Devlyn AI · React · Proptech
React engineering for Proptech. Shipped at 4× pace.
Deploy a senior React pod that understands Proptech compliance natively. One retainer. Embedded in your team in 24 hours.
The intersection
Operating React in Proptech is not just a syntax problem — it is an architectural and compliance challenge.
React pods typically ship product UIs with complex multi-step workflows and conditional rendering pipelines, admin dashboards with real-time data tables and chart visualisations, marketing sites and landing pages through Next.js or Remix with SSR and ISR strategies, real-time collaborative interfaces using WebSocket or CRDT-backed state synchronisation, and design-system implementations with component libraries published as shared packages across multiple products. Devlyn engineers ship React with TypeScript strict mode, Tailwind CSS with design-token systems, shadcn/ui or Radix primitives for accessible component foundations, TanStack Query for server-state management with optimistic updates, and Zustand or Redux Toolkit for client-state — with Storybook-driven component development and Playwright visual-regression tests as standard workflow.
AI-augmented React workflows lean on Cursor and Claude Code for component scaffolding including prop-type definitions, hook patterns with proper dependency arrays, accessible ARIA attribute generation, responsive Tailwind class composition, and integration-test stub generation — all under senior validation that owns design-system architecture decisions, bundle-size performance budgets, SSR and hydration correctness, render-count profiling, and accessibility compliance. Compression shows up strongest in design-system component buildouts (buttons, modals, data-tables, form fields), API integration glue code with loading and error boundary patterns, and test-suite scaffolding across unit, integration, and visual regression layers.
Where this pod lands today
Browse how this exact React and Proptech combination maps to different talent markets.
React · Proptech · New York
React for Proptech in New York
The most common 2026 proptech engineering trap is shipping tenant-screening or listing-recommendation logic without fair-housing algorithmic-bias review, creating HUD enforcement exposure that can result in significant penalties and reputational damage. React pods compress the work — react pods typically ship product uis with complex multi-step workflows and conditional rendering pipelines, admin dashboards with real-time data tables and chart visualisations, marketing sites and landing pages through next. On the Eastern (ET) calendar, fte-only paths to scale engineering in nyc routinely run 2–3 quarters behind the roadmap.
Read the full brief →
React · Proptech · San Francisco
React for Proptech in San Francisco
The most common 2026 proptech engineering trap is shipping tenant-screening or listing-recommendation logic without fair-housing algorithmic-bias review, creating HUD enforcement exposure that can result in significant penalties and reputational damage. React pods compress the work — react pods typically ship product uis with complex multi-step workflows and conditional rendering pipelines, admin dashboards with real-time data tables and chart visualisations, marketing sites and landing pages through next. On the Pacific (PT) calendar, fte hiring in sf has slowed structurally since 2024 layoffs but compensation expectations have not.
Read the full brief →
React · Proptech · Los Angeles
React for Proptech in Los Angeles
The most common 2026 proptech engineering trap is shipping tenant-screening or listing-recommendation logic without fair-housing algorithmic-bias review, creating HUD enforcement exposure that can result in significant penalties and reputational damage. React pods compress the work — react pods typically ship product uis with complex multi-step workflows and conditional rendering pipelines, admin dashboards with real-time data tables and chart visualisations, marketing sites and landing pages through next. On the Pacific (PT) calendar, la's hiring funnel competes with sf for senior talent at lower compensation envelopes.
Read the full brief →
React · Proptech · Boston
React for Proptech in Boston
The most common 2026 proptech engineering trap is shipping tenant-screening or listing-recommendation logic without fair-housing algorithmic-bias review, creating HUD enforcement exposure that can result in significant penalties and reputational damage. React pods compress the work — react pods typically ship product uis with complex multi-step workflows and conditional rendering pipelines, admin dashboards with real-time data tables and chart visualisations, marketing sites and landing pages through next. On the Eastern (ET) calendar, boston fte pipelines run 4–6 months for senior backend roles.
