---
title: "AI Recruitment Statistics 2026: Hiring Trends & Data"
date: 2026-05-07
author: "Barry Elad"
featured_image: "https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/ai-recruitment-statistics.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Artificial Intelligence"
    url: "/artificial-intelligence.md"
tags:
  - name: "Statistics"
    url: "/tag/statistics.md"
---

# AI Recruitment Statistics 2026: Hiring Trends & Data

SHRM’s overall 2025 survey of 2,040 HR professionals found that nearly half (43%) of organizations now use AI in HR tasks, up from 26% in 2024. A separate HireVue report covering more than 4,000 HR leaders worldwide put adoption even higher, at 72% in 2025, up from 58% in 2024.

Pew Research Center found that 66% of Americans would not want to apply for a job with an employer that uses AI to help make hiring decisions. The gap between employer enthusiasm and candidate skepticism defines the current state of AI recruitment. These [AI recruitment statistics](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/ai-in-hr-statistics/) cover adoption rates, screening tools, cost benchmarks, bias patterns, and the regulatory deadlines that will change how companies hire.

## Key Takeaways

- Nearly half (**43%**) of organizations use AI in HR tasks in 2025, an overall jump from **26%** in 2024, according to SHRM’s survey of **2,040** HR professionals.
- About **82%** of companies that use AI in hiring apply it to resume review, per a ResumeBuilder survey of **948** business leaders.
- **66%** of Americans would not apply for a job with an employer that uses AI in hiring decisions, according to Pew Research Center.
- Teams using AI save approximately **20%** of their work week (roughly one full workday), per LinkedIn’s survey of over **1,000** talent professionals.
- AI adoption among HR professionals surged from **58%** to **72%** between 2024 and 2025, per HireVue’s global survey of more than **4,000** respondents.
- The [EU AI Act](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/eu-ai-act-compliance-cost-statistics/) classifies recruitment AI as high-risk, with fines of up to EUR **15** million and full enforcement beginning **August 2, 2026**.

## Editor’s Choice

- The average cost per hire in the U.S. is approximately **$4,700** for non-executive roles, with a time to fill of about **44** days, according to SHRM’s 2025 Recruiting Benchmarking Report.
- Over half (**51%**) of organizations use AI to support recruiting efforts, with nearly 9 in 10 citing efficiency gains, SHRM reports.
- About **68%** of companies plan to use AI in hiring by the end of 2025, according to ResumeBuilder.
- **53%** of respondents trust AI-powered hiring recommendations, per HireVue’s 2025 survey of more than **4,000** HR leaders.
- **23.2 million** American jobs are already impacted by AI, per SHRM research.
- Nearly 9 in 10 (**89%**) of HR professionals using AI in recruiting say it saves them time or increases their overall efficiency, SHRM found.

## Recent Developments

- SHRM’s State of AI in HR 2026 report (published March 31, 2026) found **39%** of organizations have adopted AI in HR, with **27%** using it specifically for recruiting.
- Among organizations using AI in HR, **87%** reported efficiency improvements and **75%** reported work quality improvements, per SHRM’s March 2026 report.
- **57%** of HR professionals in states with AI regulations are unaware of local AI laws governing hiring tools, according to SHRM’s 2026 survey of 1,908 HR professionals.
- HireVue’s February 2025 report, based on more than **4,000** respondents, showed AI adoption among HR professionals reached **72%**, up from **58%** in 2024.
- **21%** of U.S. workers reported using AI in their jobs in a September 2025 Pew Research survey, up from **16%** in 2024.
- The EEOC removed AI-related hiring guidance from its website in January 2025 following a presidential executive order titled “Removing Barriers to American Leadership in Artificial Intelligence.”
- Prohibited AI practices under the EU AI Act became applicable on **February 2, 2025**, including a ban on emotion recognition in the workplace.

