Dev Salaries in my Home Lithuania: Survey Results (Market Research)
Chapters11
The host explains the yearly poll, sample size, questions, and how earnings are reported after taxes.
Lithuanian developers earn about 1.6–4k EUR/month after tax, with juniors at ~1.6–1.7k and seniors near 4k, while AI reshapes expectations and the market tightens for top talent.
Summary
Laravel Daily’s video by Andrius surveys a decade of Lithuanian developer salaries, sharing a table of after-tax monthly earnings and how they’ve changed year over year. Andrius notes the sample is roughly 1,000 respondents across junior, mid, and senior levels, with biases due to a web-centric respondent pool. The main takeaways show juniors around 1.6–1.7k EUR/month after tax, mid-level around 2.5k, and seniors about 3.9–4k. He converts to USD for familiarity and discusses how Lithuania’s average wage compares—developers earn roughly 80% more, though the gap is narrowing as the economy rises. He highlights a notable 15% junior increase from last year, but cautions the numbers can be skewed by fewer junior applicants and inflated job titles. Andrius also delves into AI’s impact: productivity boosts, shifting expectations, and the risk of “AI v. code” quality debates, while managers push for faster delivery. He touches on job market mood—fewer postings and a growing preference for in-office work in Lithuania—and regions like Poland’s growing tech scene as a competitive reference. The discussion closes with reader engagement, inviting comparisons to other countries and reflections on long-term junior pipelines and market health.
Key Takeaways
- Junior developers in Lithuania earn about 1.6–1.7k EUR/month after tax.
- Mid-level developers earn around 2.5k EUR/month after tax.
- Senior developers earn roughly 3.9–4k EUR/month after tax.
- Over 11 years, the developer-pay gap versus Lithuania’s average wage remains large but is shrinking.
- Last year, junior salaries grew about 15%, though this is affected by smaller junior samples and title inflation.
- AI is both boosting productivity and raising management expectations, with debates on code quality and delivery speed.
- Lithuania’s salaries are perceived as catching up to Western Europe in some perspectives, with Poland emerging as a cheaper-but-active tech hub.
Who Is This For?
This is essential viewing for frontend, backend, and full-stack developers in Lithuania or nearby markets who want real-world salary benchmarks, and for managers or recruiters trying to calibrate offers in a changing AI-influenced landscape.
Notable Quotes
"Junior developers or people consider themselves junior earn about 1.6 1.7,000 per month."
—First concrete salary figure for juniors after tax.
"Senior level is at roughly 4K per month, maybe 3.9."
—Snapshot of senior-level earnings.
"We can also discuss the languages popularity in Lithuania."
—Mentions survey limitations and bias from respondent pool.
"AI sped up the work but didn't make it much easier."
—Key AI impact theme on productivity and expectations.
"Developers earn almost two times more like 80% more than average person in Lithuania."
—Salary gap vs. country’s average wage.
Questions This Video Answers
- How much do Lithuanian developers earn after taxes by level?
- Is Lithuania catching up to Western Europe in dev salaries?
- What is the impact of AI on salaries and productivity for developers in Lithuania?
- What are Lithuanian remote vs in-office work trends for tech roles?
- How has the junior salaries trend changed year over year in Lithuania?
Lithuania salary surveyDeveloper salaries after taxLithuania average wageAI impact on software developmentRemote vs in-office work LithuaniaPoland tech hubSalaries vs inflationSalary trend 11-year surveyEuropean developer salaries
Full Transcript
Hello guys, in this video let's talk about developers salary. Everyone likes to talk about money, especially someone else's money. So every year in my home Lithuania in the country of Baltics in central Europe, I make a poll, a survey for 11 years in a row where a thousand people roughly thousand people tell me how much they earn as developers. And then I compile this table that you see on the screen for now blurred out but I will show you that in a minute. And then I will discuss the numbers comparison against last year which means how salaries are growing comparison versus average salary of Lithuania as a country.
So you would understand is it a lot or not? And also there was a free form question what people think about the dev job market and trends. We will read summarize responses and the survey for the record was like this. Let me zoom that in. There were six questions. Anonymous survey with the questions. What language do you work with? What salaries do people get after taxes. This is Google translate so it didn't translate everything perfectly but people should give a number per month in euros after taxes. Then the Lithuanian city which is not relevant to you.
