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Coder

Coder is a software platform that enables enterprises to run developer workspaces on centralized infrastructure, typically in Kubernetes or other cloud environments.

  • Remote development environment platform for running cloud-hosted workspaces.
  • Centralized management of developer workspaces, images, resources, and policies.
  • Integration with source control systems, container registries, and existing Continuous Integration and Continuous Deployment (CI/CD) pipelines.
  • Support for running Integrated Development Environments (IDEs) and development tools via browser-based or connected local clients.
  • Focus on enterprise deployment models, including self-hosted installations and Infrastructure-as-Code (IaC) workflows.

More About Coder

Coder provides a platform for enterprises that want to move software development environments from individual laptops to centrally managed infrastructure. The platform is generally deployed into an organization’s Kubernetes clusters or other cloud compute environments and provisions container-based development workspaces on demand. Each workspace can be configured with specific resources, base images, tools, and permissions that align with team or project requirements.

The platform is used by infrastructure, platform, and Developer Experience (DevEx) teams to standardize how development environments are created, updated, and secured. Instead of each developer manually configuring their own machine, Coder defines workspaces through templates that can be versioned and managed using IaC practices, often using tools such as Terraform or similar workflows. This approach allows consistent configuration of runtimes, SDKs, language versions, and internal tooling across distributed teams.

From an architectural perspective, Coder typically relies on Kubernetes (cloud DevOps) or comparable orchestrators for compute isolation and scheduling, with workspaces delivered as containers or similar runtime units. Connectivity to developer tools is provided through browser-based interfaces or through agents that connect remote workspaces to local IDEs. The platform integrates with authentication and authorization systems, enterprise network controls, and existing DevOps tooling so that workspaces can access source code repositories, package registries, artifact stores, and internal services.

Coder’s capabilities are aligned with categories such as remote development environments, cloud Immutable Deployment Environment (IDE) enablement, and Internal Developer Platform (IDP) tooling (developer productivity / platform engineering). It sits alongside or complements CI/CD systems, observability platforms, and code hosting services rather than replacing them. Organizations use Coder to centralize environment lifecycle management, apply consistent security policies, and allocate compute resources according to role, team, or project.

In enterprise and institutional settings, Coder is positioned as a self-hosted platform that can be integrated into existing cloud accounts, private data centers, or hybrid environments. The product is relevant to teams that manage regulated or sensitive codebases, need centralized governance over development infrastructure, or support globally distributed engineering teams. By mapping workspace definitions to templates and policy controls, Coder supports repeatable environment provisioning and alignment with corporate standards for security, networking, and compliance.

At-A-Glance

  • Employees: 30
  • Estimated Annual Revenue: $1M-$10M

Connect

Corporate Headquarters

9901 Brodie Lane
160 1212
Austin, TX 78748

Market Segmentation

  • Type: Private
  • Sector: Information Technology
  • Group: Software & Services
  • Industry: Internet Software & Services
  • Sub-Industry: Internet Software & Services