AI & Machine Learning
Business Insiderabout 2 hours ago
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So much for the AI jobs apocalypse. Demand for tech talent is rising.

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Tech job openings have risen 14% in 2026, driven by a 52% surge in hardware engineering roles as AI infrastructure investments grow, challenging fears of an AI-driven job apocalypse.

So much for the AI jobs apocalypse. Demand for tech talent is rising.

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The Big Picture
According to TrueUp data provided to Business Insider, open tech job postings at tech companies have increased nearly 14% so far in 2026, indicating resilience despite widespread AI disruption fears. Hardware engineering roles saw a 52% jump, reflecting heavy investment in AI infrastructure like chips, data centers, and servers. Software engineering openings rose only 2%, with a recent slowdown, but overall demand remains solid after the 2022-2023 tech correction. The data challenges the narrative that AI is destroying tech jobs, though recent graduates face stiffer competition due to an influx of computer science graduates and ongoing layoffs. Big public tech companies also increased postings by 18% year-to-date, though the market is not as overheated as during the pandemic boom.
Why It Matters
Despite widespread fears that AI would decimate tech jobs, demand for tech talent is actually rising, with hardware engineering roles surging 52% as companies invest heavily in AI infrastructure. This suggests that AI is creating new opportunities even as it transforms existing roles, challenging the narrative of a job apocalypse. The rebound indicates a resilient tech sector that is adapting to AI rather than being replaced by it.

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A RW robot lays on the ground after falling during the VivaTech technology startups and innovation fair at the Paris Expo Porte de Versailles, in Paris on June 19, 2026. (Photo by SIMON WOHLFAHRT / AFP via Getty Images)
A RW robot lays on the ground after falling during the VivaTech technology startups and innovation fair at the Paris Expo Porte de Versailles, in Paris on June 19, 2026. (Photo by SIMON WOHLFAHRT / AFP via Getty Images)
A RW robot lays on the ground after falling during the VivaTech technology startups and innovation fair at the Paris Expo Porte de Versailles.

SIMON WOHLFAHRT / AFP via Getty Images

  • Tech job openings rise 14% in 2026, showing resilience despite AI disruption fears.
  • Hardware engineering roles surge 52% as AI infrastructure investments drive demand.
  • Tech industry rebounds after 2022-2023 correction, with steady job demand across sectors.

The tech job market is showing signs of resilience so far this year, suggesting that AI may not destroy all white-collar work after all.

Open tech job openings at tech companies have climbed nearly 14% so far this year, according to TrueUp data provided to Business Insider.

TrueUp tracks job postings across 9,000 public tech companies, startups, and unicorns, rather than tech roles across the entire economy. This is ground zero for AI disruption because the tech industry usually adopts new technology and feels the impact first.

And the impact so far has been mixed — certainly not the dystopian job collapse predicted by Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei.

Amit Taylor, founder of TrueUp, described the current tech job market as "holding steady despite everything else happening in the tech industry."

A chart showing tech job openings across the tech industry
A chart showing tech job openings across the tech industry
A chart showing tech job openings across the tech industry

TrueUp

The rebound is strongest in Hardware engineering. Open hardware engineering roles jumped 52% year-to-date, according to TrueUp.

That likely reflects the industry's heavy investment in AI infrastructure, including chips, data centers, servers, devices, and other physical systems needed to support the AI boom.

A chart showing hardware engineering job openings across the tech industry
A chart showing hardware engineering job openings across the tech industry
A chart showing hardware engineering job openings across the tech industry

TrueUp

These figures challenge the popular narrative that AI is crushing demand for engineers and other tech workers.

The recovery follows a painful tech correction in 2022 and 2023, when companies cut jobs and slowed hiring after expanding too quickly during the pandemic. Now, the data shows that tech job demand is solid across much of the sector, even as companies continue to scrutinize costs and experiment with AI tools that could reshape parts of the workforce.

Software engineering job openings have not surged like the broader market, but they have still edged higher this year. TrueUp data shows software engineering openings rose just over 2% since January this year. There's been a slowdown in recent months, versus a real surge earlier in 2026, according to TrueUp data.

A chart showing software engineering job openings across the tech industry
A chart showing software engineering job openings across the tech industry
A chart showing software engineering job openings across the tech industry

TrueUp

The stronger demand for tech talent doesn't mean every candidate has it easy. Recent graduates face more competition, especially for software jobs, because far more people have studied computer science in recent years. Tech layoffs also funnel more supply into the market.

Taylor previously told Business Insider that the jobs themselves haven't vanished, but the number of applicants chasing them has surged.

Big public tech companies also increased job postings, with open roles up 18% so far this year. But the numbers are down a smidge from earlier in 2026.

A chart showing tech job postings by big public tech companies
A chart showing tech job postings by big public tech companies
A chart showing tech job postings by big public tech companies

TrueUp

Not the crazy-strong job market of the pandemic boom, but a solidly healthy situation.

Sign up for BI's Tech Memo newsletter here. Reach out to me via email at abarr@businessinsider.com.

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So much for the AI jobs apocalypse. Demand for tech talent is rising. | TechCulture