Recruiting Headlines

Deel’s 2025 State of Global Hiring Report

DEEL, the leading global HR and payroll platform, just released its annual State of Global Hiring Report, the most comprehensive analysis of how companies hire across borders. Drawing on data from more than one million workers spanning 37,000+ companies in 150+ countries, the 2025 report reveals four seismic shifts in the global labor market: AI training has emerged as a distinct, global profession, top-funded startups are hiring internationally for specialized talent rather than cost savings, remote workers are migrating back toward cities, and contractors in volatile economies are frequently “currency hopping” into USD and stablecoins to protect their earnings.

AI Is Creating Jobs, Not Just Replacing Them
The report reveals a rapid emergence of AI trainers as a new, expansive global profession that barely existed a few years ago. Over 70,000 workers now train AI systems across more than 600 organizations, performing tasks from basic data annotation to expert-level feedback in medicine, economics, and translation. General AI trainer roles grew 283% cross-border in 2025, making it the single fastest-growing cross-border role on Deel’s platform. Additional key findings on AI trainers:

Top Startups Go Global for Talent, Not Cost Savings
Among nearly 100 startups founded between 2020 and 2025 that raised $100M+ in funding, cross-border hiring overwhelmingly targets wealthy, high-income countries, shattering the myth that international hiring is primarily about cost-cutting.

The Urban Boomerang: Remote Workers Are Moving Back Toward Cities
After a pandemic-era exodus from major cities, remote workers are gradually migrating back. The average distance of cross-border employees from major urban centers increased between 2021 and 2022, but has declined every year since then. In the U.S., workers are now as close to major cities like New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, and San Francisco as they were in 2021. Similar patterns appear in London and Paris.

Global Compensation: Leadership Roles Drive Pay Growth, Regional Gaps Widen
Salary growth in 2025 concentrated in senior leadership positions, but the drivers varied dramatically by region:

Workers Are “Currency Hopping” to Protect Earnings
As part of the “currency hopping” trend, contractors in economically volatile markets with high inflation are frequently choosing USD or stablecoins over local currencies to protect their purchasing power.

“This year’s data tells a story that touches on many of the hot topics of this specific moment in time, and demystifies what is actually happening on the ground,” said Lauren Thomas, Economist at Deel. “What intrigues me the most is that we now have proof that hiring internationally isn’t driven by shrinking budgets, but an intense competition for the best talent. That talent still lives in major metro areas, closer to big cities than they have in recent years, and they’re a hot commodity for companies around the world. Post-pandemic, there is a slow crawl towards the urban centers that were always where top talent gravitated towards.”

“The rise of ‘currency hopping’ and stablecoin payments is a direct signal that workers are taking global mobility into their own hands,” said Kristine Lipscomb, General Manager of Global Mobility at Deel. “When a contractor in Argentina chooses to get paid in USD or stablecoins instead of pesos, it’s not just a financial decision. It’s a vote of confidence in the global, borderless economy. Companies that want to attract and retain the best talent worldwide need to offer the flexibility to match how modern workers actually want to be paid.”

Additional Findings

The full 2025 State of Global Hiring Report is available here.

Exit mobile version