2

Freelance Remote C Programming Jobs (NOW HIRING)

next page

Showing results 1-20

Freelance Remote C Programming information

See salary details

$11K

$117.4K

$178.5K

How much do freelance remote c programming jobs pay per year?

As of May 31, 2026, the average yearly pay for freelance remote c programming in the United States is $117,437.00, according to ZipRecruiter salary data. Most workers in this role earn between $95,000.00 and $156,000.00 per year, depending on experience, location, and employer.

What is the difference between Freelance Remote C Programming vs Freelance Remote C++ Development?

AspectFreelance Remote C ProgrammingFreelance Remote C++ Development
Required CredentialsKnowledge of C language, certifications optionalKnowledge of C++, certifications optional
Work EnvironmentRemote, project-basedRemote, project-based
Industry UsageEmbedded systems, system softwareGame development, software applications
Common Search IntentFinding freelance C programmersFinding freelance C++ developers

Freelance Remote C Programming focuses on projects requiring expertise in C language, often used in embedded systems and system software. Freelance Remote C++ Development involves C++ skills, typically for software applications and game development. While both roles are remote and project-based, they target different technical specializations and industry applications.

More about Freelance Remote C Programming jobs
What cities are hiring for Freelance Remote C Programming jobs? Cities with the most Freelance Remote C Programming job openings:
What are the most commonly searched types of Remote C Programming jobs? The most popular types of Remote C Programming jobs are:
What states have the most Freelance Remote C Programming jobs? States with the most job openings for Freelance Remote C Programming jobs include:
Infographic showing various Freelance Remote C Programming job openings in the United States as of May 2026, with employment types broken down into 14% As Needed, 43% Full Time, 14% Temporary, and 29% Contract. Highlights an 100% Remote job distribution, with an average salary of $117,437 per year, or $56.5 per hour.
Agentic AI Engineer (Freelance, Remote)

Agentic AI Engineer (Freelance, Remote)

Outlier AI

Philadelphia, PA • Remote

Full-time

This job post has expired 2 days ago. Applications are no longer accepted.


Job description

About the Project

Outlier helps the world’s most innovative companies improve their AI agents by providing human feedback. Do you want to shape the future of autonomous agents like OpenClaw?

We collaborate with leading AI organizations to train Large Language Models (LLMs) to function as proactive, multi-step agents. Our projects focus on teaching these systems how to design, coordinate, and optimize complex, real-world architectural workflows.

Whether you are a passionate orchestration guru or experienced software developer — we want you to help us train the world's most advanced generative systems.

Ideal Qualifications

  • 2+ years of experience in backend engineering, AI automation, or complex systems integration.
  • Proven ability to build and maintain production-grade software with modular separation (e.g., distinct services for data parsing, logic processing, and reporting).
  • Strong command of at least two major languages (e.g., Python, JavaScript, Go, or Java) and experience working with SQL databases.
  • Practical experience building for live, non-mocked environments and handling multi-turn system interactions.
  • Outstanding attention to detail and the ability to provide clear, high-density technical feedback on complex system behaviors.

Nice to have

  • Expertise building multi-stage coordination tasks where data acquisition leads to reasoned output.
  • Hands-on experience integrating agents with live tools such as Supabase, Gmail, and various APIs to solve real-world problems.
  • High level of comfort implementing persistent state and session discovery using MEMORY.md to track agent progress.
  • Experience identifying subtle failures like privacy leaks, authority escalation, or indirect prompt injections.