Ask HN: Why that many more US-based companies are hiring "US-only" remote?

14 soneca 10 5/27/2025, 9:26:32 PM
I recently got laid off and was going through the latest "Who is hiring".

I noticed that about 90% (guessing) of US-based companies that hire remote are hiring "(US only)".

I know there are plenty good reasons for a US company to hire US-only, I am only surprised because a few years ago (when I last was searching for a job), that was definitely not the case. "US-only" was the exception, not the rule. At least in the universe of companies that post on "Who is hiring".

What prompted the change?

Comments (10)

walterbell · 1d ago
Among other reasons, 2022 Section 174 tax changes require 15 years of depreciation for non-US software engineering ("R&D") expenses, vs 5 years for US workers, https://hn.algolia.com/?query=Section%20174. There's currently a proposal in Congress to restore US R&D tech worker salary depreciation to one year, for the 2026-2030 period.
muzani · 21h ago
What does this mean in practice? Wouldn't companies just jump through the bureaucratic hoop to hire people for a third of the prices?
walterbell · 20h ago
Does the company in question have cash flow for 15 years of advance tax payments?
paulcole · 17h ago
If someone in the US is 3x the price does the company in question have cash flow for 5 years of advance tax payments?
walterbell · 16h ago
If they are a startup on the "Who's Hiring" page, that depends on whether they have US investors.
paulcole · 9h ago
Huh?
csomar · 16h ago
You can't legally hire someone else not currently in the US or at least has a US-work permit and thus can be legally hired in the US and made a resident in some state. It used to be that the law turned a blind eye about this but now that's not the case.

You can Deel these employees but you can only transfer money abroad long enough till you realize that the only way to do it fully legally is to create a foreign entity in the foreign country and hire the employee through it. Might work for a particular and unique talent but it doesn't scale.

The US system is now hostile for "globally" distributed teams.

thuanao · 7h ago
They’re hired through outsourcing firms. The company pays the outsourcing firm as a subcontractor. It’s quite common, even amongst the Silicon Valley startups I work with.

My experience is that outsourcing has only accelerated since Covid made remote work commonplace. It never used to be a thing amongst trendy startups.

enceladus06 · 10h ago
W-8BEN and don't worry about it, there are larger problems tbh. Or if you can use it for tax minimization hire internally.
scarface_74 · 9h ago
Why hire internationally when you can hire someone remotely from the MiddleOfNowhere South Dakota that will happily work for peanuts and not have to deal with tax issues, time zones, etc?

Besides every opening for any remote job gets hundreds of applications within 24 hours. Most companies only need good enough CRUD developers. The market is flooded with unemployed “full stack developers”