Remote hits $300M ARR, credits AI for 50% jump in revenue per employee
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BitcoinWorld

Remote hits $300M ARR, credits AI for 50% jump in revenue per employee
Remote, the seven-year-old Amsterdam-based payroll services provider, has crossed $300 million in annual recurring revenue and reached cash-flow positive status. But the company says the more significant milestone is internal: a 50% increase in revenue per employee driven by widespread adoption of artificial intelligence across all departments.
AI adoption beyond the engineering team
CEO Job van der Voort told Bitcoin World that AI tools are now embedded in nearly every function at Remote, not just in the engineering or product teams. Employees across the organization have built internal applications on Remote Labs, an internal marketplace powered by the company’s own technology. Van der Voort described using multiple Claude instances simultaneously on his laptop to build tools for himself and the company, including a Slack agent that summarizes discussions and experiments with agentic AI.
The result: Remote is generating more revenue without adding headcount. The company says its core payroll business has grown more than 300% year over year, a figure van der Voort attributes largely to AI adoption, though the company has not provided independent verification of that specific number.
How Remote is scaling without hiring
Remote’s approach mirrors a broader trend in tech: using AI to restructure how companies scale. Instead of expanding headcount proportionally with revenue, Remote has deferred hiring plans in some departments and invested more in upskilling existing employees and increasing AI spending.
Van der Voort said the company has not cut jobs, but acknowledged that hiring plans in certain areas were scaled back. “What we’re doing now very actively is evaluating: ‘Do we actually need more people, or do we want to spend more time on upskilling the people that we have to use AI tools, and directly spending more money on AI?'”
AI-powered coding has also accelerated development. Van der Voort said the volume of code contributions from engineers has risen more than 60% over the last year, with more than 85% of all code now written by AI in the most recent month.
Opening AI capabilities to clients
Remote is now extending its internal AI capabilities to customers through Remote Build, a service that deploys engineers directly with clients and prospects to create custom workflows similar to those Remote uses internally. Van der Voort described these as “forward-deployed engineers” who help organizations implement AI-driven automation for payroll and compliance processes.
The company also recently launched Remote MCP, an interface based on the Model Context Protocol, which allows AI agents and external platforms like BambooHR and Workday to securely access payroll and compliance data. This enables clients to interact with Remote’s platform through natural language interfaces like ChatGPT or Claude, potentially bypassing the traditional user interface entirely.
“If you use ChatGPT or Claude, you can control all of Remote; if you really wanted to, you don’t have to interact with our platform anymore,” van der Voort said. “I think that’s where the future goes.”
Why this matters for the broader AI adoption debate
Remote’s trajectory provides one of the clearer data points yet in the ongoing conversation about AI’s real business impact. The company is not just using AI to move faster — it is using it to restructure how it scales. More revenue per employee, deferred hiring, and an expanding product surface area without proportional headcount growth is the operating model many companies are chasing.
Van der Voort also emphasized that Remote serves all types of businesses, not just remote or distributed workforces. The vast majority of its clients employ people in traditional office settings, he said. “We do payroll for everybody, period.”
While AI costs are rising, van der Voort said the company’s increased efficiency creates room to absorb those expenses. “Our spend on AI is increasing, but we keep track of it, so it’s something that we’re happy with; and because we become more efficient as a company, we have some space to spend that on AI and those initiatives.”
Conclusion
Remote’s financial and operational results offer a concrete example of how AI can reshape a company’s growth model. The startup’s focus on automating complex payroll and compliance workflows — rather than building an all-in-one HR platform — appears to be paying off as AI makes those processes more efficient. Whether other companies can replicate Remote’s results will depend on their ability to embed AI across their organizations, not just in isolated departments.
FAQs
Q1: How did Remote achieve a 50% increase in revenue per employee?
By adopting AI tools across all departments, including internal apps built on Remote Labs, AI-powered coding, and agentic AI assistants that automate repetitive tasks and improve productivity without adding headcount.
Q2: What is Remote Build?
Remote Build is a service that deploys engineers directly with clients and prospects to help them create custom AI-driven workflows for payroll and compliance, similar to the tools Remote uses internally.
Q3: Has Remote cut jobs due to AI adoption?
No. Van der Voort said the company has not laid off employees, but has scaled back hiring plans in some departments and shifted spending toward AI tools and upskilling existing staff.
This post Remote hits $300M ARR, credits AI for 50% jump in revenue per employee first appeared on BitcoinWorld.
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