The Bangladesh pitch, and where it actually holds up
You've probably seen the deck. Lower rates than India, a young population, a million-plus freelancers, English in the office. Some of that is real. Some of it is a 2019 slide that nobody updated. If you're a CTO or a procurement lead deciding whether to stand up a delivery team in Dhaka, the question isn't "is Bangladesh cheap" (it is) but "what am I actually trading away for the saving."
The market context first, because it sets your leverage. Bangladesh's broader IT sector reached an estimated $9.44 billion in 2026 and is projected to hit $12.78 billion by 2031. The IT services slice specifically is tracking toward $789 million in 2026 and around $1.4 billion by 2029, growing at roughly 15 to 20 percent a year. The country has over a million active freelancers, which makes it the world's seventh-largest freelancing market. So the talent is there. The trick is sourcing it without getting burned on the parts of the pitch that quietly stopped being true.
Related reading: Pakistan's AI Upskilling Wave in 2026: A B2B Buyer's Guide to Training Vendors · Sri Lanka as an IT-BPO Destination in 2026: A Cost and Rate Guide for Enterprise Buyers · The Philippines IT-BPM Sector and GenAI Upskilling in 2026.
The talent paradox you need to price in
This is the single most useful thing to understand about Bangladesh in 2026, and most vendor decks skip it. The entry-level market is flooded. Senior talent is scarce. Universities push out tens of thousands of CS graduates a year, so junior developers are abundant and cheap. But senior and specialised roles in AI, machine learning, cybersecurity, and DevOps are critically short, because the people who reach that level often leave for higher pay abroad or go full-time freelance for Western clients directly.
What that does to your engagement: a Dhaka vendor can staff a ten-person team in two weeks if you need mid and junior engineers. Ask for two senior cloud architects and a security lead, and the same vendor will stall, sub-contract, or quietly assign someone who's "senior" by local title but has three years of experience. Write your seniority definitions into the statement of work. Define "senior" by years, by a specific tech depth, and by a screening call your side runs, not theirs.
Who the credible vendors are
Names worth knowing, because a market with 295-plus firms needs a shortlist. Brain Station 23, Kaz Software, DataSoft, Tiger IT, and Enosis Solutions are among the better-known established players, and the industry body BASIS (Bangladesh Association of Software and Information Services) is a reasonable first filter for vetting whether a shop is real. None of this replaces your own due diligence. It just tells you the firm has been around long enough to have a reputation to protect.
One pattern I'd watch for: a lot of the strongest Bangladeshi engineers have gone independent. So the best individual talent isn't always inside the big vendors. If your model can absorb managed freelancers (through a vetted platform with contracts and IP assignment handled), you sometimes get better people than a mid-tier agency would put on your account. That's a real option in Bangladesh in a way it isn't everywhere.
What it costs
Blended hourly rates, mid-2026, for dedicated developers working with overseas clients:
| Role | Hourly (USD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Junior developer | $15–22 | Abundant supply, easy to staff |
| Mid-level developer | $22–35 | The sweet spot for value |
| Senior / specialist (AI, security, DevOps) | $40–65 | Scarce; expect delays and competition |
| Tech lead / architect | $55–80 | Often the binding constraint on a team |
For comparison, the mid-level rate is roughly half of typical Indian Tier-1 vendor rates and a fraction of nearshore Europe. The saving is real. It's just concentrated at the junior and mid bands, which is exactly where supply is deepest. The moment your project is senior-heavy, the cost advantage narrows and the staffing risk climbs.
So what's the catch?
Three things the rate card won't show you.
First, infrastructure and political risk. The 2024 internet shutdowns were not a one-off scare for the outsourcing industry; they're a live reason to insist on a documented business-continuity plan, ideally with a secondary location or remote-failover arrangement. Ask the vendor what happened to their delivery during the 2024 disruptions and what changed afterward. The honest ones have a real answer.
Second, tax and policy uncertainty has made some firms cautious about long-horizon hiring, which can show up as thinner bench depth than they advertise. Third, time zone. Bangladesh Standard Time is six hours ahead of UTC, which is fine for Europe and a workable few-hours overlap for the US East Coast morning, but brutal for US West Coast real-time collaboration. Decide early whether you need overlap hours or can run async.
How to structure the first engagement
Start with a paid trial sprint, not a twelve-month contract. Two to four weeks, a real scoped deliverable, your acceptance criteria. You learn more about a vendor from one missed standup and how they handle it than from any sales call. Keep IP assignment and source-control access on your terms from day one, not bolted on after the relationship warms up.
My honest read: Bangladesh is a strong choice for mid-weight product and maintenance work where you bring the senior architecture yourself and use Dhaka to scale execution. It's a riskier bet if you're trying to outsource the hard senior thinking, because that's the exact talent the country is losing. Buy where the supply is deep. Keep the scarce roles close.