## AI Recruitment Statistics: Adoption Rate Data

- Nearly half (**43%**) of organizations currently use AI in HR tasks, an overall jump from **26%** in 2024, according to SHRM’s 2025 survey.
- AI adoption among HR professionals surged from **58%** in 2024 to **72%** in 2025, per HireVue’s global survey of more than **4,000** respondents.
- **37%** of organizations are actively integrating or experimenting with [generative AI tools](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/generative-ai-statistics/), up from **27%** the previous year, according to LinkedIn’s survey of over **1,000** talent professionals across approximately **23** countries.
- Approximately **11%** of organizations are actively integrating gen AI tools, while **26%** are experimenting, per LinkedIn’s survey of over **1,000** talent professionals.
- Among organizations using AI in HR, nearly two-thirds (**64%**) apply it to recruiting, interviewing, and hiring overall, SHRM reports.
- More than half (**51%**) of companies currently leverage AI technology in their hiring processes, and about **68%** will use AI to acquire new talent by the end of 2025, according to ResumeBuilder.
- More than three-quarters (**78%**) of recruiting executives predict that job candidates will increasingly use AI applications to apply for open positions, per SHRM, in a period when nearly **70%** of organizations still struggle to fill roles.
- Nearly three-quarters (**73%**) expect a rise in the use of AI to perform recruiting tasks, based on SHRM data.

Metric20242025ChangeAI adoption in HR tasks (SHRM)26%43%+17 ppAI adoption among HR professionals (HireVue)58%72%+14 ppOrganizations integrating/experimenting with gen AI (LinkedIn)27%37%+10 ppCompanies using AI in hiring (ResumeBuilder)51%68% (planned)+17 pp*Source: SHRM, HireVue, LinkedIn, ResumeBuilder*

## AI Resume Screening and Candidate Sourcing Data

- About **82%** of companies that use AI in hiring apply it to resume review, per a ResumeBuilder survey of 948 business leaders.
- ResumeBuilder found that about **64%** of employers apply AI to review candidate assessments.
- Among organizations using AI for recruiting, nearly two-thirds (**66%**) use it for writing job descriptions, SHRM data confirms.
- Among organizations using AI for recruiting, nearly half (**44%**) use it for screening resumes, **32%** for automating candidate searches, **31%** for customizing job postings, and **29%** for communicating with applicants, according to SHRM.
- ResumeBuilder found that about **40%** of employers use AI chatbots to communicate with candidates during the hiring process.
- By the end of 2025, about **68%** of companies plan to use AI to acquire new talent, according to ResumeBuilder.
- **19%** of organizations using automation or AI in hiring said their tools had overlooked or screened out qualified applicants, SHRM analysis shows.
- About **56%** of companies worry that AI could screen out qualified candidates, according to ResumeBuilder.

AI ApplicationCurrent UsagePlanned by End of 2025Resume review82%83%Candidate assessments64%69%Chatbot communication40%39%Interview AI23%19%Onboarding28%36%*Source: ResumeBuilder*

## AI Hiring Cost and Time-to-Hire Statistics

- The average cost per hire in the U.S. is approximately **$4,700** for non-executive roles, with a time to fill of about a month and a half, according to SHRM’s 2025 Recruiting Benchmarking Report.
- The cost-per-hire for executives has increased by approximately **113%** from 2017 and about **21%** from 2022, SHRM’s benchmarks show.
- The time to fill job positions continues to be about a month and a half (approximately **44 days**), SHRM’s 2025 benchmarks indicate.
- Hiring teams now conduct approximately **20** interviews per hire, about a **42%** increase from **14** in 2021, based on SHRM data.
- Average cost-per-hire and time-to-hire have both increased in the past three years, a period correlating with increased use of generative AI, SHRM analysis confirms.
- Teams using AI save approximately **20%** of their work week (roughly one full workday weekly), per LinkedIn’s survey of over **1,000** talent professionals.
- The average offer acceptance rate is approximately **82%**, and the interview-to-offer ratio is about 3:1, based on SHRM benchmarking data.
- Over half of organizations have recruiters managing approximately **20** requisitions each, with higher loads at larger firms, according to SHRM documents.

SQ Magazine’s coverage of [AI job loss data](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/ai-job-loss-statistics/) documents a parallel pattern: AI adoption accelerates, but the promised efficiency gains remain uneven across industries and company sizes.

