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ZipRecruiter report shows 2025 grads landing jobs faster despite tough market

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13

Why it matters

ZipRecruiter's survey of 3,000 recent and rising 2025 graduates found that 77% landed jobs within three months of graduating, up from 63% a year prior. The improvement masks a tightening entry-level market: graduates submitted significantly more applications, often for roles they viewed as stepping stones, and unemployment among young college graduates sits at 5.6%—nearly double the 3.1% rate for all college-educated workers. Nearly half the respondents reported that artificial intelligence is affecting their fields, with communications and media hit hardest. Only 23% received university training on AI tools, and a gender gap emerged: 28.6% of men received such training versus 18.7% of women.

The data conflict on trajectory. The New York Federal Reserve reported recent-graduate unemployment at 5.7% in Q4 2025, up from 5.3% the prior quarter, with underemployment at 42.5%—the highest level since 2020. Graduate confidence in quick employment fell to 79% in 2026, according to Kelly Services. The National Association of Colleges and Employers projects a 5.6% hiring increase for the Class of 2026, suggesting modest recovery ahead.

Attorneys advising employers on entry-level hiring should note the persistent skills gap, particularly around AI competency. Work experience more than doubles job-landing odds, and 88% of employed graduates credited networking—a signal that traditional recruitment channels remain critical even as AI disruption reshapes hiring practices. The underemployment rate warrants attention: graduates are working, but often in roles below their qualifications, which may affect retention and long-term workforce planning.

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