Read the full brief →
React · Proptech · Chicago
React for Proptech in Chicago
The most common 2026 proptech engineering trap is shipping tenant-screening or listing-recommendation logic without fair-housing algorithmic-bias review, creating HUD enforcement exposure that can result in significant penalties and reputational damage. React pods compress the work — react pods typically ship product uis with complex multi-step workflows and conditional rendering pipelines, admin dashboards with real-time data tables and chart visualisations, marketing sites and landing pages through next. On the Central (CT) calendar, chicago fte hiring runs 3–5 months for senior roles with reasonable base salaries vs coast hubs.
Read the full brief →
React · Proptech · Seattle
React for Proptech in Seattle
The most common 2026 proptech engineering trap is shipping tenant-screening or listing-recommendation logic without fair-housing algorithmic-bias review, creating HUD enforcement exposure that can result in significant penalties and reputational damage. React pods compress the work — react pods typically ship product uis with complex multi-step workflows and conditional rendering pipelines, admin dashboards with real-time data tables and chart visualisations, marketing sites and landing pages through next. On the Pacific (PT) calendar, seattle fte pipelines compete with faang-tier salaries that startup budgets cannot match.
Read the full brief →
Common questions
-
Why hire a React pod specifically for Proptech?
Because React in Proptech requires specific architectural patterns. undefined Devlyn's pods bring both the deep React ecosystem knowledge and the Proptech regulatory context on day one.
-
What does the React pod own end-to-end?
Architecture, security review, and the React-specific patterns that production-grade work requires. React pods typically ship product UIs with complex multi-step workflows and conditional rendering pipelines, admin dashboards with real-time data tables and chart visualisations, marketing sites and landing pages through Next.js or Remix with SSR and ISR strategies, real-time collaborative interfaces using WebSocket or CRDT-backed state synchronisation, and design-system implementations with component libraries published as shared packages across multiple products. Devlyn engineers ship React with TypeScript strict mode, Tailwind CSS with design-token systems, shadcn/ui or Radix primitives for accessible component foundations, TanStack Query for server-state management with optimistic updates, and Zustand or Redux Toolkit for client-state — with Storybook-driven component development and Playwright visual-regression tests as standard workflow.
-
How do AI-augmented workflows help in Proptech?
AI-augmented React workflows lean on Cursor and Claude Code for component scaffolding including prop-type definitions, hook patterns with proper dependency arrays, accessible ARIA attribute generation, responsive Tailwind class composition, and integration-test stub generation — all under senior validation that owns design-system architecture decisions, bundle-size performance budgets, SSR and hydration correctness, render-count profiling, and accessibility compliance. Compression shows up strongest in design-system component buildouts (buttons, modals, data-tables, form fields), API integration glue code with loading and error boundary patterns, and test-suite scaffolding across unit, integration, and visual regression layers. In Proptech, this compression is particularly valuable for accelerating The most common 2026 proptech engineering trap is shipping tenant-screening or listing-recommendation logic without fair-housing algorithmic-bias review, creating HUD enforcement exposure that can result in significant penalties and reputational damage. Second is smart-building integration fragility where IoT sensor failures or firmware updates break building-automation workflows. Devlyn pods design with fair-housing bias testing in the CI/CD pipeline and IoT resilience patterns from week one. without compromising the compliance posture.
-
What is the typical shape of this engagement?
React engagements at Devlyn typically run as one senior frontend engineer plus a designer-friendly tooling lead for $4,000–$7,500/month, covering component architecture, design-system implementation, and API integration. This scales to a two- or three-engineer pod when the roadmap demands parallel ownership across complex client-state management, real-time collaboration features, data-visualisation dashboards, or multi-app design-system packages. Pods share a single retainer with flexible allocation across lanes. undefined
Scope the work
If your Proptech roadmap is shaped, book a 30-minute discovery call. We will validate if a React pod is the right fit, and if not, what shape is.