Decoding the UK Job Market in 2026: What Recruiters Need to Know

March 4, 2026 | Jack Gleeson

Decoding the UK job market

Decoding the UK job market reveals a landscape that is constantly evolving, and recruiters must adapt to stay competitive. By decoding the UK job market using insights from the latest REC/KPMG Report on Jobs, recruitment professionals can better understand shifting hiring conditions and their implications for strategic workforce planning this year.

The latest data shows a slight easing in the decline of permanent placements, the slowest rate of reduction in over a year and a half. The Permanent Placements Index remains below the neutral 50.0 mark, indicating contraction. However, this cautious positive sign is accompanied by modest growth in temporary billings, suggesting employers are becoming more flexible in resource allocation.

These shifts are due to broader market conditions. While many organisations are cautious due to economic pressures and tight budgets, some are slowly hiring after reduced uncertainty following the recent budget announcement. Vacancies are falling, but more slowly than late in 2025, while candidate availability is rising, though at the slowest pace in the past year.

The report also highlights wage movement. Starting salaries and temporary wages have increased more rapidly, reflecting heightened competition for in-demand skills and enabling recruiters to position talent more competitively.

Regional and sector differences also matter. For instance, the Midlands survey shows some increases in permanent placements that exceed the neutral threshold, suggesting pockets of resilience and demand in the broader UK market.

What this means for recruiters in Q1–Q2 2026

How should recruitment professionals respond to these trends?

  • Reposition talent pipelines: With temporary billings growing and candidate availability rising, balance short-term placements with strategic permanent roles. Understand where candidates are plentiful and where skill competition is pushing up wages to advise clients effectively.
  • Use local market insight: Tailor strategies for specific markets rather than relying solely on national averages, as regional hiring activity varies (e.g., stronger performance in the Midlands).
  • Focus on value-added consulting: As employers remain cautious, recruiters who offer market guidance, salary benchmarking, and workforce forecasting will be seen as partners, not just vendors.

In a shifting hiring landscape, data-led recruitment strategies will be key to helping clients navigate 2026 with confidence.

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Jack Gleeson

Jack Gleeson

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