Coding bootcamps have been a mainstay in Silicon Valley for more than a decade. Now, as AI eliminates the kind of entry-level roles for which they trained people, they’re disappearing.
August 9, 202510:00 AM UTCUpdated ago
Illustration by Karolis Strautniekas
Jonathan Kim, a would-be U.S. software engineer, began his job search over 50 weeks ago, tracking his efforts on a spreadsheet. He applied for more than 600 software engineering jobs. Six companies replied. Two gave him a technical screening. None have made him an offer.
That was not the plan when Kim paid nearly $20,000 in 2023 for an intensive part-time coding bootcamp he thought would equip him to land a software engineering job.
“They sold a fake dream of a great job market,” said Kim, 29, who works at his uncle's ice cream shop in Los Angeles while continuing his job search. Without a college degree, he believes his chances are low, but boosts his resume by contributing to open-source software projects. “I see so much doom and gloom throughout everything,” he said. “It’s hard to stay positive.”
Coding bootcamps were already on their way out, but AI has been the nail in the coffin.
Allison Baum Gates
Kim decided to attend the coding bootcamp just as artificial intelligence chatbots like ChatGPT were taking off. By the time he graduated in 2024, AI — which started off with simple party tricks like writing poems — was on its way to reshaping the economy, with perhaps its most significant impact in coding. It began eliminating the kind of entry-level developer roles that bootcamps have traditionally filled, in what has been dubbed one of the fastest job shifts in any profession, ever.
Coding bootcamps have been a Silicon Valley mainstay for over a decade, offering an important pathway for non-traditional candidates to get six-figure engineering jobs. But coding bootcamp operators, students and investors tell Reuters that this path is rapidly disappearing, thanks in large part to AI.
“Coding bootcamps were already on their way out, but AI has been the nail in the coffin,” said Allison Baum Gates, a general partner at venture capital fund SemperVirens, who was an early employee at bootcamp pioneer General Assembly.
Gates said bootcamps were already in decline due to market saturation, evolving employer demand and market forces like growth in international hiring.
At the Codesmith bootcamp Kim attended, just 37% of students in the 2023 part-time program secured full-time technical jobs within six months of graduating, down from 83% in the second half of 2021, according to the Council on Integrity in Results Reporting, which aims to make education outcomes transparent.
Codesmith acknowledged the industry-wide challenges graduates face. "Today's market is tough," it told Reuters in a statement, while noting that it continues to offer lifetime hiring support to its alumni.
“This is the story of one graduate out of over 4,000,” the company said, adding that 70.1% of those enrolled in its full-time program secured in-field employment within a year of graduation.
It is unsurprising that coding is the prime example of generative AI's prowess. Unlike more subjective tasks like writing jokes, code either works or doesn't. This black-and-white distinction makes it the perfect subject matter for training AI models. In addition, a wealth of coding examples provides widely available training data.
With AI now excelling at coding, entry-level coding jobs have shrunk. Signalfire, a venture capital firm that tracks tech hiring, said in a May 2025 report that new grad hiring has dropped 50% from pre-pandemic levels in 2019. AI could wipe out half of all entry-level white-collar jobs in the next one to five years, Dario Amodei, CEO of AI developer Anthropic, recently told Axios.
Nowhere is that collapse more evident than in the coding bootcamp industry. Bootcamps began to appear around 2011 in the aftermath of the Great Recession. Demand for software engineers was growing, and many workers were eager to retrain for high-paying technology jobs.
Dev Bootcamp, launched in 2012, was among the first to offer courses on web development coding languages such as JavaScript and Ruby. In an intensive 19-week program, attendees would learn during the day and practice nights and weekends. Competitors soon emerged, and by 2018, in-person bootcamps in the U.S. and Canada had mushroomed to nearly 100.
I had some friends that went through a bootcamp that were able to find jobs, but that was during the golden era of 2020. Had my timing been better, I think the outcome would have been different.
Jonathan Kim
As companies started to embrace diversity hiring goals, they found partners such as the women's coding bootcamp Hackbright, said Michael Novati, co-founder of Formation Dev, which helps experienced engineers prepare for job interviews. Diversity hiring is no longer a priority for tech companies, he said.
While the entry-level software engineering job market has collapsed, the opposite is true for experienced AI researchers who create generative AI models and now command staggering pay packages, with bonuses up to $100 million a year, thanks to an escalating talent war driven by Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
AI company valuations are soaring as well, though their employee footprints remain small. Anysphere, the company behind coding tool Cursor, has a valuation of $10 billion and about 150 U.S.-based employees, according to its LinkedIn profile. OpenAI, with a few thousand employees, is valued at $300 billion.
Novati said this trend represents a return to the traditional model of recruiting primarily from elite universities, a system bootcamps were created to disrupt. The top-tier Silicon Valley companies are doubling down on these classic ideas of using signal from universities to vet the smartest people in society,” he said. “They’re sending their recruiters to MIT and Stanford and wining and dining the top students.”
Codesmith founder Will Sentence said he is changing the school's curriculum to meet the AI shift, including developing an AI technical leadership program to help mid-career software engineers learn to use AI.
For bootcamp graduates like Kim, this offers little comfort. He expects to continue working at the ice cream shop for the foreseeable future, and has expanded his job search beyond software engineering.
“I had some friends that went through a bootcamp that were able to find jobs, but that was during the golden era of 2020,” he said. “Had my timing been better, I think the outcome would have been different.”
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Editing by Yasmeen Serhan and Richard Chang; Illustration by Karolis Strautniekas
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Anna Tong is a correspondent for Reuters based in San Francisco, where she reports on the technology industry. She joined Reuters in 2023 after working at the San Francisco Standard as a data editor. Tong previously worked at technology startups as a product manager and at Google where she worked in user insights and helped run a call center. Tong graduated from Harvard University.
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