Office for National Statistics figures show job vacancies continue to decline, with Kent’s key sectors feeling the pinch.
Job seekers across Kent are facing a tighter employment market after new figures revealed UK vacancies have fallen according to the latest Office for National Statistics data. The ongoing decline represents the latest sign that Britain’s labour market continues to cool from its post-pandemic highs.
For families in Maidstone, Canterbury, and Dartford already feeling the squeeze from rising living costs, fewer job opportunities could mean longer searches for new employment or career changes.
The Numbers Tell the Story
The Office for National Statistics released figures showing vacancies stood at 726,000 between November 2025 and January 2026 – down 9.2% from the previous year and sitting below pre-pandemic levels.
View tweet from @ONS
The trend isn’t just a blip. Advertised vacancies tracked by job site Adzuna fell to 695,000 in January 2026, marking the lowest point since early 2021. These figures align with the ONS data, painting a consistent picture of a labour market that’s lost much of its earlier momentum.
The confirmed data shows the steady decline has been consistent, with the November 2025 to January 2026 period representing the most recent verified figures available from the ONS.
Why Jobs Are Disappearing
The cooling didn’t happen in a vacuum. Employers are grappling with rising costs that make hiring more expensive than it’s been in years. National Insurance contributions for businesses have jumped by up to 15%, even as minimum wage increases implemented by the Labour government have added further pressure on company budgets.
Many firms have responded with hiring freezes rather than expansion. It’s a cautious approach that reflects broader economic uncertainty, with businesses preferring to wait and see rather than commit to new staff.
Yet there are signs of stabilisation. The KPMG/REC Report on Jobs noted the softest contraction in hiring since May 2025, suggesting the worst of the decline might be behind us. Payroll employment even managed a modest increase of 20,000 in February 2026.
Kent Feels the Pinch
Here in Kent, the impact varies by sector but follows national patterns. The county’s important logistics industry, centred around Dover and the Channel ports, has seen opportunities shrink alongside construction roles, which dropped 32.4% nationally. Retail positions – vital for towns like Tunbridge Wells and Folkestone – have similarly contracted.
Construction has been hit especially hard. With major infrastructure projects facing delays and residential building slowing, the skilled trades that employ thousands of Kent residents are seeing far fewer openings than just two years ago.
But it’s not all doom and gloom. Healthcare continues to recruit actively, with NHS Kent and Medway ICB still advertising positions across the county. The public sector has remained relatively stable, offering some shelter from the private sector storm.
What Job Seekers Face Now
The mathematics are stark for anyone looking for work. With unemployment holding steady at 5.2%, the same number of people are chasing fewer jobs. That means more competition for each vacancy and potentially longer searches for suitable roles.
However, recruitment specialists point out that this increased candidate availability has some benefits. Employers can be more selective, but they’re also seeing higher-quality applications. For job seekers with strong skills and experience, opportunities still exist – they just require more persistence to find.
The slowdown in vacancy decline offers hope that the market is finding its footing. Rather than the dramatic drops seen through 2024 and early 2025, recent months suggest a levelling off that could precede recovery.
Source: @ONS
Key Takeaways
UK job vacancies stood at 726,000 between November 2025 and January 2026, down 9.2% year-on-year, continuing a steady decline from post-pandemic peaks
Kent’s logistics, construction, and retail sectors mirror national trends with fewer opportunities available than previous years
Rising employer costs from National Insurance increases and minimum wage hikes are driving hiring freezes across many industries
What This Means for Kent Residents
Kent families should prepare for a more competitive job market in the coming months, with construction and retail workers chiefly affected by the downturn. Those seeking new employment should consider expanding their search to healthcare and public sector roles, which remain more stable, and explore opportunities through Universal Jobmatch or local council job boards. Businesses across the county may want to focus on retaining existing staff rather than expansion plans, given the ongoing economic pressures that are making hiring more expensive than in previous years.
Source: @ONS
Published: 21 April 2026
Source: @ONS on X. This article has been researched and rewritten with editorial balance by Kent Local News.