MetricFigureSourceAverage cost per hire (non-executive)$4,700SHRMExecutive cost-per-hire increase (from 2017)+113%SHRMAverage time to fill44 daysSHRMInterviews per hire20SHRMInterviews per hire (2021)14SHRMOffer acceptance rate82%SHRMInterview-to-offer ratio3:1SHRM*Source: SHRM 2025 Recruiting Benchmarking Report*

> **By the numbers:** According to SHRM’s 2025 Recruiting Benchmarking Report, hiring teams now conduct approximately **20** interviews per hire, about a **42%** increase from 14 in 2021, while both cost-per-hire and time-to-hire have risen during the same period AI adoption surged. The data suggests AI is augmenting, not yet replacing, the volume of human evaluation in recruitment.

## AI Recruitment Efficiency and ROI Data

- Nearly 9 in 10 (**89%**) of HR professionals whose organization uses AI to support recruiting say it saves them time or increases their overall efficiency, SHRM’s 2025 survey shows.
- Over 1 in 3 (**36%**) say using AI to support recruiting activities helps reduce their recruitment, interviewing, and hiring costs, while nearly 1 in 4 cite improved candidate identification, based on SHRM findings.
- Nearly 1 in 4 (**24%**) report that AI has improved their overall ability to identify top candidates, SHRM’s survey reveals.
- More than half of HR professionals (**63%**) report greater productivity gains from AI, per HireVue.
- More than half (**55%**) of HR professionals are automating manual tasks with AI, according to HireVue.
- Approximately **61%** of talent acquisition professionals believe AI can improve how they measure quality of hire overall, per LinkedIn.
- Companies using AI-assisted messaging are approximately **9%** more likely to make quality hires overall, according to LinkedIn.
- **61%** of respondents in Mercer’s Global Talent Trends survey saw an increase in efficiency from AI adoption.

![Impact of AI on Hiring Efficiency and Cost Reduction](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/impact-of-ai-on-hiring-efficiency-and-cost-reduction.jpg "Impact of AI on Hiring Efficiency and Cost Reduction")

## How Candidates View AI in Hiring

- **71%** of Americans oppose AI making a final hiring decision, while just **7%** favor it, according to Pew Research Center’s survey of 11,004 U.S. adults.
- **66%** of Americans say they would not want to apply for a job with an employer that uses AI to help make hiring decisions, per Pew Research Center data.
- A plurality (**41%**) opposes AI reviewing job applications, **30%** are not sure, and **28%** are in favor, based on Pew survey data.
- **47%** think AI would do better than humans at evaluating all job applicants in the same way, while **15%** believe AI would be worse, based on Pew Research Center data.
- **50%** of U.S. adults say increased AI use makes them more concerned than excited, per a June 2025 Pew Research Center survey.
- Only **23%** of Americans expect positive job-related impacts from AI, based on Pew Research Center findings.
- Confidence in AI systems rose by **14** percentage points, from **37%** in 2024 to **51%** in 2025, per HireVue’s global survey.
- A majority (**57%**) of respondents believe AI reduces racial and ethnic bias in hiring (up **6%** from the prior year), per HireVue’s global report covering more than 4,000 respondents.

![Candidate Attitudes Toward AI in Hiring](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/candidate-attitudes-toward-ai-in-hiring.jpg "Candidate Attitudes Toward AI in Hiring")

## AI Bias and Discrimination in Recruitment Statistics

- About **47%** of companies identify age bias in their AI hiring tools, **44%** cite socioeconomic bias, **30%** mention gender bias, and **26%** point to racial or ethnic bias, per ResumeBuilder.
- ResumeBuilder found that about **56%** of employers worry that AI could screen out qualified candidates.
- About **47%** of companies identify age bias in their AI tools, and **44%** identify socioeconomic bias as a concern, per ResumeBuilder.
- **19%** of organizations using automation or AI in hiring said their tools had overlooked or screened out qualified applicants, per SHRM research.
- ResumeBuilder found that about **9%** of firms report that AI always produces biased recommendations, while **24%** say it often does.
- About **21%** of employers automatically reject candidates at all stages without human review, per ResumeBuilder.
- **66%** of Americans say they would not want to apply for a job with an employer that uses AI to help make hiring decisions, per Pew survey data.
- About **21%** of firms automatically reject candidates at all stages without human review, highlighting gaps in AI oversight, per ResumeBuilder.

