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Belitsoft Shares IT Outsourcing Cost Guide for 2026

The Belitsoft custom software development company reports: while cost savings continue to be the main driver of IT outsourcing, recent industry analyses highlight how talent shortages and geopolitical changes are altering strategies. “Cost is generally the main consideration,” according to a TechRepublic summary of an outsourcing study, but some businesses are returning to outsourcing due to factors such as international tensions. For example, a lack of talent was cited by nearly 70% of IT executives as the reason they were outsourcing more, with some choosing domestic or nearshore providers despite higher costs. Similar to how they did with data centers in previous years, TechCrunch notes that CIOs are squeezing every last efficiency out of cloud and outsourcing contracts as they tighten their budgets. Outsourcing is no longer just about finding the cheapest offshore labor.

Cost Savings and Market Drivers

The appeal of outsourcing still depends on labor-cost arbitrage, but actual savings often fall short of the lofty expectations. The average hourly rate for developers in the US can be more than $150 to $200, even though offshore rates are much lower. One guide, for example, compares the hourly wage of a Canadian developer at about $160 to that of an Eastern European developer at about $60. According to a survey cited by TechRepublic, sales pitches promising to “save 50-70%” through outsourcing are deceptive because the majority of successful outsourcing projects only result in savings of 10-25% on the overall project cost. In conclusion, even though offshore or nearshore teams can drastically undercut onshore rates (TechRepublic reports up to 70% lower labor costs overseas), ancillary costs reduce savings.

Despite this, the global scale of outsourcing continues to grow. Large corporations lead the trend: for example, ISG research indicates that 92% of Forbes Global 2000 companies outsource IT operations. The drivers remain a mix of cost, talent access, and speed: Deloitte’s Outsourcing Survey finds that while cost reduction is still key, “skilled talent and agility join cost reduction as key drivers for outsourcing”. In short, business leaders outsource not only to save money, but also to quickly acquire scarce skills or ramp capacity on demand.

Regional Rate Differences

Location-specific outsourcing costs differ significantly. Onshore (U.S./Western Europe) developers command the highest rates, usually between $100 and $200 per hour in the U.S., while nearshore and offshore markets are much less expensive. According to TechRepublic’s analysis, developer rates are between $18 and $25 per hour in India, between $25 and $40 per hour in Eastern Europe, between $40 and $55 per hour in Latin America, and between $100 and $200 per hour in the United States. (In fact, according to the Harvard Business Review, a U.S. developer’s fully loaded costs can average well over $100k/year). In contrast to $60 per hour in Eastern Europe, a Canadian developer makes $160 per hour. The cost advantage of outsourcing is based on these gaps.

However, proximity and communication are reshaping this calculus. A growing number of American businesses are nearshoring to Latin America, where labor costs are higher than in South/Southeast Asia but time zones and communication are more compatible. In the meantime, Western Europe continues to find Eastern Europe (such as Poland and Romania) appealing due to their high STEM education rates, which are frequently half of those of Western Europe. However, the spread is narrowing as general wages in Europe are also increasing. (According to one UK analysis, the average hourly rate for UK developers is between £30 and £40, which results in app projects costing tens of thousands of pounds.) According to one outsourcing trend report, CIOs now prioritize vendors who can provide quick response, security, and overlap hours even if their rates are slightly higher. “Low cost” alone is no longer the top priority. In conclusion, location selection now strikes a balance between cost and cooperation.

Hidden Costs and ROI

When comparing costs, many hidden factors need to be considered. Analysts warn that onboarding, management, and inefficiencies often undermine projected savings. For example, TechRepublic reports that internal teams may see a 20% drop in productivity during the first two years of an outsourcing contract as staff members get used to new processes and cultures. There are “evaluation costs” (time spent selecting and screening vendors), “cultural costs” (overcoming language and procedural barriers), “transition costs” (dual staffing during handover), and managerial overhead. Until these are overcome, organizations typically see little to no cost benefit. As one long-time analyst put it, outsourcing only works financially if the provider can do the job “for less money” than the company itself – otherwise it’s not worth it.

According to empirical research, pure labor arbitrage rarely results in significant cost reductions, but the majority of IT functions achieve cost parity or modest savings through outsourcing. According to a Computer Economics survey, the average success rate for maintaining or cutting costs through outsourcing is roughly 74% for 11 common IT functions. (Here, “success” refers to the outsourced cost being on par with or less than the internal cost.) To put it another way, about 75% of outsourcing agreements achieve their cost goals. Help-desk outsourcing (91% success rate) and desktop support (83%), where sophisticated service models and scale yield the largest savings, stand out. In more complex domains like systems integration (62%) and application development (69%), lower cost success is observed. In actuality, companies often find savings in routine operations, but they have to make greater investments in governance and management if they are outsourcing core development work.

