Analysts from the global job search platform Jooble used internal company data to identify key shifts in the behavior of American employers and job candidates throughout 2025. Their findings reveal a market increasingly defined by pragmatism. American workers consistently showed an interest in fast pay. The market anticipates an even tougher struggle in 2026 for flexibility and AI competency.
- A healthcare recruitment surge. Demand for healthcare professionals increased by 30% by early fall, driven by an aging population and persistent staffing shortages. Demand for registered nurses (RNs) and caregivers remained high.
- Healthcare and service sectors lead in part-time hiring. Demand for RNs and caregivers remained critically high throughout the year, making healthcare and hospitality the most stable segments for part-time work.
- New IT strategy. IT companies moved away from the mass hiring that characterized previous years to focus on team optimization and the ROI for each employee. AI integration – rather than headcount expansion – was a priority.
- Remote work hits a ceiling. After years of steady growth, the remote work market showed signs of stagnation. Despite seasonal fluctuations that peaked between March and June, the supply of remote job postings remained at 2024 levels, creating intense competition among job seekers.
- The fast-pay phenomenon. One of 2025’s most revealing trends emerged in search query data. Terms like “immediate hire” and “we pay cash daily” consistently ranked among the top searches. “Immediate hire” search queries peaked during the winter months, confirming demand for supplemental income and increased financial pressure on American families.
- Speed over prestige. Workers demonstrated a clear preference for speed over traditional career advancement, focusing on sectors with low barriers to entry over corporate positions. Strong demand for jobs in construction, cleaning and logistics indicated that getting hired quickly mattered more than job prestige.
- International interest remains strong. Steady interest from international candidates in the U.S. job market persisted throughout 2025. Searches for “visa sponsorship” and “free visa” remained among the top queries on the Jooble platform, demonstrating continued appeal for American employment opportunities for workers abroad.

Breaking down search patterns
- Flexibility and hiring freezes. The ability to work remotely or maintain an adaptable schedule will drive employment decisions more than compensation levels. Companies that insist on full return-to-office mandates risk losing key specialists to more accommodating competitors. Competition among candidates will also intensify as job postings decrease and employees change jobs less frequently.
- Escalating healthcare talent shortage. Medical facilities face mounting pressure to offer larger sign-on bonuses and highly flexible shifts to attract professionals. Healthcare appears positioned to remain the only sector showing steady growth while other industries stagnate.
- AI adaptation. Candidates who can integrate AI tools into their daily work will gain a significant advantage. Demand for AI-enabled specialists in support, marketing and IT is expected to grow 25 to 30%. Employers will begin revising job descriptions to make AI proficiency a mandatory requirement rather than a nice-to-have bonus.

“While the supply of remote work has stabilized, it remains a key tool for accessing talent outside local hubs,” Onatsko said. “In 2026, the competitive edge will go to employers who can integrate AI technologies into their processes and offer flexible employment formats adapted to a person’s lifestyle, rather than the other way around.”
Yevhen Onatsko, Jooble’s U.S. country manager