Concerns about AI-driven discrimination extend beyond individual employers. Our coverage of [AI in social media statistics](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/ai-in-social-media-tools-statistics/) documents how algorithmic bias affects multiple technology layers, from content delivery to hiring pipelines.

![Top Hiring Biases Reported By Employers](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/top-hiring-biases-reported-by-employers.jpg "Top Hiring Biases Reported by Employers")

## AI Hiring Regulation and Compliance Statistics

- The EU AI Act, which entered into force on **August 1, 2024**, classifies AI tools for employment, worker management, and self-employment access as high-risk, with penalties scaling up to full enforcement by August 2026.
- CV-sorting software for recruitment is specifically named as a high-risk example under the EU AI Act, subject to requirements that scale up to full compliance by August 2026.
- Starting **August 2, 2026**, each AI tool used for recruiting, screening, selection, or performance evaluation will need mandatory risk assessments, technical documentation, bias testing, human oversight, transparency disclosures, and continuous monitoring, with penalties up to **3%** of global annual turnover.
- Fines for deployers who fail to meet high-risk obligations can reach up to EUR 15 million or **3%** of global annual turnover, whichever is higher.
- Emotion recognition in candidate interviews or video assessments is a prohibited practice under the EU AI Act, classified separately from high-risk obligations.
- The EEOC removed AI-related hiring guidance from its website in January 2025 following a presidential executive order.
- Colorado’s Senate Bill 24-205, effective **February 1, 2026**, mandates employers to comply with high-risk AI system standards, including conducting bias audits for AI used in employment.
- U.S. employers can be covered by the EU AI Act even without a physical EU presence if AI outputs are intended to be used in the EU, with obligations scaling up to full compliance by August 2026 (for example, recruiting EU candidates with unaudited tools).

> **Key finding:** According to the European Commission, the EU AI Act classifies employment-related AI tools as high-risk, with full enforcement beginning August 2, 2026, and non-compliant deployers face fines of up to EUR 15 million or 3% of global annual turnover. EU, Colorado, and Illinois deadlines converge within months, creating a narrow compliance window for global employers.

RegulationEffective DateKey RequirementEU AI Act (prohibited practices)February 2, 2025Emotion recognition banned in hiringEU AI Act (full enforcement)August 2, 2026Bias testing, risk assessments, human oversightColorado SB 24-205February 1, 2026Bias audits for high-risk AI in employmentIllinois AI Video Interview ActJanuary 1, 2020Consent and disclosure for AI video interviews*Source: European Commission, Holland &amp; Knight, Crowell &amp; Moring*

## AI in Hiring by Industry and Company Size

- Over half (**51%**) of organizations use AI to support recruiting efforts, with nearly two-thirds (**64%**) of AI-using organizations applying it to recruiting, interviewing, and hiring overall, per SHRM’s 2025 survey.
- Nearly **39%** of organizations overall have adopted AI in HR functions, per SHRM’s 2026 survey.
- Only **27%** of organizations use AI specifically in recruiting, per SHRM’s 2026 report.
- Larger companies are more likely to adopt AI in HR, with 60% of extra-large organizations using AI compared to 35% of midsize and 33% of small organizations, according to SHRM’s 2026 report.
- **46%** of employers see skill shortages as a top threat to their business, per Mercer’s Global Talent Trends report.
- **53%** of executives expect AI and automation to boost productivity by **10-30%** over the next three years, according to Mercer.
- Only **30%** of organizations are regularly using generative AI, despite widespread executive optimism, per Mercer.

Companies investing in [Microsoft 365 statistics](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/microsoft-365-statistics/) and enterprise software platforms are often the same organizations leading AI adoption in recruitment, given their existing technology infrastructure.

