For the Class of 2026, graduation season is approaching—but so is an unsettling reality. After four years of tuition, late-night studying, and the promise that a degree would open doors, many will discover that the job market they’re stepping into looks nothing like what they expected.
The numbers are stark. According to the Cengage Group‘s 2025 Graduate Employability Report, only 30% of college graduates secure jobs in their field of study . For the vast majority, the degree they worked so hard to earn isn’t leading to the career they planned for.
This is the toughest entry-level job market in five years . Here’s what’s happening—and what graduates can do about it.
The Hard Numbers: A Market in Contraction
The challenges facing the Class of 2026 aren’t anecdotal. They’re showing up clearly in the data.
The U.S. economy added just 181,000 jobs in 2025—a dramatic slowdown from the 1.46 million jobs created in 2024 . While hiring projections for the Class of 2026 are expected to be “flat,” the National Association of Colleges and Employers (NACE) reports that more than 75% of employers hired the same number or fewer entry-level employees in 2025 than the year prior .
The unemployment rate for college graduates ages 22 to 27 soared to 5.6% at the end of 2025, according to an analysis from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York—up sharply over the past three years and significantly higher than the overall unemployment rate of 4.2% at the time . For young people ages 20 to 24 with bachelor‘s degrees, the rate climbed even higher, reaching 6.2% in early 2026 .
But unemployment tells only part of the story. Among those who are employed, more than 40% hold jobs that do not typically require college degrees—the highest level since 2020 . These are graduates working as restaurant hosts, retail clerks, or ride operators: jobs they could have gotten without the diploma.
BlackRock CEO Larry Fink recently warned that the incoming cohort “could see the highest unemployment rate among graduates in years,” pointing to a deeper structural shift in how early-career hiring is evolving .
Why Is This Happening? Four Key Factors
Economists point to several converging forces—not one single cause.
1. The “Low Hire, Low Fire” Labor Market
Job openings have been trending down and are below pre-pandemic levels, even as layoffs have remained low. The result is a “hiring stasis” that hurts new entrants to the labor market most acutely .
“There’s just a general slowdown in hiring and less churn,” said Adam Ozimek, chief economist at the Economic Innovation Group. “And so those who need their first jobs are probably disproportionately affected” .
2. AI Is Reshaping Entry-Level Roles
Artificial intelligence is rapidly eroding the traditional first rung of the white-collar career ladder. Entry-level roles in fields like software development, data analysis, and basic content creation—jobs that historically absorbed fresh graduates—are being automated or augmented to require fewer junior hires .
According to a November 2025 report from the Stanford Digital Economy Lab, there have been “substantial declines in employment for early-career workers” in AI-vulnerable fields . Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic, has predicted AI could eliminate half of entry-level white-collar jobs within five years .
“The speed at which AI is changing, we’re not adapting our society fast enough,” Fink said at BlackRock‘s 2026 Infrastructure Summit .
3. The Aging Workforce Creates Congestion
A less-discussed factor: older workers are staying in the workforce longer. Since the 1970s, the share of older workers in private-sector white-collar jobs has grown as life expectancy has increased and Americans have worked longer .
“As the U.S. population has aged, older workers are continuing to hold on to their positions,” said Luke Pardue, policy director at the Aspen Institute’s Economic Strategy Group. “That is now showing up in terms of diminished job prospects for younger workers” .
With fewer senior workers retiring, there‘s less movement up the career ladder—meaning fewer entry-level positions need to be filled.
4. More Graduates, More Competition
More people are graduating with college degrees than ever before, heightening competition for entry-level white-collar jobs . Job postings targeting students and recent graduates on Handshake fell over 16% between August 2024 and August 2025, while applications per role rose 26% .
The Degrees Still in Demand
Despite the bleak headlines, some fields are still hiring. NACE‘s Winter 2026 Salary Survey, which collected responses from 150 employers, identified the most in-demand bachelor’s degrees for the Class of 2026 :
| Rank | Degree | % of Employers Planning to Hire |
|---|---|---|
| 1 (tie) | Finance | 61.3% |
| 1 (tie) | Mechanical Engineering | 61.3% |
| 3 | Computer Science | 60.0% |
| 4 (tie) | Accounting | 58.7% |
| 4 (tie) | Business Administration/Management | 58.7% |
| 6 | Electrical Engineering | 51.3% |
| 7 | Information Sciences and Systems | 48.0% |
| 8 | Logistics/Supply Chain | 44.7% |
| 9 | Marketing | 44.0% |
| 10 | Human Resources | 40.0% |
Starting salaries are also rising for many of these fields. Computer science graduates in 2026 are projected to earn an average of $81,535—up 6.9% from last year—making it the highest-paying major category . Engineering follows closely at $81,198 .
The Hidden Crisis: Underemployment
The 30% figure—the share of graduates working in their field—is itself a measure of underemployment. But an even broader measure shows the scale of the problem: more than 40% of employed recent college graduates hold jobs that don‘t require a degree at all .
For students like Erin Torres, 22, who graduated in December from Barnard College with a psychology degree, the reality has been humbling. She aspired to product management in tech but has broadened her search to include “all manner of entry-level corporate jobs and business analyst roles.” In two months, she applied to nearly 200 jobs and received four interviews .
“Things don’t necessarily come to me easily, but I was hoping that at this stage I would have something lined up,” Torres told The New York Times . She now lives with her parents on Long Island, working part-time as a host at a restaurant—and recently learned that location is closing.
