Y Combinator has a small ~12 person team that makes the software that runs YC. Hardly any investors write software, but YC was started by programmers so it's natural for us to solve our problems that way. We believe our software is a key competitive advantage and we are investing aggressively in new software products.
As a member of the software team, you'll get full access to the YC program, just like founders do. You'll learn the ins and outs of how YC works, and you'll get to follow and learn from hundreds of companies. You'll meet some of the most successful people in the startup world and get exposed to the best startup ideas. And of course, if you ever want to start your own company, you’ll learn a lot about that from working at YC.
Y Combinator is run by a small team that is committed to helping founders build their startup and make it take off like the next Airbnb, Stripe, Reddit or Doordash (all companies that previously went through YC).
While YC is primarily known for it’s batch program for founders, what’s lesser known is that we have our own small-but-mighty software team. We build tools to help run YC, as well as to help our founders have an unfair advantage — through our unparalleled founder network, expert advice from YC General Partners, exclusive funding opportunities, and much more.
Working at YC is a unique place to operating like a startup — talking to customers and shipping code rapidly — and also be surrounded and learning at the frontier of the new startup world.
About the role
While the software team itself is very small (~15 people), the impact of our software for our founders and for YC itself is quite massive. Some examples of the software you’d get to work on:
And despite all of this, we still feel like we’re just getting started. We have a lot of great ideas on every front to improve how YC operates and to bring tremendous value to our startups, and many of them are 🤫.
About the team
As a company, we largely abide by the same principles we teach our startups - so if you've read Paul Graham's essays or watched our videos on YouTube, you can already predict what it would be like to work here.
Many of our software teammates have worked at or started startups themselves, while also having experience from bigger companies like Meta and Google. This tends to be a good balance to know how to ship quickly, but also make strong product and technical decisions that don’t leave us with dead ends. True to YC advice, our product engineers talk to our customers regularly and ship fast. We also define our own roadmap and often design our own products when needed.
Our stack is pretty straightforward (Rails, React, Postgres), and the last three engineers have learned it on the job. That said, we’ve found that enjoying front-end software development is key to being successful here, so it’s almost a requirement for the role. Our needs as an organization require a large degree of flexibility, and people change teams quite often.
More and more, our founders are introducing AI in all they do — how they code, how their product works, and how they streamline their own operations. At YC, we’re similarly pushing the boundaries of how AI can improve our software and help our companies. We’re excited to share more in person — so please take a moment to apply. ;-)
Lastly: If you’re interested in starting your own startup one day: eight former engineers on our team have gone on to start YC-funded startups. If you want to start your own startup someday but aren’t ready to do it now, working at YC could be an excellent way to get there, provided you’re willing to be here for at least 2-3 years.
Location: This is an in-person role at YC's campus in Dogpatch, San Francisco. This is where our users (founders, partners, and employees) are five days a week, so it’s optimal for you to be here with them. You must live in the SF Bay Area or be willing to relocate. We offer generous relocation support for those who want to move to SF to work here.
Compensation: $180,000 to $270,000 base (depending on skills and experience) plus bonus.
Benefits : YC has a profit-sharing program, which is comparable to equity in an early-stage startup or carry in a VC fund.
Our full benefits package includes medical, vision, and dental plans, infertility benefit, STD/LTD, life insurance, commuter benefits, flexible spending account, health savings account, 401(k) + 4% matching, generous parental leave, paid holidays, and flexible paid time off policy.
Work Authorization: This position does not support work authorization/visa sponsorship.
Legal note: Y Combinator considers qualified applicants with criminal histories, consistent with applicable federal, state, and local law, including San Francisco’s Fair Chance Ordinance. Y Combinator is committed to protecting the privacy of the personal information of job applicants and complying with the California Consumer Privacy Act. The privacy policy of Ashby, Inc., the hiring platform used by Y Combinator, governs the collection of such data and can be found here.
The YC internal software is mostly written in Ruby on Rails and React. It runs on AWS and PostgreSQL. Previous experience developing web apps will be helpful, but we don't care if you've used React or Rails specifically.
Note: Hacker News is written in Lisp, but Hacker News is run by a separate team.
Our interview process includes:
We are able to go as fast as the candidate might need, and have extended (and had an offer accepted) in as few as 7 days.
fulltimeSan Francisco, CA, USFull stack$180K - $270K3+ years
fulltimeSan Francisco, CA, USFull stack$180K - $270K3+ years