Remote Interpreter Salary
Remote interpreter jobs: the U.S. median pay for this role is $59k per year (BLS, 2024). RemoteFront is tracking 68 open remote roles right now — refreshed hourly from 20,000+ company career pages, no recruiter spam.
Remote interpreter salary
The median pay for a interpreter in the U.S. is $59k per year as of 2024. This is base pay across all U.S. employers and settings.
Projected U.S. employment outlook (2024–2034): Slower than average (1% to 2%).
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (Interpreters and Translators), 2024. Remote-specific pay can differ; see live postings above for current openings.
Core knowledge & skills for remote interpreters
The domain areas this role is built on.
Who's hiring remote interpreters
Experience mix across 68 open remote interpreter roles.
How to become a remote interpreter
Considerable preparation — most roles require a four-year bachelor's degree plus several years of related experience.
Projected change in U.S. employment for this occupation, per the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Top companies hiring remote interpreters
Frequently asked questions
How much do remote interpreters make?
The median pay for a interpreter in the U.S. is about $59k per year (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2024). This is base pay only — it excludes bonus, commission, and equity.
What companies are hiring remote interpreters?
Companies hiring remote interpreters right now include contactlinksolutions, Language Services Associates, DOLATEL, oneworldglobalservices, Tildesia, among others. RemoteFront pulls every listing straight from company career pages, so the employer list reflects who's actually hiring today.
What skills do you need for a remote interpreter job?
Core knowledge areas for a interpreter include Foreign Language, Customer and Personal Service, Public Safety and Security, Law and Government, Computers and Electronics, Communications and Media (per the U.S. Department of Labor's O*NET). Employers also value clear written communication and the self-direction remote work requires.
How do you become a remote interpreter?
Most remote interpreters have a bachelor's degree. Considerable preparation — most roles require a four-year bachelor's degree plus several years of related experience. U.S. employment in this field is projected to be slower than average through 2034. Remote roles otherwise follow the same path as in-person ones — the difference is where you work, not the qualifications.
What experience level do remote interpreter jobs require?
46% of open remote interpreter roles are mid level-level, but the feed spans entry through lead — filter by seniority to match your experience.
Can you really work as a interpreter remotely?
Yes. RemoteFront currently tracks 68 open remote interpreter roles, every one pulled from a real company career page and refreshed hourly as of July 2026.
How do I find legitimate remote interpreter jobs?
Every remote interpreter job on RemoteFront comes straight from a verified company career page — no reposts, no recruiter spam, no scams. Browse the latest above, or save a search to get new roles the moment they post.
Wage and career data: median wages from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics); occupation outlook and skills from O*NET 30.3 by the U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration, used under CC BY 4.0. RemoteFront adapted the source data (mapped to roles, summarized, and reformatted).