![AI Adoption in HR by Organization Size](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/ai-adoption-in-hr-by-organization-size.jpg "AI Adoption in HR by Organization Size")

## AI Interview and Assessment Technology Statistics

- About **23%** of employers use AI to conduct interviews, and **64%** apply AI to review candidate assessments, per ResumeBuilder.
- ResumeBuilder found that about **64%** of firms apply AI to review candidate assessments, while **40%** use AI chatbots to communicate with candidates.
- About **82%** of employers using AI in hiring apply it to resume review, the highest-reported application at **82%**, per ResumeBuilder.
- **41%** of companies use skill assessments in hiring, per HireVue’s report covering more than 4,000 respondents.
- About **23%** of firms use AI to conduct interviews, according to ResumeBuilder.
- By the end of 2025, about **68%** of companies plan to use AI to acquire new talent, with **56%** worried about screening out qualified candidates, according to ResumeBuilder.
- A majority (**53%**) of respondents trust AI-powered hiring recommendations, per HireVue’s 2025 report covering more than 4,000 respondents.

![How Companies Use AI in Hiring (Resume Screening to Interviews)](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/how-companies-use-ai-in-hiring-resume-screening-to-interviews.jpg "How Companies Use AI in Hiring (Resume Screening to Interviews)")

## AI Chatbot and Automation in Recruitment Data

- About **40%** of employers use AI chatbots to communicate with candidates, per ResumeBuilder.
- More than half (**55%**) of HR professionals are automating manual tasks with AI, according to HireVue.
- Nearly a third (**29%**) of organizations overall use AI for communicating with applicants, based on SHRM data.
- About **68%** of employers will use AI to acquire new talent by the end of 2025, up from **51%** currently, according to ResumeBuilder.
- **58%** of executives expect AI and process automation to help with cost optimization by eliminating manual work and improving workforce productivity, per Mercer.
- **63%** of respondents in HireVue’s survey, covering more than 4,000 HR leaders, reported greater productivity gains from AI adoption.
- Nearly a third (**32%**) of organizations overall use AI for automating candidate searches, based on SHRM findings.
- About **68%** of firms plan to use AI in hiring by the end of 2025, per ResumeBuilder.

Chatbot-driven candidate communication connects to broader enterprise technology adoption. Organizations tracking [Google workforce data](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/how-many-people-work-at-google/) see the tech employers leading AI tool development and internal adoption.

![AI Chatbots and Automation Lead Hiring Trends](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/ai-chatbots-and-automation-lead-hiring-trends.jpg "AI Chatbots and Automation Lead Hiring Trends")

## Recruiter Sentiment and AI Skills Data

- The number of talent acquisition professionals using LinkedIn Learning to develop AI skills increased approximately **2.3x** over the last 12 months, per LinkedIn.
- Nearly 4 in 5 (**78%**) of recruiting executives predict that job candidates will increasingly use AI applications to apply for open positions, per SHRM’s talent trends survey.
- Nearly three-quarters (**73%**) expect a rise in the use of AI to perform recruiting tasks, SHRM data indicates.
- Only **30%** of organizations are regularly using generative AI, per Mercer.
- Approximately **73%** of talent acquisition professionals overall agree that AI will change the way organizations hire, per LinkedIn.
- Only approximately **25%** of talent acquisition professionals overall report high confidence in their ability to measure quality of hire effectively, per LinkedIn.
- Nearly two-thirds (**64%**) of AI-using organizations apply it to recruiting, interviewing, and/or hiring, SHRM reports.
- Only **23%** of Americans expect positive job-related impacts from AI, per Pew survey findings.

Our [Claude vs ChatGPT data](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/claude-vs-chatgpt-statistics/) coverage shows that AI model capabilities shift every six months, but public perception lags by over a year. The same pattern applies to recruiter confidence: tools evolve faster than the skills needed to use them.

Recruiter Sentiment MetricPercentageSourcePredict candidates will use AI to apply78%SHRMExpect rise in AI recruiting tasks73%SHRMAgree AI will change how organizations hire73%LinkedInHigh confidence in measuring quality of hire25%LinkedInOrganizations regularly using gen AI30%MercerOrganization proactive in AI upskilling33%SHRM*Source: SHRM, LinkedIn, Mercer*

## AI Recruitment Market Growth and Future Projections

- **53%** of executives expect AI and automation to boost productivity by **10-30%** over the next three years, according to Mercer.
- Nearly **70%** (**69%**) of organizations still face challenges recruiting full-time positions, reflecting 2016 levels after peaking in 2022, per SHRM.
- Approximately **73%** of talent acquisition professionals overall agree that AI will change the way organizations hire, per LinkedIn.
- **46%** of employers see skill shortages as a top threat to their business, per Mercer.
- Top concerns about AI include misinformation (more than half, **51%**), job replacement fears (**51%**), and security risks (**47%**), per HireVue.
- **58%** of executives expect AI and process automation to help with cost optimization by eliminating manual work, per Mercer.
- Among organizations using AI in HR, nearly two-thirds (**64%**) apply it to recruiting, interviewing, and/or hiring, with **44%** screening resumes and **32%** automating candidate searches, per SHRM.
- A 13-point increase in concern about AI occurred between 2021 and 2025, per Pew survey data.