Then how do they consider themselves junior, mid or senior? How many years of programming do they have? This was just kind of a validation question so to speak and then free form question. Now let's see the numbers and discuss them. So this is the main table with the numbers open. This is again in euros per month after taxes. This is how we usually calculate salaries in Lithuania. I know in some countries they prefer per year or before taxes but in my case I serve it in a local way so people would know how much they earn after taxes.
Not everyone knows how much they earn before taxes because companies pay taxes for them. Anyway, what do we see here? Junior developers or people consider themselves junior earn about 1.6 1.7,000 per month. mid level is at around 2.5k euros. Also, many of you are familiar more familiar with USD. So, this is how much it's roughly in USD. So, like 20% more when euro is like 120 or $118. And now, if we go back to the table, senior level is at roughly 4K per month, maybe 3.9. We can also discuss the languages popularity in Lithuania. But this is kind of biased because I shared that survey in the web developer group on my Facebook local page and local group also LinkedIn.
So this is mostly web developers and also of course for some of the languages the number of respondents was too low to even get to some average conclusions and also some languages that were also mentioned but weren't enough to be on the table which is Scotland Ruby and others also the next obvious question is probably you don't know much about my country Lithuania so that 2.5k per month after taxes for mid-level is it enough to have a good lifestyle to afford stuff. So to compare with this is the website again translated with Google translate the average wage in Lithuania for all professions not developers.
The newest number is from 25 Q3 and this is the average salary again after taxes per month in the country. So you would say that developers earn almost two times more like 80% more than average person in Lithuania. And to be honest, that difference is shrinking. As I said, I'm making that survey for 11 years already. And over 11 years, I remember that the difference was more than twice, but the difference gets smaller. Developer salaries aren't growing as quick as the whole economy salaries and averages. Maybe it's the situation in my local country. I'm not sure.
We can of course discuss your regional situation. Now we can compare with the last year survey for example how much the salaries have grown and only on junior level it grew substantially 15% but this number is misleading because there were fewer juniors so 47 versus 59 last year and also I noticed that with fewer junior positions on the market the requirements are much higher especially in the age of AI and we'll talk about that when discussing the free form answers by people. So I would interpret that the level you should be at to get even hired as a junior is higher which means the salary could be potentially higher.
Also another interpretation is that companies name the position as junior developer but actually the level of work involved maybe not exactly junior but then the number that I do believe in more is midlevel plus 1% only inflation is roughly I don't know 4% I would guess and then that salary increase doesn't cover even the inflation and also the real estate prices locally in Lithuania have skyrocketed in recent years and they continue to grow which means that the real estate that these developers can afford is not the same as the last year and this is what I see and feel overall in the market that a lot of companies don't raise every like 10% as it used to be like a tradition every like December or every year when they renegotiate the salary or something like that doesn't happen as much except for senior level plus 9% is also I would believe to be realistic because for the best people for senior people these are the people that basically make the most money for the companies with their valuable work companies still value their work they don't have many seniors to choose from locally to be honest from what I understand so that's why they keep raising the rates for hiring and also raising salaries for the same people year after here.
And now let's read the answers. What do people say with free form question like this? I asked AI to compile the most interesting answers and quote by kind of separate topics. And the first topic is junior deaf crisis. And I do agree heavily that for juniors currently it's hard times. It's hard to find jobs. Juniors aren't needed. Maybe I mean it's not my words. I'm just reading what people say. juniors. These positions barely exist anymore and I see that on the market. The next trend discussed was salary stagnation. End of the golden age. Exactly as I told the salaries aren't growing as much.
And here are a few examples of people who actually told roughly similar in their own words even including returning to the same company and getting lower salary. Next topic let's talk about AI. the obvious kind of elephant in the room and some people claim it's a positive change. They produce roughly five times more boosted productivity and as a result my salary. For some cases, if you deliver more with AI, you may ask for bigger salary or the general value for the business is bigger, which means bigger profits for the business. And if the business is sensitive, they share some of that profit with their employees.
And also interesting twist, I can track more hours per day. This is probably for freelancers. So for the same amount of work, it gets done faster and then you can have different clients in parallel. This is on the edge of cheating in a way, but if the person manages to pull it off, something like that in ethical way, then I'm all for it. We're getting paid not for hours in the day typing, but actually for delivery of the result. But also with AI, there's another twist, another thing to talk about is push from management. So managers and company owners push.
