Talent Shortage in Germany 2026: Data & Trends
By Taleva Research·February 18, 2026·10 min read
Germany's labour market is under sustained pressure. With approximately 770,000 unfilled positions reported in Q4 2025 and a working-age population that is shrinking by roughly 300,000 people per year, the Fachkraftemangel (skilled worker shortage) has become one of the defining challenges for German employers. This page presents the latest data on which roles are hardest to fill, which sectors are most affected, and how Germany compares to the broader European picture.
Key Indicators at a Glance
| Indicator | Germany | EU-27 Average | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Job vacancy rate (Q4 2025) | 4.1% | 2.8% | +1.3pp |
| Unfilled positions | approx. 770,000 | -- | -- |
| Average time to fill (days) | 152 | 118 | +34 days |
| Employer difficulty hiring (%) | 82% | 74% | +8pp |
| Workforce participation rate | 77.4% | 74.6% | +2.8pp |
Sources: Eurostat Job Vacancy Statistics (jvs_q_nace2), Bundesagentur fur Arbeit Engpassanalyse Q4 2025, ManpowerGroup Talent Shortage Survey 2025.
Top 10 Hardest-to-Fill Roles in Germany
The Bundesagentur fur Arbeit publishes a regular bottleneck analysis (Engpassanalyse) identifying occupations where demand consistently outstrips supply. The following table shows the ten roles with the highest shortage severity in 2025/2026.
| Rank | Occupation | Vacancy Duration (Days) | Vacancies per 100 Jobseekers | Severity Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Skilled Electrician (Elektroniker) | 212 | 385 | 9.6 / 10 |
| 2 | Software Engineer / Developer | 197 | 340 | 9.4 / 10 |
| 3 | Nursing Professional (Altenpflege) | 205 | 310 | 9.3 / 10 |
| 4 | Mechatronics Technician | 188 | 295 | 9.1 / 10 |
| 5 | HVAC Technician (Sanitartechnik) | 195 | 280 | 9.0 / 10 |
| 6 | IT Security Specialist | 183 | 320 | 8.9 / 10 |
| 7 | Civil Engineer (Bauingenieur) | 176 | 260 | 8.7 / 10 |
| 8 | Metal Worker / Welder | 172 | 250 | 8.5 / 10 |
| 9 | Physician (Facharzt) | 168 | 275 | 8.4 / 10 |
| 10 | Truck / Logistics Driver | 155 | 230 | 8.2 / 10 |
Sources: Bundesagentur fur Arbeit Engpassanalyse Dec 2025, Taleva calculations. Severity score combines vacancy duration, applicant ratio, and regional spread.
Shortage by Sector
The shortage is not evenly distributed. Manufacturing, IT, healthcare, and construction face the most severe gaps, while administrative and retail roles remain closer to equilibrium.
| Sector | Vacancy Rate | YoY Change | Avg. Time to Fill | Shortage Trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Information & Communication (ICT) | 5.8% | +0.4pp | 168 days | Worsening |
| Manufacturing | 4.6% | +0.2pp | 158 days | Worsening |
| Healthcare & Social Work | 4.9% | +0.5pp | 172 days | Worsening |
| Construction | 4.3% | +0.1pp | 145 days | Stable |
| Transportation & Logistics | 3.8% | +0.3pp | 132 days | Worsening |
| Financial Services | 2.9% | -0.1pp | 98 days | Stable |
| Retail & Wholesale | 2.4% | -0.2pp | 85 days | Easing |
| Public Administration | 2.1% | +0.1pp | 110 days | Stable |
Sources: Eurostat (jvs_q_nace2), IAB Stellenerhebung Q3 2025, Taleva analysis.
Talent Supply vs. Demand
Germany produces roughly 500,000 university graduates and 430,000 vocational training completions annually. However, the distribution does not match employer demand. Business administration and social sciences are oversupplied, while STEM fields, healthcare, and the skilled trades face persistent deficits.
| Field | Annual Graduates/Completions | Estimated Annual Demand | Gap |
|---|---|---|---|
| IT / Computer Science | 32,000 | 58,000 | -26,000 |
| Electrical Engineering | 18,000 | 35,000 | -17,000 |
| Nursing / Elderly Care | 28,000 | 52,000 | -24,000 |
| Mechanical Engineering | 24,000 | 31,000 | -7,000 |
| Construction Trades | 22,000 | 38,000 | -16,000 |
| Business Administration | 68,000 | 45,000 | +23,000 |
Sources: Destatis Bildungsstatistik 2025, BIBB Datenreport, Taleva estimates.
Year-over-Year Trends
| Year | Total Unfilled Positions | Vacancy Rate | Employer Difficulty (%) | Avg. Time to Fill |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 630,000 | 3.5% | 75% | 128 days |
| 2023 | 690,000 | 3.7% | 78% | 135 days |
| 2024 | 730,000 | 3.9% | 80% | 143 days |
| 2025 | 770,000 | 4.1% | 82% | 152 days |
Sources: IAB Stellenerhebung, ManpowerGroup Talent Shortage Survey (annual), Bundesagentur fur Arbeit.
What is Driving the Shortage
Four structural factors explain why Germany's talent shortage continues to deepen:
- Demographic aging. The baby boomer generation (born 1955-1969) is entering retirement. Germany will lose an estimated 7 million workers from its labour force by 2035 if immigration and participation rates remain at current levels.
- Vocational training decline. The number of new apprenticeship contracts has fallen from 520,000 in 2015 to approximately 470,000 in 2025. Fewer young people are entering the trades, and employer investment in training has not kept pace.
- Education-employment mismatch. Universities continue to produce more graduates in humanities and social sciences than the labour market can absorb, while STEM and healthcare programs remain undersubscribed relative to demand.
- International competition. German companies increasingly compete with employers in the Netherlands, Switzerland, and the Nordics for mobile European talent. Bureaucratic visa processes and German-language requirements remain barriers to attracting non-EU workers at scale.
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