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- Category: Programming
- Published: 2026-05-02 03:57:34
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Go Team Launches 2025 Developer Survey, Seeks Global Input on Language Evolution
September 16, 2025 – The Go programming language team has officially opened its 2025 Developer Survey, giving the worldwide Gopher community a direct voice in the language's future. The survey is available now through September 30, 2025, and takes an estimated 10–20 minutes to complete, with every question being optional.
“This survey helps us understand the real-world needs, pain points, and aspirations of Go developers across the globe,” said Todd Kulesza, speaking on behalf of the Go team. “Every response helps us prioritize the work that matters most to you.”
Survey Details and Data Sharing
The results of the survey will be shared publicly on the Go Blog in early November 2025. For the first time, the Go team will also release the raw dataset of responses—on an opt-in basis—so that the broader community can conduct its own analyses and derive their own insights.

Participants will be asked for permission to include their responses in this shared dataset. If consent is not given, the individual’s answers will remain confidential and not be published. This model mirrors the approach used with Go Telemetry, emphasizing transparency and user control.
“We believe in giving back to the community the data we collect,” Kulesza added. “By releasing the anonymized dataset, we enable researchers, educators, and tool makers to learn from the same information we use to guide our decisions.”
Background
The annual Go Developer Survey has been a cornerstone of the language’s community-driven development since 2016. It captures feedback on everything from language features and tooling to satisfaction and adoption trends. Past surveys have directly influenced major decisions, such as the introduction of generics in Go 1.18 and improvements to module support.
This year’s survey comes as Go continues to expand into new domains, including AI/ML infrastructure, cloud-native development, and enterprise systems. The team is particularly interested in understanding how developers are using Go in production environments and where they see room for improvement.
What This Means
The survey is a key input for the Go team’s roadmap and feature prioritization over the coming year. Participation ensures that the language evolves in a direction that serves its diverse user base, from solo developers to large organizations.
“The more voices we hear, the better we can serve the entire Go ecosystem,” said a spokesperson. “We encourage everyone who uses Go—whether for work, open source, or personal projects—to take a few minutes and share their perspective.”
The Go team is also urging the community to spread the word: sharing the survey link with colleagues, friends, and online forums helps reach developers in every region and industry. With a larger and more representative sample, the resulting insights will better reflect the true state of Go adoption worldwide.
Take the survey at the official Go Blog before September 30, and be part of shaping the next chapter of Go.