The 5 best sites for finding a remote job in 2026
It’s that time again. The calendar has flipped, the resolutions are written, and you’re probably sitting in your office chair at your office desk looking at a lukewarm cup of office coffee, wondering if you’ve really got another year of fluorescent lights and “serendipitous” coworker interactions in you.
Let’s make a pact: No more. It’s time to find a great remote job.
Unfortunately, you can’t find 21st-century work using 20th-century methods. If you’re still scrolling through the generic “Big Box” job boards and getting buried in 5,000 applications for one role, you’re doing it wrong.
Instead, here are the five sites you should check first when you’re looking to work from home.
We Work Remotely
We Work Remotely is the “Old Reliable” of the remote world. It’s been around since 2011, which in internet years makes it roughly as ancient as a stone tablet. But it’s still the heavyweight champion.
It’s simple. There’s no bloat. You get a clean list of categories, and the jobs are actually remote. Because companies that post listings here pay a fee, you’re far less likely to run into the pages and pages of filler that plagues the free boards.
FlexJobs
I know, I know: It’s a subscription service. Asking someone who’s looking for a paycheck to pay money feels a little backward.
But here’s the thing: FlexJobs has an army of humans who hand-screen every single job posting.
If you’re tired of clicking on a “Work from Home” ad only to realize it’s a pyramid scheme or a high-pressure sales gig, this is your sanctuary. They filter out the junk so you don’t have to.
Remote OK
If We Work Remotely is the elder statesman, Remote OK is the cool, tech-savvy younger sibling. The entire vibe is built for people who want to work from a laptop, whether that’s in their living room or a café halfway around the world.
The site’s filters are fantastic. You can sort by salary ranges (yes, actual numbers!), tech stacks, and even benefits such as health insurance or four-day workweeks. It’s fast, transparent, and updated constantly.
Remote.co
Remote.co was started by the same team behind FlexJobs, but while FlexJobs is a paid, curated list, Remote.co is a free, high-quality resource that goes beyond just job titles.
One nice feature: They don’t just list a job; they interview the companies. You can read Q&As from more than 100 remote-first outfits to see how they actually handle things like time zones and communication.
It’s perfect for job seekers who want to know the vibe of a company before they even hit the apply button.
Working Nomads
If your dream is to emphasize the “remote” part of remote work, this is your home base.
Working Nomads curates roles specifically for the digital nomad crowd, meaning these companies are usually comfortable with you working from pretty much anywhere on the map.
The categorization is incredibly clean, and the site uses a color-coded system for different industries, making it very easy to scan. It also has a premium tier with 10 times more listings and advanced search filters. And its daily email alerts are a great way to stay in the loop without having to constantly check the site.