For years, federal hiring followed a rigid formula. Degrees acted as gatekeepers. Experience defined eligibility. Salaries rarely compete with the private sector. Technology talent, in particular, remained scarce inside government systems built for another era.The Trump administration has now chosen to disrupt that structure. With the launch of the U.S. Tech Force, the federal government is rewriting its recruitment rulebook, opening high-paying technology roles to applicants without college degrees or formal experience, and signalling a deeper shift in how the state plans to rebuild its digital capacity according to a report by Fortune.
A federal role without traditional barriers
The Office of Personnel Management announced the initiative this week. The programme aims to recruit nearly 1,000 engineers, data scientists, and AI specialists. Each hire will serve a two-year term within federal agencies.Annual salaries are expected to range from $150,000 to $200,000. Most roles fall under the GS-13 and GS-14 classifications, placing fellows among the highest-paid technical professionals in government service.Applicants will be evaluated on demonstrated skills. Projects, certifications, and technical assessments will matter more than academic credentials. OPM has highlighted problem-solving ability and commitment to public service as core requirements.
Why the government is moving fast
The Tech Force emerges after a significant reduction in the federal workforce. About 260,000 employees exited government through buyouts, early retirements, and terminations. Technology-focused teams were disproportionately affected.The 18F digital consultancy was eliminated. Large parts of the US Digital Service were dismantled. Both units had played central roles in modernising federal systems.The new programme is framed as a reset. Leaner teams. Higher compensation. Sharper technical focus.
Where fellows will be deployed
Tech Force fellows will be placed across major departments, including Defence, Treasury, State, and Energy. Agencies such as the Internal Revenue Service and the Centres for Medicare and Medicaid Services are also included.Their assignments will centre on artificial intelligence implementation, application development, cybersecurity and data modernisation. OPM has described these areas as critical gaps.Applications opened this week through federal hiring channels. The first cohort is expected to begin service by March 2026.
Silicon Valley moves closer to the State
More than two dozen technology companies are partnering with the initiative. Participants include Amazon Web Services, Microsoft, Apple, Meta, Oracle, Palantir and xAI.The companies will provide training and mentorship. They have also committed to considering Tech Force alumni for roles once their government service ends.Some firms will nominate senior engineers to take temporary leave and serve directly in government. All fellows will be full-time federal employees during their term and subject to ethics regulations, though divestment of existing stock holdings will not be required.The programme is also working with the NobleReach Foundation, which has previously placed technical talent in public service roles across federal and state agencies.
Praise, doubts, and open questions
The administration has described Tech Force as unprecedented in its coordination, involving multiple agencies, budget authorities and science policy offices. Supporters view it as a necessary response to global competition in artificial intelligence.Critics have raised concerns about overlap with dismantled digital programs and potential conflicts of interest tied to private-sector partnerships. Those concerns remain part of the broader debate around the initiative.
A high-stakes experiment in state capacity
The White House has positioned Tech Force as central to preserving US leadership in artificial intelligence and advanced technology. It forms a key pillar of the administration’s AI Action Plan.Whether it succeeds will depend on execution. Government systems move slowly. Technology does not. For now, Tech Force stands as a bold attempt to bridge that divide and redefine who gets to build the modern American state.