The Australian hiring landscape in 2026 is shaping up to be stable but highly competitive, with shifting demand across industries, rising candidate activity, and the continued influence of AI on workforce planning. While the rapid post‑pandemic hiring boom has cooled, the latest reports show a resilient labour market with pockets of strong growth across key sectors.
Below is a breakdown of the most important trends employers and candidates need to know for 2026.
1. Unemployment Remains Stable – But Competition Is Rising
Australia’s unemployment rate has steadied at 4.1% moving into 2026, defying earlier forecasts of a larger increase.
At the same time, applications per job ad continue to surge due to cost‑of‑living pressures, leading to far higher competition for each advertised role.
What this means:
For employers:
- Expect large applicant volumes
- Screening and shortlisting times are increasing
- Strong EVP and clear job ads matter more than ever
For candidates:
- Standing out requires tailored applications
- Employers value recent, directly relevant skills
- Practical experience with AI tools is increasingly sought after.
2. Full‑Time Hiring Is Growing Again
Recent ABS data shows full‑time employment growing strongly, increasing by 50,500 roles in a single month.
This signals a shift away from temporary hiring toward more permanent workforce planning.
Industries currently lifting hiring demand include:
- Retail & Consumer Products
- Transport & Logistics
- Manufacturing
- Construction
3. State‑by‑State Hiring Conditions Are Diverging
Hiring strength varies significantly across Australia:
- WA, QLD, SA: Strong hiring demand
- NSW, VIC, ACT: Softer conditions and fewer job ads
Employers operating nationally should be aware of these regional differences when planning recruitment strategies or expanding teams.
4. AI Skills Are Now in High Demand
Demand for AI‑related skills in job postings doubled over the past year, with 5.8% of all job ads mentioning AI skills by the end of 2025.
What this means:
- Employers want candidates who can work effectively with AI tools
- Early‑career professionals should prioritise upskilling
- AI is augmenting roles rather than replacing them outright
5. High‑Growth Industries for 2026
Based on national projections, the majority of new jobs through November 2026 will come from four industries:
- Health Care & Social Assistance: +301,000 jobs
- Professional, Scientific & Technical Services: +206,600
- Education & Training: +149,600
- Accommodation & Food Services: +112,400
These industries are powering Australia’s workforce expansion and offer a wide range of opportunities for both entry‑level and experienced candidates.
6. Occupations in Highest Demand
The fastest‑growing roles expected in 2026 include:
- Aged & Disabled Carers (+28%)
- Software & Applications Programmers (+27%)
- Registered Nurses (+13.9%)
- ICT Security Specialists (+38.9%)
- Management & Organisation Analysts (+32%)
Softening growth is expected in roles involving routine administrative or clerical tasks, driven by automation.
7. Skills Employers Want in 2026
Success in the 2026 job market requires a blend of:
Technical skills:
- Digital literacy
- Cloud, cybersecurity, and data skills
- AI‑assisted productivity tools
Human skills (The “4Cs”):
- Care
- Computing
- Cognitive ability
- Communication
These combined capabilities are becoming essential as job roles evolve.
8. What Employers Should Do
- Compress hiring decision cycles to avoid losing talent in high‑demand sectors
- Map capability gaps and upskill internally
- Balance permanent and contract talent for flexibility
- Build early‑career pathways to reduce future shortages
9. What Candidates Should Do
- Prioritise portable, future‑proof skills
- Update résumés to demonstrate real outcomes
- Highlight experience using AI and digital tools
