When US contractor rates rise and vendor performance gets inconsistent, procurement teams tend to face the same two directives at once: cut costs and consolidate vendors. Those goals often pull in opposite directions. Nearshore staffing is one of the few sourcing strategies that helps with both.
Latin America has become one of the fastest-growing IT talent markets in the world. The question most vendor managers are asking now is whether a nearshore partner can actually operate inside their existing Vendor Management System (VMS) environment without creating more work.
It can. But the fit depends on a few things worth understanding first.
Most vendor management programs were designed for a different market. The assumption was that a managed panel of staffing suppliers, combined with a VMS to track spend and submissions, would keep quality up and costs predictable.
That math still works in theory. In practice, a few things have changed.
IT employment in the US is projected to grow much faster than the average for all occupations through 2034. That demand is driving onshore contractor rates higher, and the increase is not spread evenly. According to CompTIA, the median U.S. tech salary hit $112,667 in 2024 (up nearly 8% in just one year) and more than double the national median. Factor in benefits, taxes, and staffing margins, and it’s not unusual for a domestic IT contractor to cost $100–$120 per hour.
Meanwhile, the vendor panels managing that spend have grown in size but not always in quality. Response times vary. Bill rates are inconsistently applied. SLA compliance differs from one supplier to the next, sometimes dramatically. Benchmarking becomes nearly impossible when vendors are not transparent about their pricing structures.
The result is a program that is technically managed but not really optimized.
What Contingent Workforce Management Actually Requires from a Vendor
Before evaluating any new sourcing strategy, it helps to be precise about what a vendor inside a managed program needs to do well.
Rate card compliance matters for budget predictability. SLA windows for submission turnaround matter for delivery speed. Compliance management, covering payroll, employer-of-record obligations, and applicable labor law, matters for risk exposure. And rate transparency matters for benchmarking.
Most procurement managers are not surprised by any of that. What surprises them is how rarely a single vendor covers all four consistently.
A nearshore partner that operates within a VMS environment handles all of these the same way a domestic vendor would. The difference is that their bill rates sit 40–60% below US-equivalent contractor rates, and their sourcing geography gives them access to a talent pool that is growing, not shrinking.
Schedule a call with the Fast Dolphin team.
Onshore vs. Nearshore: What the Rate Gap Looks Like by Role
US onshore vs. nearshore Latin America IT contractor rates across common roles, based on current market data and Fast Dolphin placement history.
| IT Role | US Rate ($/hr) | Nearshore Rate ($/hr) | Typical Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| DevOps Engineer | $85 – $130 | $35 – $65 | 40 – 60% |
| QA Automation Engineer | $75 – $110 | $30 – $55 | 40 – 55% |
| Cloud Engineer (AWS/Azure/GCP) | $90 – $140 | $40 – $70 | 40 – 55% |
| Salesforce Developer | $100 – $150 | $45 – $75 | 40 – 55% |
| Full-Stack Developer | $80 – $120 | $30 – $60 | 40 – 60% |
US rates sourced from the Dice Tech Salary Report. Nearshore rates reflect Fast Dolphin placement data.
Nearshore IT contractors from Mexico and Latin America consistently run 40–60% below US contractor rates across most technical roles. On a 4–8 person engagement, that gap compounds into six-figure annual savings without requiring any changes to the VMS workflow your team already uses.
“VMS-compatible” is not a high bar on paper. Most staffing firms can technically access a platform. What separates a vendor who fits cleanly into a managed program from one who creates friction is operational readiness, specifically what happens after a requisition drops.
A genuinely VMS-ready nearshore partner does three things without needing guidance:
Submits within your SLA windows. A 24–48 hour first submission target requires sourcing activity that starts before the req comes in. Fast Dolphin maintains that turnaround by running continuous sourcing within specific tech stacks, which means candidates are being evaluated before the requisition is formally opened.
Operates within your rate card structures. Rate card compliance is not negotiable inside a managed program. A quality nearshore vendor will tell you upfront if a role is outside a workable rate range rather than submitting overpriced candidates and hoping the margin holds.
Manages its own compliance layer. This includes payroll, employer-of-record obligations, and country-specific labor law requirements. For US clients working with Mexico-based IT professionals, United States-Mexico-Canada (USMCA) TN visa support is also part of that picture. Your organization should not carry compliance risk on behalf of your vendors’ contractors.
Nearshore IT staffing is a strong fit for most managed programs, but not every requisition.
It works well for roles that require close collaboration with US-based teams, positions where time zone overlap directly affects delivery, and multi-consultant engagements where per-hour savings compound meaningfully across a project timeline. DevOps, QA automation, cloud engineering, and software development consistently fall into this category. Those are also the roles where US contractor rates are climbing fastest, which is where the cost pressure is most acute.
It works less well for roles requiring active US security clearance, positions with specific state-level sourcing restrictions, or placements so short that onboarding time erodes the rate advantage.
Fast Dolphin has placed bilingual IT professionals for US teams for more than 21 years, across clients in financial services, healthcare, technology, and logistics. Eighty percent of those clients return with additional projects. That retention rate reflects something specific: the consultants placed through this model actually integrate with the teams they join.
Latin America is now one of the fastest-growing developer communities in the world, according to GitHub’s annual Octoverse report. The supply of skilled, English-proficient IT professionals in Mexico, Colombia, and Brazil is real and growing.
The cost savings get most of the attention in these conversations, and reasonably so. But the ROI case for nearshore sourcing in Latin America runs deeper than the hourly rate differential. How well a consultant integrates with a US-based team, how quickly they reach full productivity, and how long they stay on the engagement all factor into the actual return a client sees.
Those dynamics are worth understanding before you run the numbers. Computer Tech Reviews put together a solid breakdown of how US companies are thinking through the full ROI picture when evaluating Latin American nearshore talent, including the factors that tend to get underweighted in a rate-first analysis. Read the piece here.
Contacto and a member of the Fast Dolphin team will follow up within one business day.
Yes. An experienced nearshore partner operates directly through VMS platforms like SAP Fieldglass, Beeline, and IQNavigator. Candidate submissions, time tracking, and expense management all run through the system your team already uses. No parallel process, no manual workarounds.
Nearshore contractors from Mexico, Colombia, and Brazil work in time zones that overlap significantly with US business hours. Offshore talent in South or Southeast Asia often operates with a 10–12 hour gap, which breaks real-time collaboration. For teams running daily standups, sprint reviews, or paired development workflows, nearshore is consistently the better option.
The most common placements are DevOps Engineers, QA Automation Engineers, Cloud Engineers across AWS, Azure, and GCP, Salesforce Developers, Platform and SRE Engineers, and Full-Stack Developers. These are also the roles with the widest rate differential between US and nearshore, which is why they appear most often in vendor consolidation conversations.
A well-structured nearshore partner manages compliance on its side of the relationship. That means payroll, employer-of-record obligations, and applicable labor law in their country of operation. For US clients working with Mexico-based professionals, USMCA TN visas are an additional option that an experienced firm can support without adding burden to your team.
Fast Dolphin targets a 24–48 hour first submission on active requisitions and a 1–3 week time-to-fill for most IT roles. For context, equivalent US-sourced placements typically take 6–10 weeks from requisition to start. That speed difference matters on projects with fixed delivery timelines.