Jobs
Feb 13, 2026

Current Market Update

𝐂𝐔𝐑𝐑𝐄𝐍𝐓 πŒπ€π‘πŠπ„π“ 𝐔𝐏𝐃𝐀𝐓𝐄 – π‚πŽπŒπŒπ„π‘π‚πˆπ€π‹, πŒπ„πƒ π€π…π…π€πˆπ‘π’, 𝐑𝐄𝐆 π€π…π…π€πˆπ‘π’

The market is cautious but improving: commercial, medical affairs, and regulatory affairs hiring in pharma/biotech is still selective and lean, but demand for experienced, cross‑functional talent is edging up as pipelines mature into 2026.

πŽπ•π„π‘π€π‹π‹ πŒπ€π‘πŠπ„π“ π“π„πŒππ„π‘π€π“π”π‘π„
US life sciences employment hit a record ~2.1M workers in early 2025, but growth has shifted from big hiring waves to smaller, steadier adds.

​2025-early 2026 looks like β€œpost‑contraction but not yet boom”: job openings and hires are up month‑over‑month into January 2026, but still below last year’s levels.

Across healthcare and life sciences, employers are laser‑focused on efficiency, filling fewer roles, faster, and with tighter specs, rather than broad expansion.

π‚πŽπŒπŒπ„π‘π‚πˆπ€π‹ (𝐒𝐀𝐋𝐄𝐒, πŒπ€π‘πŠπ„π“πˆππ†, πŒπ€π‘πŠπ„π“ 𝐀𝐂𝐂𝐄𝐒𝐒, 𝐄𝐓𝐂.)
Companies have pulled back from big primary‑care style sales buildouts and are prioritizing smaller, highly skilled teams around complex launches and specialty/rare assets.

Demand is strongest for people who sit at the intersection of strategy and evidence: market access, pricing, HEOR, and value communication roles are clear priorities for biopharma going into 2026.

Nonclinical β€œcorporate” roles (which include many commercial and access positions) currently give candidates a slight advantage: openings and applications are both up month‑over‑month, but hires are lagging, so strong profiles can still command attention.

What This Feels Like in Searches
More backfills and β€œsurgical” hires than net‑new headcount.

Heavy emphasis on payer fluency, launch experience, and ability to work cross‑functionally with medical, regulatory, and HEOR.

Contract and interim roles playing a bigger part in coverage for launch and project work.

πŒπ„πƒπˆπ‚π€π‹ π€π…π…π€πˆπ‘π’
Medical affairs remains one of the more resilient areas versus pure R&D or early discovery; it is central to communicating value and navigating stricter evidence and payer expectations.

Companies are leaning on leaner but more senior teams of MSLs and medical directors who can cover larger geographies/portfolios and plug into real‑world evidence, HEOR, and access discussions.

Hybrid and remote‑heavy models remain common for headquarters medical roles, with field medical still traveling but often covering multiple indications or assets.

What This Feels Like in Searches
Strong demand for people who can partner tightly with commercial while staying compliant: launch medical, evidence generation, and KOL strategy.

Fewer junior MSL openings; more emphasis on candidates who can operate as strategic partners and β€œplayer‑coaches.”

π‘π„π†π”π‹π€π“πŽπ‘π˜ π€π…π…π€πˆπ‘π’
Regulatory is still viewed as a β€œmust‑have, not optional” function; even as companies run lean, they rarely compromise on key Regulatory Affairs headcount.

Survey data from late 2025 show mixed confidence among regulatory professionals and fewer openings than the prior year, but executives overwhelmingly indicate they do not plan to reduce regulatory hiring because of macro uncertainty or evolving FDA rules.

As pipelines move toward pivotal trials and filings, specialized regulatory (CMC, global, labeling, expedited pathways) is expected to tighten fast as 2026 progresses.

What This Feels Like in Searches
Longer time‑to‑fill and very candidate‑selective processes; companies will wait for the right strategic hire.

More competition among candidates for each opening, but also a clear willingness to pay for deep experience that can de‑risk approvals and inspections.

2026 π“π‘π€π‰π„π‚π“πŽπ‘π˜ 𝐕𝐒. 2024–2025

2024–2025 created a temporary surplus of talent due to funding pressure and restructurings, but the underlying need for experienced commercial, medical, and regulatory people never disappeared.

As capital slowly returns and programs move into later stages, demand for these β€œbridge to market” roles should pick up, with parts of the market tilting back toward candidate‑friendly conditions by mid‑2026, especially in complex specialties and for senior hires.

The macro signal: early 2026 healthcare hiring shows rising openings and applications with a more modest rise in hires, suggesting employers are still cautious but starting to lean back into growth where revenue and regulatory milestones are on the line.