UK Job Openings Drop to 850,000 While Average Pay Soars to Record Highs

UK Job Openings Drop to 850,000 While Average Pay Soars to Record Highs


  • UK Job Market in April: A Mixed Bag of Wins and Woes

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  • “When the job market feels like a roller‑coaster, you learn to love the ups (and the little drops that keep you on your toes).”*

  • Vacancy Numbers: Slight Dip, Dramatic Decline

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  • Monthly change: Vacancies slipped –0.94% to 854,171 this April, down from March.
  • Year‑on‑Year slump: A sharp –18.34% drop compared to April 2023.
  • Sector bright spots: Hospitality & Catering, Manufacturing, and Teaching added some optimism – their vacancy rates edged up, lending a glimmer of hope.

  • Hiring Slows Down: More Time to Find the Right Fit

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  • Average fill time: Folks are taking 39 days on average to fill a role (vs 35.6 days in March).
  • Why it matters: The longer hiring window suggests the market’s early tightening is easing a bit. Businesses are just being more cautious, which could reduce tension for job seekers.

  • Salaries Keep Climbing: The Good News and the Numbers

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  • April growth: Monthly salaries rose +0.45% to £38,810.
  • Year‑above‑year gain: An impressive +3.06% raise compared to last year.
  • Historic high: These figures are among the highest on Adzuna’s platform since 2016. The pay swings are hardly a joke!

  • Unemployment and Jobseekers: The Tipping Point

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  • Rate spikes: Unemployment rose to 4.3%, the highest since last May.
  • Jobseekers per vacancy: Stalled at a steady 1.89 – not quite a crisis, but worth watching.

  • Salary Transparency: A Close Call

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  • Jobs without posted salaries: 50.35% of listings still hide the pay.
  • Jobs with salaries: 49.65% reveal the numbers.
  • Trend note: The split hasn’t veered dramatically in 2024 – a quiet, steady situation in a market that’s usually hot and volatile.

  • Bottom Line: A Twisty Turn in the UK Job Landscape

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  • The April report shows a job market that’s carefully donning a new sweater—some sectors are wearing it well, salary numbers keep on ticking up, and hiring takes longer. Yet, unemployment is nudging up again, and job tweaks remain a touch of uncertainty.
    It’s a story of teetering balances, not all black or white—just the kind of market that keeps employers, job‑seekers, and analysts on their toes.

    Hospitality and Teaching sectors experiencing positive growth

    Vacancy Buzz: April 2024’s Employment Rollercoaster

    April saw job adverts playing a game of leapfrog—some sectors sprint ahead, while others stare at a cross‑road. Let’s dive into the numbers, sprinkled with a dash of humor because why shouldn’t career data feel like a Friday night stand‑up?

    Where the Jobs are Getting a Leg Up

    • Hospitality & Catering – +4.75% increase. Diners and bartenders are back on the hiring menu!
    • Manufacturing – +4.34% jump. Machines are humming, and engineers are swiveling to fill those gaps.
    • Teaching – +3.85%. Educators are stepping back into classrooms—finally, a voice for the “learning academy” crowds!.
    • Logistics & Warehouse – +3%. The magic of moving goods is still rockin’.
    • Charity & Voluntary – +2.59%. Altruists, you’re getting jobs as generous as your spirits.

    Sector Slow‑downs – When It’s Hard to Keep Up

    • PR, Advertising & Marketing – Down by 13.84%. Call centres aren’t the only ones buzzing.
    • Domestic Help & Cleaning – Down 7.91%. Even the housekeepers are hoping for more orders.
    • Creative & Design – Down 7.46%. Think of doodles that didn’t make the cut.
    • Graduate – Down 5.4%. Fresh grads—your entry seats might be a bit tighter.
    • Travel – Small slide of 3.23%. After a March surge, the voyage signs went slightly dim.

    Year‑over‑Year – Where the Landscape Shifts

    • Travel – Only sector with a yearly bump (+2.73%). Maybe the jet lag brought a fresh wave of recruiters.
    • Teaching – Barely dipped (-0.35%). Less is still roughly the same.
    • Domestic Help & Cleaning – YoY chop of 49.01%.
    • Trade & Construction – 46.73% trimmed.
    • Admin – 41.88% cut in half.

