Hays says jobs market still under pressure as it counts on new year hiring boost


Hays has revealed a 10% drop in recruitment fees over the final quarter of the year as the jobs market remained under pressure, and it banks on a new year boost to hiring activity.

The global recruiter said permanent hiring was still a challenge, with it taking longer to get people into roles.

Permanent recruitment fees dropped by 14% on a net basis over the final three months of 2025, compared with the same period last year, while temporary and contracting fees fell by 8%.

In the UK and Ireland, the public sector faced an even tougher climate, with recruitment fees tumbling by 16% year-on-year, compared with a 5% decline within the private sector, Hays revealed.

However, fees collected from technology jobs grew year-on-year for the first time since mid-2023.

Recruitment agencies like Hays make money by charging companies a fee to find and place candidates in jobs.

The company has been impacted by a slowdown in hiring and a weaker jobs market over the past year, with many companies making cutbacks in response to a tougher economic environment.

Hays said a new year โ€œreturn to workโ€ trend will be particularly important over the 2026 financial year, so it will be monitoring activity levels closely.

Chief executive Dirk Hahn said: โ€œAmidst ongoing macroeconomic uncertainty, challenging perm (permanent hiring) conditions, and weaker average hours worked in Germany, we are executing well against our strategy and continue to make significant operational progress.โ€

He added that the recruiter was sharpening its focus on โ€œlong-term growth marketsโ€ and making sure it was prioritising the job categories that are most in-demand, that require higher skilled and higher paid roles, growing industries and its biggest enterprise clients.

This focus, along with cost-saving efforts, will help it return to previous peak profits of ยฃ250 million, the firm said.

Hays is expecting to make a profit over the first half of its financial year of around ยฃ20 million.

Shares in Hays were down by more than 3% on Wednesday morning.

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