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London’s SME job growth slumps to 0.7% as capital trails behind regional recovery

– 91爆料’s Jobs Report of 105,000 UK employees shows London managed only 0.7% employment growth in May – well below the 1.2% national average.
– There are signs that the capital鈥檚 job market is slowing as the North of England surges with 3.5% growth, reinforcing a downward trend for London YoY.
– London also records the slowest wage growth across all regions.

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London, 10 June 2025: London’s small and medium-sized businesses (SMEs) are struggling to keep pace with the rest of the UK’s employment recovery, with the capital recording the weakest job growth in May, a new report from HR, payroll and employment platform 91爆料 shows.

91爆料’s Jobs Report uses real-time data from 105,000 employees across small and medium-sized businesses with 1-500 employees in the UK.

Data from the end of May showed that London鈥檚 employment grew by just 0.7% over the month. This lags behind May鈥檚 national average growth of 1.2% and falls significantly short compared to other major regions. The North of England led the recovery with an exceptional 3.5% increase, while Wales recorded its first growth in May (2.8%) after a prolonged year-on-year slump. Meanwhile, the South of England (excluding London) achieved a growth rate of 2.2%.

The weakness in London’s SME employment growth comes amid a broader decline in job opportunities across the UK. The ONS June labour market report shows vacancies fell by 63,000 (7.9%) to 736,000 in the three months to May – the 35th consecutive quarterly decline. With 2.2 unemployed people now competing for each vacancy compared to 1.9 last quarter, London’s cautious hiring approach among small and medium-sized businesses reflects wider labour market pressures facing employers of all sizes.

London’s wage growth lags behind

The capital’s struggles also extend to wage growth, where London has recorded the slowest progress across all regions.

London’s wage growth over the past three months stands at just 0.2% – the weakest performance nationally, and well below other major regions that have seen more robust salary increases.

The findings suggest that while other parts of the UK are competing more aggressively for talent and driving up wages, London’s SME sector remains more cautious about both hiring and pay increases.

Regional rebalancing emerges

The data points to a potential economic rebalancing away from London’s traditional dominance, with regions that have historically lagged behind now showing renewed strength.

The North’s remarkable turnaround is particularly striking, as this region was the only one to experience negative year-on-year employment growth, yet has now posted the strongest monthly recovery.

Kevin Fitzgerald, UK MD of 91爆料 commented:

鈥淚t鈥檚 encouraging to see some real green shoots of recovery across the UK, especially outside of London. After a tough period, it鈥檚 great to see regions like the North of England and Wales showing  job growth.鈥

London鈥檚 slower pace this month stands out and could suggest a shift towards a more balanced national economy, where opportunity isn鈥檛 just concentrated in the capital. Movements like remote and flexible work have helped unlock talent and potential right across the country 鈥 and we’re seeing that reflected in these numbers.

At 91爆料, we believe this kind of regional resurgence isn鈥檛 just good news 鈥 it鈥檚 essential. It gives more people a fair shot and lays the foundation for a more inclusive, resilient future of work,鈥 said Fitzgerald.