Tech Jobs for Africans: Remote vs. Relocation

Ruby

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Two years ago, I was staring at my laptop at 11 PM, trying to decide between a remote job offer from a Berlin startup or waiting for a relocation package to Canada. After six months of applying to over 150 positions, I suddenly had options but no idea which path was better.

Today, I want to share what I've learned from my own experience and from watching other African tech professionals navigate this same decision.

The Remote Work Reality​

The pandemic changed everything. Now, thousands of companies actively hire remote workers from Africa with competitive international salaries. I've seen Nigerian developers earning $60,000-$90,000 annually, Kenyan designers making €45,000-€65,000, and South African data scientists pulling in $70,000+.

What's Actually Good About Remote Work
Your money goes further here. My $75,000 remote salary gave me a lifestyle I could never afford in London. I bought a car within six months, moved to a nicer apartment, and still saved more than I would abroad.

I stayed close to family. Being here for my aging parents, family emergencies, and regular Sunday dinners matters more than I realized. There's also no visa anxiety or culture shock to deal with.

The Hidden Challenges Nobody Mentions
Infrastructure issues are constant. I've lost count of meetings rescheduled because of power outages or internet failures. I now have three backup internet solutions and a generator—which costs money.

The time zone difference is exhausting. UK hours are manageable, but US West Coast hours (6 PM to 2 AM) nearly destroyed my health and social life.

Career progression is slower. When promotions are discussed, remote workers in different time zones often get overlooked. Not intentionally, but it happens. The person grabbing coffee with the CEO gets remembered—you don't have that advantage.

Relocation: The Other Side​


My friend Chidi relocated to Berlin, and his experience taught me what relocation really involves beyond the Instagram posts.

The Real Advantages
Career acceleration is significantly faster. Chidi went from mid-level to senior engineer in 18 months—something that would've taken 3-4 years remotely. Being in the office meant challenging projects, direct mentorship, and visibility with decision-makers.

The networking is incomparable. He's now connected with CTOs, VCs, and engineers across Europe. These connections led to speaking opportunities and unsolicited job offers.

Infrastructure just works. Reliable electricity, fast internet, functional transport, efficient healthcare—the mental energy you save not managing these issues is significant.

The Honest Drawbacks
Cost of living shock is real. Chidi's €65,000 salary sounds amazing until €1,200 goes to rent, €300 to insurance, and €400 to groceries. After 35% taxes, his lifestyle isn't dramatically better than mine in Lagos, just different.

Loneliness is harder than expected. Making genuine friends is difficult. He goes months feeling like he doesn't truly belong anywhere.

Racism and microaggressions are constant. From being followed in stores to colleagues expressing "surprise" at his competence. It's exhausting.

You miss important family moments. Flights home cost €600-€1,200, and you can't just pop back for a weekend.
 

How to Actually Get These Jobs​

For Remote Positions:
I built a strong online presence through GitHub contributions, technical blog posts, and engaging in tech communities. Recruiters found me through these channels.

I used platforms like RemoteOK, We Work Remotely, and AngelList, targeting remote-first companies that already had international payment systems.

I started with contract work on Upwork. The pay was lower, but it gave me international experience and a UK reference that made the next job search easier.

For Relocation:
Target countries with tech talent shortages—Germany, Netherlands, Canada, and Australia have streamlined visa processes.

Build skills in high-demand areas like cloud engineering, cybersecurity, or machine learning. Companies sponsor visas more readily for specialized roles.

Network aggressively on LinkedIn. Optimize your profile, connect with recruiters, engage with company content. I've seen people get interviews purely from LinkedIn activity.

The Money Truth​

Remote from Nigeria earning $70,000: After taxes, you keep about $63,000 annually. Living on $2,500 monthly, you save $30,000-$36,000 yearly.

Relocated to Berlin earning €65,000: After 35% taxes, you take home €3,520 monthly. With expenses of €2,500, you save €12,000-€15,600 annually (about $13,000-$17,000).

You actually save more working remotely initially, but career growth accelerates faster with relocation.

Making Your Choice​

Choose remote if: You value family proximity, want to maximize short-term savings, have strong self-discipline, and can manage infrastructure challenges.

Choose relocation if: Career acceleration is your priority, you want long-term immigration options, you thrive on in-person collaboration, and can handle cultural adjustment.

My approach: I'm doing remote work now while building skills and savings, planning to relocate in 2-3 years. This gives me time to strengthen my profile and be selective about opportunities.

Start Today​

Update your LinkedIn profile with keywords from jobs you want. Build in public through blogs and open source. Get certifications in high-demand areas. Connect with Africans already working internationally.

Neither option is magic. Both require excellent skills, strong communication, and consistent effort. But if you're good at what you do, international opportunities can transform your career in ways that seemed impossible five years ago.

The question isn't whether you can access these opportunities—you can. It's whether you're willing to do the work to position yourself for them.