Organizations building AI recruiting capabilities also compete for the same talent. [OpenAI employee count](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/how-many-people-work-at-openai/) data reflects how AI companies recruit at scale.

Future ProjectionFigureSourceExecutives expecting 10-30% productivity boost53%MercerOrganizations struggling to fill roles69%SHRMTA pros agreeing AI will change hiring73%LinkedInEmployers seeing skill shortages as top threat46%MercerExecutives expecting cost optimization via AI58%Mercer*Source: Mercer, SHRM, LinkedIn*

## Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

**What percentage of companies use AI in hiring?**SHRM’s overall 2025 survey found that over half (51%) of organizations use AI in recruiting, with nearly 9 in 10 reporting time savings. ResumeBuilder data shows about 68% of companies plan to use AI in hiring by the end of 2025. Adoption rates vary by survey methodology and scope.

 

**Does AI in hiring reduce costs?**SHRM found nearly 9 in 10 (89%) of HR professionals say AI saves time or increases overall efficiency, while over 1 in 3 (36%) report reduced recruitment costs. SHRM benchmarking data shows cost-per-hire and time-to-hire both increased over the past three years, during the same period AI adoption surged. Results depend on implementation maturity.

 

**Is AI biased in recruitment?**ResumeBuilder’s survey found that about 47% of companies identify age bias, 44% cite socioeconomic bias, and 30% report gender bias in their AI tools. SHRM research shows 19% of organizations using automation or AI in hiring said their tools overlooked or screened out qualified applicants. Bias testing and human oversight remain critical.

 

**What AI hiring regulations exist?**The EU AI Act classifies AI tools used for employment decisions, worker management, and self-employment access as high-risk, with fines of up to EUR 15 million or 3% of global annual turnover (whichever is higher) and full enforcement on August 2, 2026. Colorado’s SB 24-205 takes effect February 1, 2026, requiring bias audits for AI in employment. Multiple jurisdictions are converging on AI hiring compliance deadlines.

 

**Do candidates trust AI in hiring decisions?**Pew surveys found 71% of Americans oppose AI making a final hiring decision, and 66% would not apply to an AI-hiring employer. HireVue’s 2025 report, based on more than 4,000 respondents, found confidence in AI systems rose from 37% to 51%, suggesting trust is growing among HR professionals, if not yet among candidates.

 

 

## Conclusion

AI adoption in HR rose from 26% to 43% over a single year, according to SHRM’s 2025 survey. Candidate resistance remains strong, with 66% of Americans unwilling to apply to employers using AI in hiring, per Pew survey data.

The data tells a story of rapid adoption colliding with slow trust. Employers report efficiency gains, but aggregate cost and time metrics have not yet improved. Candidates distrust the tools. Regulators are closing in. The organizations that will benefit most from AI recruitment are those that pair automation with transparency, bias testing, and genuine human oversight.

HR professionals, recruiters, and compliance officers tracking AI recruitment statistics should monitor the EU AI Act’s upcoming August enforcement date, Colorado’s upcoming February bias audit deadline, and evolving EEOC guidance. The efficiency paradox documented in this year’s data (rising AI adoption alongside rising costs) will resolve only when organizations move beyond tool deployment to process redesign.

*Data in this report was cross-referenced against SHRM’s 2025 Talent Trends and Recruiting Benchmarking reports, Pew Research Center’s 2022 and 2025 surveys, LinkedIn’s Future of Recruiting 2025 report, HireVue’s 2025 Global Guide to AI in Hiring, ResumeBuilder’s 2024 survey, and official EU AI Act documentation.*