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Employee Retention in 2026

How to Hold onto Your Best Employees Next Year

By 2026, leaders won’t just be asking how they can hire faster or find more talent; they’ll be paying more attention to keeping the people they already have.  As of 2025, around one in four workers plan to leave their roles in the UK alone.

That’s not just troubling from an HR perspective.  Every lost employee means lost productivity, diminished momentum, and problems with morale.  It's no wonder that nearly 90% of leaders rank retention as a top priority this year.  The trouble is that turnover isn’t a result of just one thing.

Employees are disappearing for various reasons, including skill gaps, issues with workplace culture, and concerns about management’s approach to wellbeing and work-life balance.  So, how do leaders ensure they can hold onto their best people next year?

Key Takeaways: What Keeps Top Talent in 2026:

  • Economic security matters beyond salary: 89% of UK employees are dissatisfied with pay alignment to their needs. Offer emergency funds, debt assistance, and earned wage access to demonstrate genuine financial support.
  • Career development drives loyalty: With 70% of job skills changing by 2030, employees need visible growth opportunities. 94% say they'd stay longer if their employer invested in their development.
  • Flexible work must deliver on its promise: 87% of UK companies offer hybrid options, but success depends on outcome-based trust, not location monitoring.
  • Wellbeing integration is non-negotiable. Only half of workers feel truly supported. Embed mental health resources into daily operations, not just benefits brochures.
  • Purpose creates lasting connection: 73% of employers recognise that values alignment influences retention. Show employees how their work creates real impact.

The Five Pillars of 2026 Talent Retention

Anyone who has managed a team knows what happens when someone leaves.  The first week is about covering their work.  The second is about realising how  much they knew that no one else does.

Then there’s the shift you can’t quite measure - the drop in energy, the sense that people are wondering if they should be next.  Turnover doesn’t usually cause a significant financial impact all at once. It wears at the edges until things feel thinner than they should.

The reasons people decide to move on are typically spread across a few pillars:

Then there are factors such as the growing demand for flexible work and the continued pursuit of purpose (particularly among younger employees) to consider.

Here’s what leaders need to focus on right now.

  • Money plays a part, especially when everyday costs keep climbing.
  • Skills and growth are another. Jobs are changing fast. If someone cannot see a way to keep up, they will look for an employer who can help them.
  • Wellbeing is often the quiet trigger. Gallup’s latest report shows only half of U.S.  employees say they are thriving, the lowest number since 2009.

Pillar 1:  Economic Security Beyond Salary

A good salary will always matter. It is the foundation of any healthy working relationship.  Yet by itself, it rarely keeps people for the long haul.  In 2026, employees are seeking something steadier, proof that their employer values their financial well-being as much as it values quarterly results.

Companies will have to think about the practical support they can offer struggling teams, such as:

  • Emergency funds for sudden expenses
  • Help with student loans or debt repayment
  • Access to earned pay before payday
  • Financial coaching that gives people a plan they can trust

All these things demonstrate to staff that their employer wants them to feel safe, supported, and prepared to manage whatever comes next.

Pillar 2:  Economic Security Beyond Salary

Work changes quickly now.  One year, you are the person everyone goes to for help with a system, the next, that system is gone.  It is not just technology moving things along; markets shift, regulations change, and whole job functions can disappear almost overnight.

Some individuals keep up by learning at their own pace.  Others start to wonder how long before their skills run out of road.  The World Economic Forum predicts that the skills required for most jobs will change by approximately 70 % by 2030.

Fortunately for business leaders, the link between growth and loyalty is strong. 94% of employees say they’d stay in a role longer if the company invested in their future.

Take a practical approach to your team’s growth and development:

  • Make it easy to move internally rather than leave to grow.
  • Offer training that feels relevant today and valuable tomorrow.
  • Shape roles so work matches a person’s strengths - what HBR calls “job sculpting.”
  • Show people how to work alongside AI instead of fearing it.

Growth is a kind of safety.  When people feel prepared for what’s next, they stop scanning job ads for someone who might prepare them better.

Pillar 3:  Flexible Work Models That Actually Work

Most companies now offer some form of flexibility.  Depending on who you ask, up to 87% of UK companies offer some form of hybrid work policy.  However, flexibility alone is no longer the differentiator.  What matters is how well those policies really work.

