We all know what's coming.
AI is taking over all aspects of daily life, one step at a time.
Companies are adding AI integration to all of their products and requiring employees to learn how to use AI for work efficiency.
AI has become one of the most searched-for job types in the last year or two.
People in countries all over the world want to learn how to use AI to build their skills, get better jobs, and secure their future for the next big tech boom.
Here are some of the best AI job sites that let you work remotely in many different countries:
1. Welocalize
Countries: Dozens around the world
Welocalize specialises in translation, localisation and AI training‐data services. Their core business is helping global organisations adapt content (software, documentation, marketing, multimedia) across languages and cultures, and increasingly they provide “AI training datasets” (e.g., for multilingual models) alongside classic localisation services.
In terms of AI work, you’ll often find roles such as: human-annotated dataset contributor (e.g., native speakers to label/translate content), localisation tester (e.g., verifying UI translations, voice-over/AI-generated voice scripts), and language specialist for industry-specific AI applications (e.g., legal/medical). Their career site emphasises multilingual and cultural-expert roles.
2. Daily Transcription
Countries: Mostly native English-speaking like US, Canada, UK, etc.
DailyTranscription is a transcription and translation services company that focuses on converting audio/video content into text/subtitles for clients (including medical, legal, media).
While not strictly an “AI training” firm, the tasks align with human transcription work that might support AI models (e.g., captioning, subtitling). Their jobs typically include freelance transcriptionist, subtitler/captioner roles (requiring strong English listening/typing, familiarity with .srt/.scc files) for remote work.
One AI job I've seen here is the “AI Editor” which has you edit transcripts that were automatically generated by AI.
3. Telus Digital – AI Community
Countries: Dozens around the world
TELUS International offers a variety of digital business services, including AI data-services and crowd-/rater programmes. They support clients in training, evaluating and improving AI systems.
Typical roles include freelance remote crowd “raters” who evaluate AI output (for example rating accuracy of voice-to-text, image recognition, translation quality), or a “GenAI Solutions Engineer” type role managing parts of their rater/crowd programs.
4. Appen – CrowdGen
Countries: Dozens around the world
Appen is one of the larger players in AI training data. They collect, curate, fine-tune and monitor human-generated datasets across text, image, audio, video for machine-learning and AI applications.
For jobs, Appen offers independent-agent/freelancer roles like data annotators, human evaluators, internet research tasks, transcription/translation assignments, and in some cases more specialised analytics roles (depending on region). They emphasise flexible remote work for a global crowd.
5. DataAnnotation
Countries: US, Canada, UK, Ireland, New Zealand, Australia (more coming later?)
DataAnnotation is a third-party platform that advertises remote/“work-from-home” tasks aimed at training AI—“help train AI chatbots” and the like.
Typical work: flexible tasks where you choose when to work. These might include annotation of text/image/data, evaluating AI chatbot responses, or tagging/labeling content for model training. The nature is often micro-tasks or part-time remote.
6. Outlier
Countries: Dozens around the world
Outlier (sometimes styled Outlier AI) is a platform that connects subject-matter-experts with generative-AI training projects: tasks like generating training data, evaluating model output, domain-specific contributions.
Job types: “AI writing evaluator”, “AI mathematics teacher/expert”, “data specialist” (remote/freelance). Reports note project-based, variable availability: good for side gigs but not always stable full-time income.
7. RWS – TrainAI
Countries: Dozens around the world
RWS is a global company specialising in language services, translation/localisation, and AI data services (“TrainAI” community). They support large brands with trustworthy AI training-data and multilingual annotation.
Roles: remote freelance/contract “AI Data Specialist / Annotator / Evaluator” in various languages, evaluating search engine responses, AI model output, data annotation for specific languages or regions.
8. Neevo
Countries: Around 120 worldwide
Neevo is a crowdsourcing platform where companies submit tasks (text, audio, image, video) to improve their AI systems. As a contributor you complete “micro-tasks” when available.
Job types: very flexible (work when you want), tasks like checking transcriptions vs recordings, identifying people/objects in images, sorting images, validating AI outputs. Pay tends to be per task; availability may vary.
9. Prolific
Countries: Dozens around the world
Prolific is a bit different: it’s a research platform that connects researchers/A I developers with participants. On the “job” side for contributors, you take part in studies (surveys, experiments, sometimes labeling/annotation) for pay.
Roles available: you sign up as a participant (rather than staff) and choose tasks/studies you’re eligible for: these may help train or evaluate AI systems (for example human judgement of image outputs, survey about AI behaviour). It’s flexible, often light‐duty, and more like “paid research participation” than full-time job.
If you want more remote AI jobs like these, but want to narrow down your search to the ones with no experience required, check out this article: 7 Work From Home AI Training Jobs You Can Do With No Experience Required