
Recent LinkedIn data picked up by Gulf News produced a striking number — 72% of UAE professionals are actively looking to change jobs in 2026. On its own, that figure suggests a fluid, fast-moving job market with opportunities everywhere. The second number in the same study makes things more interesting: 65% of those same professionals say finding a role has actually become harder over the past twelve months.
Both can be true at once — and understanding why explains a great deal about how the UAE job market is shifting heading into the second half of 2026, and what it means for candidates and employers on either side of the table.
The UAE enters mid-2026 with unemployment at 1.9% — one of the lowest rates in the world — and over 500,000 new job openings projected across the country this year, driven by major government initiatives, international investment, and continued private-sector growth. Work permit applications processed in 2025 climbed past 9.7 million.
By any structural measure, this is a market that wants to hire. So why are two-thirds of professionals finding it harder than ever?
The most consistent message from UAE employers in 2026 is that the bar has moved. Where five years ago a strong CV and a relevant degree could open most doors, today's hiring decisions concentrate on specific, demonstrable, sector-grounded experience.
The clearest premiums sit with candidates who have three to seven years of focused sector experience — long enough to have delivered real outcomes, recent enough to remain current with the technologies and regulations of 2026. The hiring sweet spot.
Where the demand actually sits this summer:
One change that explains a large share of the "harder than before" perception is the role AI now plays in early-stage hiring. CV screening, candidate matching, and first-pass shortlisting are increasingly handled by automated systems before a human recruiter sees an application.
The numbers are striking — 81% of UAE professionals say they feel confident using AI tools at work, and many are already using AI to refine their own CVs and surface roles. The result is a system in which candidates and employers are both leaning on the same technology, and the candidates who learn how to present their experience to that technology — keyword alignment, demonstrable outcomes, structured achievements — are pulling ahead of equally qualified peers who haven't adjusted.
The data isn't telling job-seekers to stop trying. It's telling them to be precise.
Employers are not short of CVs. They're short of the right CV at the right time. A few patterns from our 2026 placements:
"It's not that the market is closed. It's that the market is sharper. The candidates who get specific about what they offer are still moving fast. The ones who lead with 'open to opportunities' aren't."
One pattern we see consistently — and which the 72% figure doesn't capture — is the number of UAE-based professionals using a UAE-to-UK move as part of their career planning. The UK has its own persistent skills shortages in logistics, healthcare, engineering, and technology, and many of those roles are open to candidates relocating from abroad with the right visa pathway.
Prism 7 operates in both markets, and our UK Job Sourcing service exists specifically for this route — mapping UAE experience to UK shortage roles, briefing candidates on the visa picture, and introducing them directly to our UK employer network. If the UK is on your radar even as a medium-term plan, it's worth having a conversation early rather than late.
Planning a move in 2026?
Whether you're targeting a UAE specialism or considering the UK as a next step, we work with both sides of the market. Talk to us about what you actually want — and we'll tell you what's realistic.