Flexibility that feels human starts with trust. It is the difference between being told “you can work from home two days a week” and knowing your manager measures you by outcomes, not the hours you spend at your desk.  When teams are judged on results, the location of the laptop matters less than the quality of the work.

  • Set clear goals so everyone knows what good work looks like
  • Use Tools and tech that make collaboration seamless
  • Train leaders to manage distributed teams well

Also, be ready to experiment and adapt to discover what really works.  When flexibility is genuine, it provides people with the space to balance work and life.  That space is often what keeps them.

Pillar 4:  Flexible Work Models That Actually Work

Wellbeing has moved from the edges of company policies to the centre of retention. It is no longer an optional benefit.  When people feel worn down, they do not just lose energy for work; they start planning their exit.

According to Deloitte, while many employees now expect businesses to invest in their well-being, 44% still don’t feel fully supported.  The key to success is in embedding wellbeing initiatives deeper into the day-to-day culture:

  • Managers trained to spot early signs of overload and act
  • Workloads adjusted before they push people past their limits
  • Mental health support embedded in benefits, not buried in a brochure
  • Onboarding that supports connections and confidence.

When well-being is integrated into the way a business operates, people notice it. They work differently, recover more quickly, and have a greater reason to stay.

Pillar 5:  Flexible Work Models That Actually Work

Purpose is what ties people to a place.  If your employees don’t believe in what your company stands for, or can’t see how they contribute to it, their loyalty starts to fade. In fact, 73% of employers in the UK believe purpose and values influence staff retention.

Purpose doesn’t have to mean solving global problems.  It can mean knowing the product makes customers’ lives easier, or that the team’s work matters to the community.  The point is clarity and connection.

Simple practices can keep that connection alive:

  • Regularly share the impact of the team’s work, with real stories and names
  • Build recognition into everyday routines, not just annual awards
  • Give employees a voice in decisions that affect them

When people see their values reflected at work, they stop thinking about “the company” and start thinking about their place in it.  That feeling is hard to walk away from.

Developing Your Strategy for Employee Retention

Keeping good people is rarely about one big change. It is the small, steady adjustments that add up.  The trick is to start before the cracks appear.

By late 2025, it's time to take a proper look at where you stand. Not just the benefits package or the policies on paper, but how work actually feels day to day.  That means listening, through surveys, and in conversations where people can speak openly.  Sometimes the most useful feedback comes in the side comments, not the formal answers.

As 2026 begins, turn what you have learned into visible action.  If people want more flexibility, show them what that will look like in practice.  If managers need better tools to support their wellbeing, provide them with training that fits real-life situations, not just theory.  Onboarding is another quiet win: done well, it can make the difference between someone staying and leaving before their first anniversary.

By mid-2026, the focus should shift to momentum.  Career paths that feel real, cultural habits that reflect shared values, and learning opportunities that keep pace with change.  Retention works best when people do not have to think about it. They feel like they belong.

What to Measure

Retention in the industry can be challenging to measure in real-time, so it helps to keep an eye on a few steady indicators.  Some are numbers you can track easily. Others are quieter signals you only catch if you’re close enough to see them.

  • NPS scores: A simple measure of whether people would recommend working here to someone they know.
  • Internal mobility rates: If people are moving into new roles inside the company, they’re choosing to grow with you rather than leave.
  • First-year retention rates: Fewer early exits mean onboarding and early support are working.
  • Wellbeing survey trends: Even small improvements suggest the changes you’ve made are taking hold.
  • Exit interview insights: When people say they’d consider coming back, it’s a sign you’ve left the door open on good terms.

Employee Retention:  Your Competitive Advantage

Retention in 2026 will come from steady, visible evidence that you care for the people who make the business work.  That means building stability into pay and benefits, creating clear paths for growth, offering flexibility that works in practice, making wellbeing a daily priority, and keeping purpose at the heart of the work.

For recruitment companies and HR leaders, this presents an opportunity to move beyond filling roles into shaping environments where people want to stay.  Don’t underestimate the value of retaining your best people.  

In 2026, you really can’t afford to lose them.

At Recruit Recruit, we have been helping firms acquire talent and job seekers find their ideal roles for nearly 20 years.

We have placed hundreds of candidates; if you want to find out how we can help, call us on 01902 763006 or email sarah@recruitrecruit.co.uk.