Find TypeScript developer jobs with anonymous profiles.
New TypeScript jobs delivered to your inbox weekly. Free, no spam.
TypeScript has become the standard for building scalable, maintainable JavaScript applications with static type safety. As a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript code, TypeScript brings enterprise-level development capabilities to web applications. Companies hire TypeScript developers for frontend applications using React, Angular, or Vue, backend services with Node.js, and full-stack applications that benefit from end-to-end type safety. TypeScript developers work with advanced type system features, generics, utility types, and integration with modern build tools. The language's adoption by major frameworks makes it nearly universal in modern web development. TypeScript developer salaries range from $90k to $165k+ with senior full-stack engineers earning premium compensation. Organizations value TypeScript for improved code quality, better refactoring support, and enhanced IDE capabilities. The language's continued evolution with new features in each release keeps it at the forefront of web development. LeetHire enables TypeScript developers to demonstrate their technical expertise anonymously, letting companies evaluate your code rather than your background.
Learn JavaScript fundamentals first, then TypeScript. TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript, so understanding JavaScript concepts is essential. However, many modern projects start with TypeScript from day one, so learning both together is increasingly common.
TypeScript demand is extremely high. Most modern React, Angular, and Node.js projects use TypeScript, and it's becoming a standard requirement for frontend and full-stack positions at tech companies of all sizes.
TypeScript developers earn $90k to $165k+ annually. Full-stack TypeScript engineers with React and Node.js expertise typically earn $110k-$165k+, while frontend specialists range from $90k to $145k.
Companies prefer TypeScript for larger codebases because static typing catches bugs at compile time, improves code documentation, enables better refactoring, and enhances developer productivity through superior IDE support.