $90 per square foot. The city's densest hiring clusters each apply their own pressure on operational headcount. Financial services anchored in the Financial District and Midtown set total-comp benchmarks that even small RIAs cannot ignore, since every junior analyst eventually fields a JPMorgan or Goldman recruiter call. Media and advertising in the Flatiron and Hudson Square districts demand fast-turn production support but cannot match Condé Nast or WPP retention budgets. The technology and SaaS scene in DUMBO, Williamsburg, and the Flatiron District lost hundreds of mid-level engineers and PMs through the 2023–2024 ad-tech and crypto reset, and the firms that survived now hire offshore for the operational tier that used to be funded by ZIRP-era runway. Layer that on top of New York State payroll taxes and the MTA commuter mobility tax, and the math against unnecessary in-office hires is brutal in 2025. Most NYC operators now treat any back-office role that does not require physical presence as a candidate for offshore staffing from day one rather than as an experiment.
Top New York industries
- • Financial services
- • Media and publishing
- • Advertising and marketing
- • Legal services
- • Real estate
- • Technology and SaaS
Major New York employers
- • JPMorgan Chase
- • Citigroup
- • Goldman Sachs
- • IBM
- • Verizon
- • NYU Langone Health
Timezone: America/New_York (ET). Most offshore hires can overlap 4–6 hours of your NYC workday, typically 9am–3pm ET.
Top New York companies competing for ui/ux designers
Offshore hiring is most valuable where local competition for this role is intense. In New York, the following major employers drive up local salary benchmarks and make in-house ui/ux designer hires harder to close:
JPMorgan Chase
Headquartered in Manhattan with more than 60,000 NYC-area employees, JPMorgan Chase is the wage anchor for any operations, compliance, or analytics role in the city. Mid-market fintechs, RIAs, and brokers across Midtown and the Financial District constantly lose talent to its bonus structure, which pushes the rest of the market toward offshore hires for client services, KYC support, and reconciliation work.
Goldman Sachs
Goldman's lower Manhattan headquarters and 200 West Street footprint set the comp ceiling for trading support, quant ops, and analyst roles across NYC. Smaller hedge funds, family offices, and capital introduction firms in Tribeca and Midtown East routinely turn to offshore back office and analyst support to avoid losing year-over-year margin to Wall Street salary inflation.
IBM
With its long-standing Armonk headquarters and a meaningful Manhattan engineering footprint, IBM employs thousands of cloud, AI, and consulting professionals across the metro. Smaller NYC SaaS startups in Brooklyn's DUMBO and Manhattan's Flatiron district routinely build offshore engineering and project management teams to compete for the same skill set without paying IBM-grade compensation.
What an offshore ui/ux designer does
User research & discovery
- • Run stakeholder and user interviews to map jobs-to-be-done and failure modes
- • Build personas, journey maps, and service blueprints in FigJam or Miro
- • Audit your existing product for friction and document findings with screenshots
Wireframing & prototyping
- • Sketch low-fidelity wireframes that explore multiple flow options before committing
- • Build interactive Figma prototypes with variants, auto layout, and conditional logic
- • Run clickable prototype reviews with product, engineering, and real users
High-fidelity UI & interactions
- • Design pixel-accurate screens aligned to your brand, type scale, and color tokens
- • Specify motion and micro-interactions with Lottie, Protopie, or Figma smart animate
- • Cover every state: empty, loading, error, hover, focus, disabled, and success
Design system maintenance
- • Maintain Figma libraries with components, variants, tokens, and documentation
- • Sync tokens to code through Tokens Studio, Style Dictionary, or direct Tailwind config
- • Run audits to flag off-system colors, fonts, and spacing across historical files
Usability testing & handoff
- • Script and run moderated and unmoderated usability tests in Maze and UserTesting
- • Hand off to engineers through Figma Dev Mode with spacing, color, and component specs
- • Annotate edge cases, copy, and accessibility notes directly on the designs
Tools and technologies
- Figma
- FigJam
- Framer
- Sketch
- Adobe XD
- Maze
- UserTesting
- Miro
- Notion
- Protopie
- Lottie
- Zeplin
What to expect
- 1. Week 1: Product audit, persona review, competitive teardowns, and first user flows sketched for review.
- 2. Week 2: First high-fidelity mocks shipped and handed off to engineering through Figma Dev Mode.
