Most college students spend their summers fetching coffee and sitting in on meetings they were not invited to. Palantir (PLTR) has a different idea.
The data analytics company just posted openings for its Forward Deployed Software Engineer internship program, offering $10,000 a month to students still working toward their degrees. That works out to $120,000 annualized, a figure that rivals what many full-time engineers earn at smaller tech firms.
The postings, shared on Palantir's X account and its careers page, are aimed at students planning to graduate in 2026 and looking for their final internship before entering the workforce full-time.
What the Palantir student internship actually involves
The Forward Deployed Software Engineer, or FDSE, is one of Palantir's most distinctive positions. Unlike a traditional intern who works on internal side projects, FDSEs work directly with customers to solve live operational problems.
According to the job posting, interns in this role will own end-to-end execution of high-stakes projects with minimal supervision. They may spend one morning discussing software architecture with engineers and the next speaking directly with a customer contact or wrangling large-scale datasets.
More Palantir
The work spans Palantir's two flagship platforms.
Gotham serves defense and intelligence agencies, helping them plan operations and process real-time data. Foundry is the enterprise version, used by companies in health care, finance, and energy to build AI-driven data pipelines. Interns will be contributing to both.
What type of interns is Palantir looking for?
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Planning to graduate in 2026, with this as the student's final internship
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Background in computer science, mathematics, software engineering, physics, or data science
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Proficiency in Python, Java, C++, TypeScript, or similar languages
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Willingness to travel 25 to 50 percent of the time
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Ability to work independently and solve technical problems creatively
Why Palantir is paying interns this much
The $10,000 monthly figure is not a mistake or a marketing gimmick. It reflects where Palantir sits in the AI talent market right now.
The company has been expanding aggressively. It has struck major partnerships with defense contractors, energy firms, and government agencies in recent months, and it needs engineers who can hit the ground running.
Paying internship wages that match full-time salaries at other companies is one way to pull top students away from Google, Meta, and Wall Street trading firms before they ever sign an offer letter somewhere else.