UK employers are falling behind international competitors in adopting artificial intelligence within recruitment, with many HR leaders remaining cautious about the technology’s role in hiring and workforce growth.
New research suggests businesses in faster-moving economies are embracing AI as a tool to expand recruitment and improve hiring processes, while UK employers remain more hesitant and uncertain. It comes as organisations face growing pressure to modernise recruitment practices and respond to rapid changes in workforce technology.
Research conducted by YouGov for workforce screening firm HireRight found that UK HR leaders were significantly less optimistic about AI-driven hiring growth than counterparts in countries including India, Brazil and Australia.
UK employers more cautious on AI
Just 18 percent of UK HR decision-makers believed AI would increase hiring volumes by the end of 2026, while 19 percent expected it to reduce recruitment levels.
A further 40 percent expected AI to have little or no impact on hiring, suggesting widespread uncertainty among UK employers about how the technology will affect recruitment. In contrast, more than half of HR leaders in India expected AI to drive workforce growth, alongside 43 percent in Brazil.
The survey also suggested UK organisations were adopting AI tools more slowly than businesses in many overseas markets. More than two in five UK HR leaders said they were not currently using AI within HR functions at all, the highest figure among all countries surveyed.
Training and development alongside candidate selection and CV filtering were the most common uses of AI among UK employers, although adoption levels remained below global averages.
Concerns over candidate use of AI
The research also reveals growing unease among UK employers about candidates using generative artificial intelligence tools during recruitment processes.
Almost three in ten UK HR leaders admitted lacking confidence in identifying when applicants had used generative AI tools on CVs, covering letters or application forms. Although most UK respondents believed they could identify AI-assisted applications, confidence levels were notably lower than in countries including India and Australia.
Just 12 percent of UK HR leaders described themselves as “very confident” in detecting AI-generated applications. UK employers also appeared more sceptical than international peers about candidates using AI during job applications.
Only 16 percent viewed the use of AI positively, compared with far higher levels in countries including India, Brazil and parts of the Middle East. More than a quarter of UK HR leaders believed candidates were using AI tools to exaggerate or misrepresent their skills and experience.
Rob Harwood Reid of HireRight said the findings showed a widening international divide in attitudes towards AI recruitment tools.
“While other global markets seem to be pushing ahead, embracing AI tools in recruitment and preparing for workforce expansion, UK businesses are generally approaching AI rather more vigilantly, which could lead to a competitive disadvantage for those with slower rates of adoption, or choosing to abstain from using AI altogether,” he said.
Pressure to modernise recruitment
The report suggests that businesses adopting AI more confidently are increasingly using the technology to support talent acquisition, workforce management and HR administration.
International employers appeared more comfortable balancing AI adoption with oversight and governance. It adds to growing debate around how quickly HR functions should integrate AI into recruitment and employee management.
Recent studies have suggested AI tools are already reshaping graduate recruitment, candidate screening and entry-level hiring across several sectors. Employers, meanwhile, continue to face questions around bias, transparency, candidate trust and the reliability of AI-generated application materials.
Harwood Reid said organisations with more progressive approaches towards AI could gain advantages in recruitment efficiency and workforce planning.
“As AI continues to reshape the workforce, UK HR leaders with more progressive attitudes towards AI are more likely to experience its full potential in supporting key HR functions, such as talent acquisition, HR administration and workforce management,” he said.
The research surveyed 1,061 HR and recruitment decision-makers across eight countries, including 204 respondents in the UK.
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.














