Back to Blog
QA Strategy

QA Team Structure: Roles, Ratios, and How to Build a Testing Team

Astaqc Team

Astaqc Team

June 11, 2026

QA team structure and roles

QA Team Structure: Roles, Ratios, and How to Build a Testing Team

A QA team structure defines the roles, reporting lines, and embedding model for quality assurance in a software organisation. The right structure depends on release frequency, product risk, and team size — there is no universal answer, but there are proven patterns.

Core QA Roles

  • QA Engineer / Manual Tester — designs and executes test cases, performs exploratory testing, logs and verifies defects
  • Test Automation Engineer (SDET) — builds and maintains automated test frameworks and suites
  • QA Lead — owns test strategy for a team or product area, coordinates releases, mentors testers
  • QA Manager / Head of Quality — owns quality across the organisation: hiring, process, tooling, metrics
  • Specialists — performance engineers, security testers, accessibility experts, brought in as needed

Three Structural Models

  1. Centralised QA — one QA department serving all teams. Strong standards and career paths; risk of becoming a bottleneck and being treated as a gate rather than a partner.
  2. Embedded QA — testers sit inside each product squad. Tight feedback loops and product knowledge; risk of inconsistent practices and isolated testers.
  3. Hybrid (most common at scale) — embedded testers in squads plus a central quality guild that owns standards, tooling, and shared infrastructure.

Developer-to-QA Ratios

Industry ratios range from 3:1 to 10:1 developers per tester. The ratio is an output of your strategy, not an input: teams with strong automated coverage and developer-owned unit testing run leaner QA; teams with compliance requirements, complex domains, or heavy manual regression need more. A 10:1 ratio with no automation is a quality incident waiting to happen.

Scaling QA Without Linear Hiring

Headcount is not the only lever:

  • Automate regression — the largest consumer of manual QA time; see our automation ROI guide for the payback math
  • Adopt no-code automation — tools like TestInspector let manual QA engineers build automated suites without programming skills, turning existing staff into automation contributors
  • Outsource elastically — external QA teams absorb release peaks, device coverage, and specialist needs without permanent hires; our QA outsourcing guide covers engagement models and pricing

When to Hire Your First QA Engineer

Common triggers: customers find defects before you do; developers spend significant time on release verification; release cadence slows because no one trusts the build. The first hire should be a senior generalist who can set strategy and build process — not a junior executing ad-hoc checks. For what that process should contain, see our QA best practices checklist.

Frequently Asked Questions: QA Team Structure

What is a good developer-to-QA ratio?
Most product companies operate between 3:1 and 6:1. Higher ratios are sustainable only with mature test automation and developer-owned quality practices.

Should QA report to engineering or separately?
Both work. Reporting into engineering improves collaboration; an independent quality function preserves objectivity for high-risk domains. The failure mode to avoid is QA as an adversarial gate.

What is the difference between a QA engineer and an SDET?
A QA engineer focuses on test design, execution, and exploratory testing. An SDET (Software Development Engineer in Test) writes code: frameworks, automated suites, and test infrastructure. No-code platforms are blurring this line.

Should startups hire QA or outsource?
Many startups outsource first — getting senior QA expertise at a fraction of a full-time cost — then hire in-house once release volume justifies it. See our outsourcing guide for the decision framework.

Need a ready-made QA team for your product? Hire a dedicated QA team from Astaqc or contact us.

Astaqc Team

Astaqc Team

June 11, 2026

icon
icon
icon

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Sign up to receive and connect to our newsletter

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Latest Article

copilot