They read the same news like we do online and they expect with AI that we as developers deliver more, deliver faster, do everything with AI. Sometimes on the edge of we need to push back to managers and tell them and convince them it's not that simple and AI doesn't always oneshot what they need. So as with everything, it's a spectrum and in different companies it happens in a different way. But I guess push for management is a real thing. In total, by the way, we have 12 sections here. Section number five is skepticism about AI and vibe coding.
This is probably the biggest group of developers complaining about AI slob and quality code delivered by AI or delivered by juniors using AI, including the fact that with AI, we lose the ability to think for ourselves, which is part of the overall problem. And this is probably the biggest problem with AI vibe coders and general AI solution which look good on the surface and they are offered cheaper for like €200 3000 per software unit. Let's put it this way. As a result, it's crashing the market and it's making the salary lower for probably better developers who invest in quality of software.
To be honest, it's not that different if we compare for example readym made scripts from code canyon or theme forest or something like that or WordPress solution which is like quick website for $50 or $100. So it's not really a new thing but with AI it just happened in more massive ways with more numbers. Okay, next with AI also but shift of the nature of work and I talked about that in one of the videos previously on this channel. So what we're doing as developers is shifting and will be shifting for better and for worse.
For some of you it's an interesting change and maybe preferred change because you are too lazy to write cruds by hand. So this is good. But also if you spend most of your time in the day reviewing the code, this is probably not what you signed up for when you became a developer. So more architects than a coders. This is probably cool because an architect can think about solution, think about orchestrator layer and then give LLM to perform the boring stuff. But in reality, it's not that sexy. Many developers are actually turning more into this something like PMs with technical skills.
So that was another group of answers. Let's get further from AI and let's talk about job market in general. Many people pointed out that there are generally fewer job offers. Recruiter attention has dropped, fewer postings, job market completely unfavorable to candidates. These are words from totally different people. It may be not the overall trend, but I would agree to at least some extent. And also remote positions. Not sure. It's probably depending on the country but at least in Lithuania I noticed that majority of the companies now demand in office at least half of the week.
The next group of answer is the difference between junior and senior. For seniors who are really good it may be better. So good programmers are 2x or even 10x better and bad ones are not necessarily worse but let's put it on the same level or 10% better with AI. So this is another kind of angle but the gap between strongest and the rest of the market is growing and that's why partially senior level salaries aren't shrinking aren't stopping they are still growing. Then the next group of answer kind of about the same thing but from different angle.
Rising expectations from management to be done is expected 5 to 10x for the same salary which is probably summarized by this one. AI sped up the work but didn't make it much easier. Also some people have some existential threats and philosophical thoughts like where do we go from here? Will there be still programmers writing code by hand in a few years or in a few years will no longer be needed? In my personal opinion, developers will still be needed because developers are architects for the final product solution to the market and writing code is just a part of that.
I recently retweeted this thought by Jason Frerieded, founder of Basec Camp, that the last 20% is actually all of the work and this will be the differentiator between someone vip coding and releasing some sloppy or average quality software which AI can help with and the companies the product makers who would be the best in the market with useful and usable and maintainable software that will still be different level in my opinion and this is where real developers will always be needed. It's just a question of what those developers will actually do every day. And finally, two more answer groups kind of repeating in a way junior pipeline long-term risk.
So, if we don't grow juniors now, who will maintain the solutions in the future? For now, I don't have the answer, but a few people are worried about that. And then about local Lithuania, some people concluded that actually Lithuania caught up to Western Europe in terms of salaries. So our salaries are similar even to Germany or sometimes UK. And if we compare the cost of living for example in Berlin or London, this is uncomparable. So it's a good country to live in to be honest in 2026 especially the capital and also interesting kind of twist on the market.
So from Poland, people are hired for cheaper and Poland is becoming hottest tech hub. I didn't expect Poland to be mentioned in that survey, but yeah, people have spoken. So yeah, a lot of numbers, a lot of things that people told me. Now it's your turn. Let's go into the comments and let's discuss all of that. What is your opinion? This is just one country, but is it similar to trend in your country or worldwide in terms of developer salary and the growth? Let's discuss in the comments below. That's it for this time and see you guys in other videos.
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