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Updated Jul 6, 2026 · 13:45
India News Updated Jul 6, 2026

India's White-Collar Hiring Rises 6% in June; AI Roles Surge 25%

White-collar hiring in India grew over 6% in June, driven by strong demand for AI and machine-learning roles which posted 25% year-on-year growth. The Naukri JobSpeak Index reached 3027, with insurance, FMCG, and telecom sectors also showing positive growth. Fresher hiring rose 8% YoY, and emerging cities like Bhubaneswar, Indore, and Coimbatore outperformed national trends. Hitesh Oberoi, MD & CEO of Info Edge, noted that AI hiring within IT grew 16% YoY, signaling continued investment in specialized talent.

India's white‑collar hiring rises 6 pc in June

New Delhi, July 6

White‑collar hiring in India grew over 6 per cent in June, with AI and machine‑learning roles continuing to outperform, posting 25 per cent year‑on‑year growth in June, a report said on Monday.

The report from jobs site Naukri said insurance continued its strong run with 16 per cent growth, FMCG at 7 per cent, telecom at 6 per cent, real estate at 5 per cent and BPO/ITES and pharma or biotech at 4 per cent each.

The report said that the Naukri JobSpeak Index reached 3027 from 2854 a year earlier, closing the first fiscal quarter at a steady 4 per cent growth.

Fresher hiring grew 8 per cent year‑on‑year in June and 9 per cent for the April-June quarter, and hiring growth was visible across experience bands from 4-7 years to over 16 years, the report added.

Hiring for 4-7 years band grew 2 per cent YoY, 8-12 years at 7 per cent, 13-16 years at 12 per cent and 16+ years at 9 per cent in June.

Moreover, city-level hiring witnessed a positive momentum, with several metro and emerging markets outpacing the national trend. Hiring in Kolkata grew 12 per cent, Hyderabad at 11 per cent, Chennai at 10 per cent and Bengaluru at 7 per cent.

Hiring in emerging cities such as Bhubaneswar surged 21 per cent, Indore nearly 15 per cent and Coimbatore nearly 10 per cent.

Across functions, media production & entertainment led with 24 per cent growth, followed by healthcare & life sciences at 22 per cent, IT & information security at over 18 per cent.

"Even as IT hiring has moderated, AI hiring within the sector grew 16 per cent YoY in June. That divergence is important because it shows where tech companies are still investing. AI is increasingly becoming a core capability area, especially as demand shifts towards more senior and specialised talent," said Hitesh Oberoi, MD & CEO, Info Edge (India) Limited.

GCC hiring remained steady nationally but southern markets outperformed, with Chennai up 19 per cent and Hyderabad 15 per cent.

Telecom hiring entered positive territory in June with 6 per cent YoY growth, after remaining under pressure for much of the past year. The recovery was led by a sharp uptick in fresher hiring, which grew 25 per cent YoY in the sector.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Rohit P

FMCG and insurance growth makes sense - consumption is picking up. But I'm skeptical about the real estate numbers. Maybe it's just Naukri's listing data? Ground reality in Bangalore still shows many companies downsizing or putting hiring on hold. Also, AI roles growing within IT is fine, but what about the rest of the sector?

Ananya R

The 21% surge in Bhubaneswar is fantastic! 🌟 We need more such Tier-2 cities becoming job hubs. My cousin in Coimbatore is seeing better opportunities now. But I wish they'd talk about salary growth too - just hiring numbers don't tell if people are getting paid fairly. Many freshers are still offered way below what their peers got 5 years ago.

Vikram M

As someone in the IT sector for 12+ years, I see this as a mixed signal. AI/ML and specialized roles are booming but general IT hiring has definitely slowed down. The 18% growth in IT & info security is interesting - companies are finally taking cybersecurity seriously after all those high-profile breaches. But outsourcing and routine coding jobs are shrinking fast.

Nikhil C

Kolkata at 12% growth - now that's unexpected! Usually it's all about Bangalore or Hyderabad. Good to see eastern India finally getting attention. But honestly, these numbers from a single job site (Naukri) can be misleading. What about small companies hiring through other channels? And the informal sector? Our country's employment story is much bigger than one report.

Arjun K

Happy to see white-collar hiring up, but I hope this doesn't create a bigger gap between skilled and un

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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