    Salary Climbs – Even as Vacancies Slip

    With fewer openings, companies have been raising the stakes to snag talent. Here’s the paycheck patch:

    • Retail – +3.35% to £31,604.
    • Admin – +1.57% to £28,334.
    • Social Work – +1.86% to £36,814.
    • Energy, Oil & Gas – +19.67%. It’s raining bucks in the pipelines!
    • Social Work – +12.22% in the yearly tally.
    • Manufacturing – +9.25%.

    Salary Slumps – When the Pounds Go Down

    • Legal – Slight dip of 0.33% this month.
    • Travel – Down 0.49% from March.
    • IT – Big weekly dive of 5.65% compared to April 2023.
    • Graduate – Down 0.4% yearly.

    Job Hunting Takes a Detour – The Longer Wait

    On average, roles now linger on job boards for 39 days (up from 35.6). That’s the longest since the chilly autumn of 2022.

    • Energy, Oil & Gas – 45.8 days to close. They’re a bit “soft” to catch.
    • Voluntary – 29.1 days.
    • Legal – 32.7 days.

    Region‑wise – Where the Cash is Rolling in

    • East Midlands – Leading the wage parade with +6.68% to £36,188. Companies like Boots, Barchester Health, Cygnet Healthcare, and AECOM are the big players.
    • Northern Ireland – +3.17% to £36,014. Salary recovery is finally over the horizon.
    • London – Holds the top spot with an average salary of £44,880.
    • Eastern England and South West England – Follow closely in the high‑pay race.

    So there you have it— April’s employment vibes in a nutshell. Some sectors are humming along, others need a second wind, and the market’s getting a bit more competitive. Keep your eyes open, your résumé polished, and maybe a joke or two in your back pocket—you never know who will find the humor in a headline!

    Bradford is worst for jobseekers in April

    Where’s the Best of the Job Jungle?

    For the brave soul hunting for a role, the cities of Cambridge, Guildford, and Exeter are still the gold mines for the third month running. Cambridge leads with 7,394 vacancies and a sweet ratio of about 0.33 job‑seekers per job.

    On the flip side, Bradford is the hard‑to‑beat champion in the hunt‑arena, with a staggering 7.82 seekers for every opening. And the numbers are climbing like a mountain—since March 2024, the city moved from 20,180 candidates to 20,935, all vying for 2,676 roles. It’s a tough row, but not impossible.

    Quick Stats Snapshot

    • Cambridge: 7,394 jobs, 0.33 seeker/job
    • Bradford: 7.82 seeker/job, 20,935 candidates vs. 2,676 jobs

    Job hunters prioritising warehouse work

    Warehouse Work Still Rules the Job Jungle

    Warehouse work has held the crown on Adzuna’s Intelligence Portal for an astonishing 11 months straight. The ranking is based on an Interest Quotient that captures how hot a role is among jobseekers.

    Other Teams on the Running List

    • Healthcare Support – the second most searched role in the last quarter.
    • Social Care Worker – climbed from 4th to 3rd place in April.
    • Delivery Driver – brand‑new wildcard grabbing the 6th spot.

    Andrew Hunter, Adzuna co‑founder, summed it up: “April was tough for job hunters across the UK, but there are shining rays of hope.” He added:

    “Several sectors saw a surge in vacancies: Hospitality & Catering, Manufacturing, and Teaching. This signals growing confidence in businesses, and companies are eager to bring in specialists – and give them a good paycheck. Only Legal and Travel saw a modest dip in average salaries this month.”

    The East Midlands remains a hot spot, posting its largest annual rise for the fifth consecutive month. Fields in science, tech, and professional services are driving this growth. With the UK clocking the fastest hiring expansion in two years during Q1, job seekers are hoping this upbeat momentum fuels new hiring waves.

    What This Means for Job Hunters

    • Warehouse teams keep leading the pack—let’s grab that logistical groove.
    • Career paths in healthcare and social care are booming—great opportunities to make a difference.
    • Delivery drivers are rising—consider the simple agility of moving goods fast.

    Stay tuned for more real‑time updates on job trends—you won’t want to miss a beat in today’s fast‑moving labour market!