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Why Indian Developers Are Undervalued Globally

Global clients still pay a premium for a US accent and a discount for an Indian one — this is real, observable, and frustrating. It is also actively being priced away, slowly, by engineers who refuse to play cheap. This post covers the four things that quietly raise your market rate (writing in public, case studies with numbers, saying no to under-market work, owning a specific niche), and why "undervalued" is a story we half tell ourselves and half get told. Nobody negotiates on your behalf.

Siddharth PuriFebruary 14, 20268 min read
India Tech Reality

Why Indian Developers Are Undervalued Globally

February 14, 2026 · 8 min read · Siddharth Puri

Global clients still pay a premium for a US accent and a discount for an Indian one. This is real, observable, and frustrating. It is also slowly being priced away, engineer by engineer, by the Indian engineers who have decided to stop accepting the discount. This post is about how the ones who raised their own rates did it.

The undervaluation is part real, part learned

Part of the gap is genuine. Some clients have had bad experiences with cheap offshore work and apply that stereotype to every Indian engineer they meet. This is unfair and sticky.

But a significant chunk of the gap is a story we tell ourselves. We accept lower rates because "that's the market," we take on low-paid work because "we can't get anything better," we compete on price because "that's what clients want from India." None of these is required. All of them are habits.

Nobody negotiates on your behalf. The market pays whatever you and your peers let it. That is the hardest thing to accept and the most important.

What quietly raises your rate

I have watched Indian engineers 2x–5x their rates in 18 months, doing the same quality of work. Every single case involved the same four things, in some combination.

  • Writing in public — one blog post is worth ten resumes. One technical thread on Twitter is worth twenty cold emails
  • Case studies with numbers, not adjectives — "I improved conversion by 24%" beats "I improved the UX"
  • Saying no to work below your bar — even when scary, especially when scary
  • Owning a niche: "I ship fintech dashboards for Series A US startups," not "I do full-stack"

Writing in public, specifically

This is the single highest-leverage move an Indian engineer can make in 2026. Post about your work. Write technical threads on Twitter. Publish case studies on LinkedIn. Start a blog. It does not need to go viral — it needs to exist.

When a client Googles you and finds nothing, you are a cheap offshore resource. When they Google you and find three well-reasoned posts on the exact problem they are trying to solve, you are an expert. Same engineer. Completely different pricing conversation.

Case studies, specifically

Most Indian engineers' portfolios list technologies: "React, Node, AWS, Python." This is a resume, not a portfolio. It competes on commodity skills.

A great portfolio entry looks like: "Client X was losing 30% of users in onboarding. I redesigned the flow, shipped in 4 weeks, measured the result. Conversion improved 24%, revenue impact $400k ARR. Here is the before/after." That entry is worth ten resumes.

Keep receipts of your work. Not just what you built, but what it produced. Ask clients for metrics you can publish (with their permission). Build a library of these over two years. Your pricing power will feel different.

Saying no — the hardest one

If you are currently taking work at $20/hr because it is the only work coming in, raising your rate to $50/hr means you will probably have a dry month or two while new clients come in at the new rate. That is terrifying. Most engineers will not endure it, which is exactly why most engineers stay at $20/hr.

The ones who make the jump usually save 2–3 months of runway, then say no once, then again, then again. Within a quarter, new clients start arriving at the new rate because the market adjusts to whatever you consistently hold out for. But the first quarter is scary.

The niche question

"Full-stack developer" is a race to the bottom. Millions of full-stack developers exist; the cheapest one wins. "The person who ships Stripe-integrated fintech dashboards for US early-stage B2B SaaS" is a category with maybe 20 people globally. If that is you, you charge what you want.

Your niche should be a problem, not a technology. "React developer" is a technology. "The person US founders hire to ship onboarding flows in 3 weeks" is a problem-niche. Problems pay better than technologies because problems are urgent and technologies are commoditised.

What changes at the individual level changes at the national level

If enough Indian engineers charge global rates, "Indian engineer discount" stops being a coherent story in clients' heads. This has already started happening in top-tier pockets. The stereotype is slowly eroding because a growing number of individual engineers are refusing to fit it.

You cannot fix the narrative for everyone. You can fix it for yourself. Enough "yourselves" will fix it for everyone.

Nobody negotiates on your behalf. The market pays whatever you and your peers let it.
All postsSiddharth Puri

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