- 3. Week 3+: Full design sprint cadence with weekly reviews, prototype testing, and iteration cycles.
- 4. Month 2+: Design system ownership, usability testing program running monthly, and design QA on shipped features.
Pricing
Full-time offshore ui/ux designers start at $2200/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
How does the designer align with our existing brand and design system?
Week one is calibration. We ask you to share your Figma libraries, brand guidelines, logo files, and any hand-off examples from past work so the designer can study the type ramp, color tokens, spacing rhythm, and component patterns before drawing a single screen. If your design system is inconsistent or partially undocumented the designer will build a visual audit of the gaps and propose a plan to fix them. Most clients see their first branded high-fi mock by the end of week two, fully aligned to the existing system rather than in a different voice.
How do you organize Figma files so our team can actually find things?
Every project gets a standard Figma structure: a Library file for components and tokens, a Design file per product area, an Archive file for old explorations, and a Handoff file marked with branch names or sprint tags. Pages are labeled by status (Exploration, In Review, Approved, Shipped) and cover pages show the latest thumbnail. Designers use Figma branching when your plan supports it so your main file stays clean. We document the structure on a cover page so any new engineer or PM can find the current state of any flow in under 30 seconds.
How do designers hand off to engineers who are in a different timezone?
Through Figma Dev Mode with full annotations, component variants, and links to the design tokens the engineer should pull from code. Every handoff includes a short Loom video walkthrough of the interactions, edge cases, and motion specs so the engineer can start building without a live meeting. For complex flows we pair designers and engineers on a 30-minute Zoom during overlap hours to answer questions up front. Zeplin remains available for teams that prefer it.
Can you run usability tests with real users remotely?
Yes. We run unmoderated tests in Maze for prototype validation and moderated sessions in UserTesting or Lookback when we need to watch people think aloud. Recruiting happens through UserInterviews or your own customer list when available. A typical usability sprint covers 5–8 participants, ships a summary with clips and severity ratings, and feeds directly into the next design iteration. For high-stakes flows like checkout or onboarding we recommend a round before every major redesign.
How much does it cost to hire an offshore UI/UX designer and how fast can they start?
A full-time dedicated offshore UI/UX designer starts at $2,200 per month with Remoteria for a mid-level product designer, rising to $3,800 for senior designers who can own design systems and research programs. US-based product designers cost $90,000–$130,000 per year fully loaded, so you typically save 65–75%. Onboarding runs 10–14 business days: we shortlist 3 vetted candidates with portfolios in your niche within a week, you review samples and run the final interview, and your designer ships their first flows by day 10.
How does timezone work between New York and an offshore virtual assistant?
Your offshore VA typically overlaps your morning block, from about 9am ET to 3pm ET. That gives you live chat, inbox triage, and meeting support during your highest-leverage hours. Async tasks run outside that window and arrive complete by your next morning.
Do you work with New York startups and small businesses?
Yes. Most of our New York clients are 10–100 person teams in SaaS, fintech, media, and professional services. We price for founder-led companies and scale up as your headcount grows.
What is the fastest way for a New York business to start offshore hiring?
Book a 15-minute intro call, tell us the role and hours, and we shortlist 3 pre-vetted candidates within 5 business days. Most New York clients interview on day 6 and onboard on day 10.
How does offshore hiring compare to New York's local talent market?
New York has the deepest talent pool in the country, but it is also the most expensive and the most competitive. A mid-level operations hire in Manhattan now closes at $85,000–$110,000 base before benefits, and recruiting velocity is brutal: most New York candidates field 3–5 competing offers per cycle. Offshore hiring sidesteps that auction. You get a comparable skill profile in 5 business days for roughly 30 to 40 percent of the loaded NYC cost, and your retention rate climbs because you are no longer competing with JPMorgan and Goldman bonus pools every December.
Do New York businesses have any special requirements for offshore hires?
Offshore contractors are not US tax residents, so New York businesses do not withhold federal or New York State income tax, do not pay Social Security or Medicare, and do not file W-2s for these workers. The standard form is a W-8BEN collected at engagement (not a W-9, which is for US persons) and the relationship is governed by an independent contractor agreement. There is no New York City unincorporated business tax exposure for the contractor since they are working entirely outside the US. Most New York clients route payments through us so they never touch international wires or compliance paperwork 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