How much can a developer really make on DataAnnotation?
Last reviewed June 2026 · ~5 min read
Short version: as a developer your hourly rate is good — commonly $40–$75+/hr on coding projects — but your monthly total depends entirely on how many hours of work are available to you, which varies week to week. Here's a realistic way to think about it instead of trusting a single headline number.
The hourly rate
Pay is per project. Coding and technical projects are the top tier (reported around $40–$75+/hr, higher for specialized work), while general non-coding tasks sit closer to $14–$20/hr. As an experienced developer, the whole point is to qualify for the coding projects and skip the low-paid general work. Full breakdown on the pay page.
The part nobody mentions: hours available
The variable that actually determines your income isn't the rate — it's how much work is in your queue. Some weeks there are several coding projects you qualify for; other weeks it's quiet. So a realistic monthly figure is a range, not a salary:
| Hours/month you find | At ~$45/hr | At ~$60/hr |
|---|---|---|
| 10 hrs (light week here and there) | ~$450 | ~$600 |
| 30 hrs (a few hours a week) | ~$1,350 | ~$1,800 |
| 60 hrs (serious part-time) | ~$2,700 | ~$3,600 |
Illustrative math, not a promise. Availability fluctuates and isn't guaranteed; treat this as flexible side income.
How to push your number up
- Qualify for coding projects first — that's the single biggest lever on your rate.
- Check in often so you catch high-paying projects before they fill.
- Do careful, correct work — quality contributors tend to get access to more and better projects.
- Use your strongest languages but stay flexible; more languages = more eligible projects.
See what you'd qualify for
You can't see available projects or rates until you're accepted, and signing up is free. Create your account and take the assessment.
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