Reinforcement Learning Jobs
44 Reinforcement Learning jobs currently listed
Browse 44 open positions that require Reinforcement Learning experience. Every listing includes the full tech stack, language requirements, remote policy, and salary data, so you can filter with confidence instead of guessing from job descriptions.
What you'll find here
Each job includes structured data from the original posting. You can see exactly which technologies are required vs. nice-to-have, whether the role is remote-friendly, and what salary range to expect, all without reading through pages of job descriptions.
DeepL Posted 6 months ago Open for 180+ days
Senior Staff Research Scientist
Cologne, Germany - English
Machine Learning Reinforcement Learning RLHF LLM Deep Learning +1
Proxima Posted 25 months ago Open for 776+ days
AI Scientist
Zurich, Switzerland - English
PyTorch Machine Learning Deep Learning Generative AI LLM +2
Rai Posted 30 months ago Open for 913+ days
Research Scientist (Zurich Location)
Zurich, Switzerland - English
Reinforcement Learning Imitation Learning Machine Learning LLM Vision Language Models
Everlast Media GmbH
Robotics Software Engineer - Vollzeit (m/w/d)
Neu-Ulm, Germany - English
C++ Python ROS ROS2 TensorFlow +1
Frequently Asked Questions
- There are currently 44 open positions that list Reinforcement Learning as a required skill. This number updates daily as new jobs are posted.
- We analyze every job description to identify the specific technologies mentioned. We distinguish between technologies that are required, nice-to-have, or explicitly not used, so you get an accurate picture of each role's tech stack.
- Yes. Jobdex supports negative filtering, which lets you exclude specific technologies from your search. For example, you can find Reinforcement Learning jobs that don't use a particular framework or language.
- When a company includes salary in their job posting, we use that directly. Otherwise, we parse salary information from the job description. Each salary figure gets a confidence score. High-confidence data is shown prominently, while less certain figures are clearly marked.