Talent Shortage in the United Kingdom 2026: Data & Trends

By Taleva Research·February 19, 2026·10 min read

The United Kingdom's labour market remains structurally tight despite a gradual cooling since its post-pandemic peak. With approximately 734,000 vacancies recorded in Q4 2025 and 76% of employers reporting difficulty filling roles, the UK faces persistent talent gaps across technology, healthcare, engineering, and the skilled trades. Post-Brexit immigration rules have reshaped the supply of available workers, and digital skills shortages alone put an estimated 380,000 jobs at risk by 2030 according to University of Birmingham research.

Key Indicators at a Glance

IndicatorUnited KingdomEU-27 AverageDifference
Job vacancies (Q4 2025)approx. 734,000----
Employer difficulty hiring (%)76%74%+2pp
Tech employer difficulty (%)94%----
Digital skills jobs at risk by 2030380,000----
Workforce participation rate75.1%74.6%+0.5pp

Sources: ONS Vacancies and Jobs Dec 2025, ManpowerGroup Talent Shortage Survey 2025, Hays UK Salary & Recruiting Trends 2025, University of Birmingham Digital Skills Research 2025.

Top 10 Hardest-to-Fill Roles in the UK

The UK government maintains an Immigration Salary List (formerly Shortage Occupation List) that identifies roles where domestic supply consistently falls short. Combined with employer survey data, the following roles represent the most acute shortages.

RankOccupationSectorAvg. Time to FillShortage Severity
1Software Engineer / DeveloperTechnology78 days9.5 / 10
2Cybersecurity SpecialistTechnology85 days9.4 / 10
3Registered NurseHealthcare92 days9.3 / 10
4Data Scientist / EngineerTechnology74 days9.1 / 10
5Care Worker (Adult Social Care)Healthcare68 days9.0 / 10
6Electrical EngineerEngineering88 days8.8 / 10
7HGV / Logistics DriverTransport45 days8.6 / 10
8Skilled ElectricianConstruction72 days8.5 / 10
9AI / Machine Learning EngineerTechnology95 days8.4 / 10
10Veterinary SurgeonAgriculture110 days8.2 / 10

Sources: UK Immigration Salary List 2025, Hays Salary Survey 2025, ManpowerGroup UK, Taleva calculations.

Shortage by Sector

The UK's talent shortage is concentrated in sectors that require specialist qualifications or physical presence. Remote-friendly roles in financial services and professional services have seen some easing, while healthcare, construction, and technology remain under pressure.

SectorVacancy EstimateYoY ChangeKey Shortage RolesTrend
Information Technologyapprox. 105,000+8%Software, data, securityWorsening
Health & Social Careapprox. 132,000+3%Nurses, care workers, doctorsWorsening
Constructionapprox. 48,000-2%Electricians, plumbers, site managersStable
Engineering & Manufacturingapprox. 62,000+1%Mechanical, electrical, processStable
Hospitality & Foodapprox. 85,000-5%Chefs, front-of-houseEasing
Transport & Logisticsapprox. 38,000-4%HGV drivers, warehouse opsEasing
Educationapprox. 42,000+6%STEM teachers, SENCOsWorsening
Financial Servicesapprox. 35,000-3%Actuaries, complianceEasing

Sources: ONS VACS02 by Industry Dec 2025, REC JobsOutlook Survey Q4 2025, Taleva analysis.

The Brexit Factor

The end of EU free movement in January 2021 fundamentally altered the UK's labour supply dynamics. Several effects are now clearly visible in the data:

  • Net migration shift. EU net migration to the UK turned negative in the years immediately following Brexit, though it has partially recovered via the points-based system. Non-EU migration has increased substantially, particularly from India and Nigeria, but sector distribution differs from previous EU flows.
  • Hospitality and agriculture gaps. These sectors previously relied on seasonal EU workers. While dedicated visa routes (Seasonal Worker visa) have been introduced, volumes have not fully replaced prior flows.
  • Healthcare recruitment. The NHS has intensified international recruitment, particularly from the Philippines and India, to compensate for reduced EU nurse and doctor migration.
  • Salary thresholds as barriers. The points-based system requires minimum salary thresholds that price out some roles, particularly in social care and hospitality, where wages are lower.

Talent scarcity is driving wage inflation in shortage occupations. Key data points:

  • UK average earnings grew 5.2% year-on-year in Q3 2025 (ONS), outpacing inflation for the first time in two years.
  • Tech salaries in London for senior software engineers now average between 75,000 and 95,000 GBP, with AI/ML specialists commanding 100,000+ GBP.
  • 63% of digital leaders believe salary demands in tech will become "unsustainable" within two years (Computer Weekly / Nash Squared).
  • Healthcare pay remains constrained by NHS pay bands, contributing to attrition as private sector and international employers offer higher compensation.

Government Initiatives

The UK government has deployed several policy levers to address the talent shortage:

  1. Immigration Salary List. Updated regularly, this list offers visa advantages (reduced salary thresholds) for occupations where domestic supply is insufficient. Recent additions include data analysts, cybersecurity engineers, and senior care workers.
  2. Apprenticeship Levy. Large employers pay 0.5% of their payroll into a fund used to train apprentices. Uptake has been uneven, with many firms not fully utilizing their levy allocation.
  3. T-Level qualifications. Launched as a vocational alternative to A-Levels, T-Levels in digital, health, and engineering aim to increase the pipeline of skilled workers.
  4. Digital Skills Innovation Fund. Government-backed funding to support reskilling programs in AI, cloud computing, and cybersecurity.

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