Executives’ Strategic Notes

For both startup founders and enterprise CIOs, the choice to outsource should be in line with the strategy. For a long time, the Harvard Business Review has recommended that businesses consider outsourcing for “commodity” IT tasks that do not offer strategic differentiation. While more generic or repetitive tasks can be safely offloaded, functions that are essential to the product or customer experience might be better kept in-house, despite the higher cost. Additionally, executives need to understand that contemporary outsourcing is more than just transactional. According to McKinsey, astute businesses are requesting “digital outsourcing” agreements that involve co-creating solutions with robust service-level guarantees rather than merely assigning work at a set price.

According to a McKinsey study, a telco that merged several outsourcing providers and concentrated on results was able to reduce operating costs by 60%, but only after reorganizing the contract around shared accountability and automation. This demonstrates the importance of the contract model and governance choice: switching to gain-sharing or outcome-based models can result in significant cost savings and innovation.

Metrics and frameworks are widely used by executives to guide their decisions. According to reports from Deloitte and Gartner, modern outsourcing strategies prioritize value and speed-to-market in addition to cost. Startup executives who want to develop MVPs quickly may be willing to pay a premium for quick delivery and skilled offshore teams; on the other hand, CFOs of large companies may insist on strict KPIs in order to increase ROI. In reality, more complex priorities are revealed by the most recent surveys. For instance, after years of digital transformation, companies are balancing multidimensional sourcing – combining in-house, outsourced, and even AI workers – according to a recent Deloitte survey. While cost reduction is still important, quality and agility now take center stage.

Key takeaways for managing outsourcing cost:

  • Analyze total engagement cost. Don’t focus only on hourly rates. Include transition, training, supervision, and possible rework in the total cost of engagement (TCE).
  • Projects should be matched to locations. For clearly defined, low-risk projects (such as maintenance or help desk), where high skill is not essential, use offshore or nearshore teams. To reduce hidden costs associated with time zones and communication, think about using domestic or nearshore vendors for core development. In order to balance cost and service, analytics even point to a definite trend toward nearshoring in Latin America and Eastern Europe.
  • Keep an eye on service and quality. Studies reveal that while outsourcing frequently results in cost savings, if it is not controlled, service quality may suffer. Strict SLAs and quality checkpoints should be included in contracts (GitHub’s Copilot teams now pay up to 40% less for the same work, but this is only possible when tasks are clearly defined). Learn from computer economics, which defines success on both cost and service levels, and use KPIs to gauge performance.
  • Budget for the expenses of collaboration. Build in buffer time and support for the initial ramp-up phase; expect the first few months to produce limited cost relief. Harvard Business Review cautions that evaluation and ramp-up may eliminate savings in the early years. Efficiencies won’t build up until processes stabilize.
  • Continue to be strategic. Reevaluate whether the outsourced work should continue in this manner on a regular basis. The best course of action may change if business circumstances or technological requirements change (as one CTO pointed out, sometimes clients are better off forming their own team once scale changes).

In conclusion, IT outsourcing can only provide substantial financial benefits under certain circumstances and with appropriate management. According to recent data, 75-85% of outsourcing agreements meet their intended cost or service goals, suggesting a generally positive outcome; however, risk is highlighted in the remaining quarter. In these uncertain times (inflation, geopolitical shifts), some companies are even returning to onshore or blended models. The lesson for both startup founders and corporate CIOs is that outsourcing must be done carefully: whenever possible, use international talent markets to cut costs, but always take the whole cost picture into account. As one Deloitte report notes, the future of outsourcing is value-driven, not just cost-driven. Outsourcing is still a potent tool in a competitive labor market and rapidly evolving technology landscape, but its true “cost” is only apparent when all trade-offs and savings are taken into consideration.

About the Author:

About the Author

Dmitry Baraishuk is a partner and Chief Innovation Officer at a software development company Belitsoft (a Noventiq company). He has been leading a department specializing in custom software development for 20 years. The department has hundreds of successful projects in AI software development, healthcare and finance IT consulting, application modernization, cloud migration, data analytics implementation, and more for startups and enterprises in the US, UK, and Canada.

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