No Result
View All Result
Benefits Expert
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Alerts
  • Events
  • Contact
  • NEWS
  • IN DEPTH
  • PROFILE
  • PENSIONS
  • GLOBAL REWARDS
  • FINANCIAL BENEFITS
  • HEALTH & WELLBEING
  • DIVERSITY & INCLUSION
  • PODCAST
No Result
View All Result
Benefits Expert
  • NEWS
  • IN DEPTH
  • PROFILE
  • PENSIONS
  • GLOBAL REWARDS
  • FINANCIAL BENEFITS
  • HEALTH & WELLBEING
  • DIVERSITY & INCLUSION
  • PODCAST

UK salary budgets hold steady for 2026 as employers rethink priorities

by Benefits Expert
08/07/2025
Pay, UK pay, salary, wage, awards, reward, UK pounds sterling, money
Share on LinkedInShare on Twitter

Most UK employers expect to keep budgets for salary increases flat for 2026, with the average rise expected to remain at 3.6 percent, matching pay increases for 2025. 

This is one of the key findings in WTW’s latest Salary Budget Planning Report, which surveyed 994 UK organisations between April and June 2025.

Just over a third (35 percent) of companies plan to reduce their pay budgets for 2026 despite economic headwinds. Researchers said that where cuts are happening, the key drivers are cost management concerns (52 percent) and expectations of weaker financial performance or a potential recession (47 percent). Conversely, just a small proportion of employers are boosting salary budgets, and they cite tight labour markets (50 percent) and inflationary pressures (38 percent) as reasons.

But the headline pay figures don’t tell the whole story, according to researchers. WTW’s managing director, talent and rewards Ruchi Arora, said organisations are being more intentional with how they allocate compensation.

“While top-line budgets are generally holding steady, the real shift is happening beneath the surface. Organisations are being more deliberate about how they allocate pay, where they focus investment and what outcomes they expect to drive.

“Employers are no longer simply reacting to economic signals; they’re reimagining how to best support broader business goals in the face of uncertainty.”

With employee turnover easing, just 25 percent of employers now report attraction and retention as a challenge. This is 4 percentage points lower than 2023, with many organisations focusing on long-term workforce strategies. 

Among the most common measures taken to support employees are an increased focus on diversity, equity and inclusion (44 percent), efforts to improve the overall employee experience (40 percent), and expanded access to training and development opportunities (39 percent).

Employers are also refining how they manage pay within existing budgets. A significant number have carried out compensation reviews for all staff (43 percent) or specific employee groups (43 percent), while others have raised starting salaries (41 percent) or hired at higher points within salary bands (40 percent). One in three (34 percent) have issued targeted base pay increases, and a similar proportion (33 percent) have enhanced the use of retention bonuses or spot awards.

RELATED POSTS

Pension, nest egg, defined benefit, superfund

Talk of pensions tax-free cash cut resurfaces ahead of Budget

BHSF, Georgina Callaghan, COO, and Clare, Enstone, director of risk and compliance

BHSF appoints COO and compliance chief amid major transformation

Looking ahead, Arora said the focus will be on broader investment in people, not just pay. “These include career development, wellbeing, flexibility and equity—because these are critical for performance, retention and resilience in a shifting market.”

Next Post
Overseas, employees, air travel, plane

Most UK employers skip country-specific health support for overseas staff

Harassment-at-work-NDA-Employment-rights-bill-sexual-harassment

Ban on workplace harassment NDAs could have unintended consequences

SUMMIT

BENEFITS UNBOXED PODCAST

Benefits Unboxed
Benefits Unboxed

The podcast from Benefits Expert, the title for HR, reward and benefits professionals.

Seasoned professionals examine the challenges and innovations in today’s employee benefits, reward and HR sector. Every episode, they will unbox a key issue and unpack what it really means for employers and how they can tackle it.

The regulars are Claire Churchard, editor of Benefits Expert; Carole Goldsmith, HR director at the Royal Horticultural Society, and Steve Herbert, consultant and rewards & benefits veteran.

Benefits Unboxed – Forget 10,000: the step count that really boosts employee wellbeing
byBenefits Expert from Definite Article Media

The 10,000 step rule has been wellbeing gospel for decades. But what if the science says otherwise?

Fresh data is challenging old assumptions and opening up new opportunities for HR to support employee health in smarter, simpler ways.

In this episode, part of a trio of 10 minute podcasts, hosts Claire Churchard and Steve Herbert ask: why has this myth stuck for so long, and how can employers use the new evidence to boost health, engagement and productivity?

Benefits Unboxed – Forget 10,000: the step count that really boosts employee wellbeing
Benefits Unboxed – Forget 10,000: the step count that really boosts employee wellbeing
22/08/2025
Benefits Expert from Definite Article Media
Search Results placeholder

GUIDE TO WORKPLACE PENSIONS



REQUEST A FREE COPY

OPINION

Steve Herbert, consultant, ambassador, reward, benefits, HR strategy

Steve Herbert: The art of the deal?

Lorna Ferrie, legal and compliance director, Mauve Group

Lorna Ferrie: hybrid is not a loophole, remote teams can’t ignore the pay transparency push

Holly Coe, Innecto Reward Consulting

Holly Coe: friendship is an overlooked superpower when tackling workplace absenteeism

Vitality. Pippa Andrews

Pippa Andrews: how to make exercise more enjoyable for women

SUBSCRIBE

Benefits Expert

© 2024 Definite Article Limited. Design by 71 Media Limited.

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact

Follow Benefits Expert

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • In depth
  • Profile
  • Pensions
  • Global rewards
  • Financial benefits
  • Health & wellbeing
  • Diversity & Inclusion