Women undervalue themselves before hiring begins, new data reveals

-

The research found that women’s salary expectations are 9.5 percent lower than those of men before a single application is submitted. Women also applied for roles with a median salary that was $12,667 lower than the jobs men targeted.

The analysis, by work platform JobLeads, examined job search behaviour from 881,776 users in the United States during the final quarter of 2025 and focused on professional and executive roles.

Gap appears during job search stage

The study suggests the gap may emerge during the earliest stage of the recruitment process, when candidates decide which roles are worth pursuing.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

Across all industries, the research found that 94 percent of men who clicked on at least one job also submitted an application. Among women, the figure was 81 percent.

This difference of 13 percentage points may affect salary outcomes because candidates who apply less frequently or target lower paying roles are likely to have weaker negotiating positions later in the hiring process.

The data also showed that women were more likely to prioritise flexibility in their job searches. Nearly a quarter of women searched for part-time roles compared with 15 percent of men. Remote work was also more commonly sought by women, with 37 percent searching for remote positions compared with 30.5 percent of men.

Female-dominated sectors still show large pay gaps

The analysis found that women can remain at a disadvantage even in industries where they represent the majority of workers.

In the legal sector, women account for 62 percent of employees but still face the largest pay disparity recorded in the dataset. Women earn 26 percent less than men in legal roles, which equates to a median pay gap of $16,107.

The findings challenge the assumption that gender balance in an industry automatically leads to equal pay.

The research also pointed to differences in the types of roles men and women pursue. On average, women applied for jobs that required a higher proportion of soft skills, at 31 percent of the role requirements, compared with 25.5 percent for men. According to the analysis, positions with stronger soft skill requirements paid $9,650 less at the median across industries.

The researchers said this pattern may contribute to persistent salary differences because roles emphasising interpersonal or organisational skills often command lower pay than highly technical positions.

Behaviour during job search affects pay outcomes

The analysis argues that the gender pay gap cannot be explained solely by differences in pay negotiations or employer decisions. Instead, behavioural patterns during job searches may influence earnings well before candidates reach the offer stage.

The researchers said women were not less skilled or ambitious but often appeared more cautious about their expected value in the labour market. This difference in expectations could shape the roles women apply for and the salaries they consider realistic.

The study analysed behavioural data from 881,776 JobLeads users in the United States between October and December 2025. Gender was inferred using probabilistic name to gender mapping.

Managing Editor at Black | Website

William Furney is a Managing Editor at Black and White Trading Ltd based in Kingston upon Hull, UK. He is a prolific author and contributor at Workplace Wellbeing Professional, with over 127 published posts covering HR, employee engagement, and workplace wellbeing topics. His writing focuses on contemporary employment issues including pension schemes, employee health, financial struggles affecting workers, and broader workplace trends.

Latest news

Lauren Webb: Empowering women to lead the way in analytics and AI

Women remain wildly underrepresented in technical and digital leadership, making up just 22% of the UK’s AI talent. It’s jarring.

Employers urged to balance flexibility and fairness as England’s World Cup campaign begins

Employment lawyers are advising organisations to plan ahead for leave requests and workplace flexibility as the 2026 FIFA World Cup gets under way.

Amy Coleman on uncertainty and pressure at work

“Many of you shared feelings of uncertainty and pressure as the work evolves.”

Workers fear favouritism is driving workplace rewards and recognition

Many UK employees believe workplace rewards are influenced by favouritism, with women significantly less likely to view recognition as fair.
- Advertisement -

Curtis Holmes: Payroll is the driver for employee engagement

Payroll has long been treated as a back-office necessity: essential, but not something that shapes culture or drives engagement. This no longer stands.

Labour market yet to show major AI impact on jobs, govt adviser says

A government economic adviser has challenged predictions of widespread AI-driven unemployment, arguing labour market data has yet to show disruption.

Must read

Al Bird: Chasing the gap – why the UK can’t seem to fix its digital skills problem

We've been talking about the UK's digital skills divide for more than ten long years. Perhaps it's time we stop talking and start doing.

Donavan Whyte: Is saying hello to Chinese and goodbye to French really a good idea?

When it comes to language in business Chinese is...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you