Counterpart Health

Healthcare

UXEngineer

$157–205k United States FULL TIME Remote Friendly
Market Sentiment
HIGH DEMAND

Neural analysis suggests this role is
optimal for Mid+ candidates.

The Brief

“UX Engineer at Counterpart Health. Skills: Design systems, UI primitives, Interaction patterns. Own and evolve design system. Build and maintain reusable UI primitives”

Industry & Context.

Healthcare

What They're Looking For.

Must Have

Advanced frontend engineering expertise, Experience shipping production UI, Experience working with design systems, Experience with component libraries at scale, High design fluency, Attention to interaction detail, Attention to usability, Attention to accessibility, Attention to visual quality

Nice to Have

Experience working in AI-enabled development environments, Leveraging AI-assisted tools to accelerate workflows

What You'll Do.

Own and evolve design system

Build and maintain reusable UI primitives

Build and maintain interaction patterns

Manage frontend UX technical debt

Resolve inconsistencies

Conduct coded prototyping

Improve experience quality

Improve experience consistency

Partner closely with Design

Partner closely with Product

Reduce downstream rework

Contribute production-quality code

Collaborate on system-level decisions

How You'll Work.

Team & Collaboration

Bridge between Design; Bridge between Product; Bridge between Frontend Engineering; Cross-functional teams

Full Job Description

At Counterpart Health, we are transforming healthcare and improving patient care with our innovative primary care tool, Counterpart Assistant. By supporting Primary Care Physicians (PCPs), we are able to deliver improved outcomes for patients at a lower cost through early diagnosis and longitudinal care management of chronic conditions. We are hiring a UX Engineer to own and evolve our design system and shared UI patterns, enabling faster, more consistent product development across teams. This role sits within Engineering and operates as a bridge between Design, Product, and Frontend Engineering. The UX Engineer ensures that design intent translates cleanly into production by building and maintaining high-quality, reusable UI primitives, components, and interaction patterns. A core focus of the role is enabling designers and product teams to leverage reliable, production-aligned building blocks rather than creating bespoke solutions. As a UX Engineer, you will: Own and evolve the design system as a product, including components, patterns, and usage standards. Build and maintain reusable UI primitives and interaction patterns that scale across teams. Proactively manage frontend UX-related technical debt, resolving quality gaps and inconsistencies that slow development. Conduct coded prototyping for complex workflows using synthetic or mock data, especially for data-dense or AI-enabled experiences. Improve experience quality and consistency across motion, responsive behavior, and mobile contexts. Partner closely with Design and Product during discovery to validate feasibility and reduce downstream rework. Act as the interface between design intent and frontend implementation, resolving ambiguity and aligning on constraints. Contribute production-quality code and collaborate with engineering on system-level frontend decisions. You should get in touch if: You have Advanced frontend engineering expertise (React, TypeScript, Tailwind, Storybook), and experience shipping p

Free ATS check

Applying for this UX Engineer role?

Most applicants get filtered before a human reads their resume. See if yours makes the cut.

How to Apply on Greenhouse

  • Create a Greenhouse profile before applying — it saves time across multiple applications.
  • Upload your resume as a PDF; the parser handles it better than Word.
  • Answer all knockout questions carefully — wrong answers auto-reject before a human sees you.
  • Enable email notifications to track application status in real time.

ANONYMOUS · UNFILTERED

What do employees actually say about Counterpart Health?

Real rants from real employees. Read before you apply.

Read Company Rants →