Taleah Reyes, 22, enrolled at Rollins College in Florida after working full-time at a theme park, believing a degree would open doors. She‘s graduating in May with an art history degree and has been applying to fellowships and internships at museums, libraries, and magazines .
“It’s been a lot of rejection,” she said. “The field is so competitive” . Her fallback? Returning to the theme park for $20 an hour. “I went to school to further my career and to have some sense of personal fulfillment. And then I‘m leaving again to enter a job I previously had” .
The Wage Scarring Effect
What happens to graduates who struggle to find work matters beyond the first year. According to an October 2025 National Bureau of Economics Research working paper, each additional $1,000 students earn in their first job after graduating translates to another $700 in yearly earnings five years out from college .
Early-career struggles create lasting “wage scars.” The longer it takes to find a degree-relevant job, the more human capital depreciates—skills become outdated, professional networks aren’t built, and future earnings potential declines .
How Employers Are Changing What They Value
The 2026 job market isn’t just smaller—it’s different. Employers are shifting how they evaluate candidates.
Skills-Based Hiring Is Growing
Nearly 70% of employers now use skills-based hiring, prioritizing what candidates can do over where they went to school . This represents a significant shift from traditional degree-centric recruiting.
The University of Oregon’s Mohr Career Services reports that employers are looking for:
- Internships in their industry (79% value this)
- Industry experience (81%)
- Leadership roles (82% among GPA-screening employers)
- Extracurricular involvement (73% among GPA-screening employers)
GPA, by contrast, matters less than it used to. Only 42% of employers plan to screen by GPA in 2026—down from 73% in 2019 .
Remote Work Is Becoming Rare
For entry-level roles in 2026, the work environment looks different than during the pandemic years. NACE data shows:
- 50% hybrid
- 43% fully in-person
- 6% fully remote
Graduates hoping for fully remote positions face a competitive market for a shrinking pool of roles.
AI Skills Are Increasingly Expected
While AI isn‘t replacing most entry-level jobs yet—61% of employers report they are not replacing positions with AI—it is changing what skills are expected . More than 13% of entry-level job posts now require AI skills . Employers are actively looking for graduates who understand how to work with AI tools, not hide from them .
What Graduates Can Do
For the Class of 2026 walking across the stage this spring, the situation is challenging but not hopeless. Career counselors and economists offer several strategies:
1. Prioritize Experience Before Graduation
If you’re still in school, internships are the single most valuable thing you can do. Employers consistently rank internships—especially internships in their industry—as the top factor in hiring decisions . Campus career centers report that students with relevant internships are hired at significantly higher rates.
2. Be Flexible on Industry and Location
Erin Torres’s experience—broadening from tech product management to any entry-level corporate role—is a realistic strategy. Graduates who are willing to relocate or consider adjacent industries often find opportunities that peers who insist on a specific city or sector may miss.
3. Learn to Articulate Your Skills
In a skills-based hiring market, how you describe your experience matters more than your major. Employers advise graduates to:
- Prepare specific examples of problem-solving for interviews
- Translate coursework into skills language (“developed data analysis skills” not “took Statistics 301”)
- Create skills-based resumes that focus on what you can do
4. Consider Alternative Pathways
Larry Fink emphasized that the “education-to-employment pipeline is fragmenting, and alternative pathways are gaining importance” . He pointed to skilled trades—electricians, HVAC technicians, plumbers, ironworkers—as a booming sector tied to AI infrastructure expansion . BlackRock has committed $100 million to skilled-trade training programs to support 50,000 workers over five years .
For liberal arts graduates in particular, graduate school, certificate programs, or skills boot camps may offer a path to more marketable credentials.
5. Use Campus Resources
Career centers are seeing increased student anxiety and are responding. At Temple University, the career center held an “ask-me-anything” gathering where students could air concerns about the job market. Washington University in St. Louis held a resilience-focused session for job seekers in February . Counselors recommend applying broadly, practicing interviewing skills, and taking advantage of alumni networks.
6. Don’t Panic—But Don’t Wait
Oxford economist Grace Zwemmer offers some perspective: “As much as people are concerned about the current state for young grads, the encouraging news is we have been here before” . The labor market has cycled through difficult entry-level periods before, including after the Great Recession and the early pandemic.
But for individual graduates, waiting out a tough market isn‘t an option. The data shows that the sooner you land a job—even if it’s not your dream role—the better your long-term trajectory.
The Bottom Line
The Class of 2026 is entering the worst job market for young degree holders since the pandemic. Only 30% will find full-time work in their field. More than 40% will be underemployed. The unemployment rate for recent college graduates has climbed to levels not seen outside the pandemic era.
But within these sobering numbers are also opportunities—if graduates are willing to adapt. The most in-demand degrees are clear: finance, engineering, computer science, accounting. Skills-based hiring is opening doors for candidates who can demonstrate practical abilities. And the AI transformation, while displacing some roles, is creating new ones in infrastructure, skilled trades, and fields where human judgment remains essential.
For the Class of 2026, the degree is still valuable—college graduates consistently earn more over their lifetimes than non-graduates. But the path from commencement to career may look different than previous generations expected.
As Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan told anxious job seekers: “If you ask them if they’re scared, they say they are. And I understand that. But harness it. It’ll be your world ahead of you” .