Climate & Environment Full-time

Senior Software Engineer, Full Stack

Kevala Inc

Location

Remote (US)

Type

Full-time

Posted

Jan 13, 2026

Compensation

USD 120000 – 160000

Mission

What you will drive

  • Collaborating with product and project managers to plan and develop product features in the Kevala K+ platform.
  • Diving into difficult problems facing the US electric grid such as helping to visualize and understand the impact of forecasted loads on the electric grid.
  • Working in our Google Cloud-based tech stack, which includes TypeScript, Svelte, Python, Django, Postgresql, Redis, and Kubernetes.
  • Providing technical leadership in architecting, maintaining, testing, monitoring, and improving front end web applications.
  • Setting a high bar for productivity, cooperation, and code quality as measured by the team’s overall output.
  • Helping to hire, mentor, develop, and support team members.

Impact

The difference you'll make

This role contributes to solving difficult problems facing the US electric grid, such as visualizing and understanding the impact of forecasted loads, which helps improve grid reliability and sustainability.

Profile

What makes you a great fit

  • 5+ years of experience building modern, framework-based web applications across the full stack from basic microservice operations to API design to front end application development.
  • Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science or equivalent practical experience.
  • Versatility and enthusiasm for taking on novel problems and learning new technologies.
  • Excellent communication and collaboration skills.

Benefits

What's in it for you

The compensation for this opportunity includes a base salary range of $120,000 - $160,000, plus equity (stock options). This is a fully remote role located anywhere within the United States.

About

Inside Kevala Inc

Kevala Inc works on platform development for the electric grid, focusing on features that help visualize and understand grid impacts, such as forecasted loads, to address challenges in the US electric system.