Global Hiring Surges Despite Regulatory Turbulence, but 7 in 10 HR Leaders Say Engagement Is Fracturing
Atlas HXM’s ‘Global Atlas Report 2026’ finds that talent retention is now as challenging as global compliance, while immigration shifts accelerate — not delay — hiring.
Global hiring has always been complex. What’s changing is that who you hire and where you find them is becoming just as difficult. Talent strategy is now a board-level issue, not just an HR function.
CHICAGO, IL, March 04, 2026 /24-7PressRelease/ — The appetite for global hiring is accelerating in 2026 despite ongoing regulatory volatility, but employee engagement is under strain and AI is rapidly reshaping workforce strategy, according to the newly released The Global Atlas Report: 2026 from Atlas HXM, the pioneer of the direct Employer of Record (EOR) model and a leader in global Human Experience Management (HXM).
Based on a survey of senior HR, legal, finance and operations leaders across North America and Europe, the report reveals major shifts in how organizations approach international expansion, talent access, and distributed workforce management.
Finding Talent Is Now as Difficult as Remaining Compliant
For years, global expansion has been defined by operational hurdles like navigating visas, managing payroll across borders, and mitigating compliance risks. In 2026, however, the challenge has evolved.
Nearly half (49%) of organizations with an international workforce say attracting and retaining international talent is very or extremely challenging — on par with managing operational complexity across countries (49%) and ahead of high international workforce costs (48%) and visa and immigration complexity (47%).
In the United States specifically, 37% of respondents cited attracting and retaining international talent as highly challenging, nearly identical to concerns around operational complexity and immigration management.
“Global hiring has always been complex,” said Jim McCoy, CEO of Atlas HXM. “What’s changing is that who you hire and where you find them is becoming just as difficult. Talent strategy is now a board-level issue, not just an HR function.”
Despite this rising competition for talent, US organizations continue to focus on traditional hiring markets: 60% plan to hire in Canada and 37% in Europe, while just 8% are considering the Middle East and North Africa and only 2% sub-Saharan Africa, suggesting potential untapped talent pools beyond established hubs.
Regulatory Pressure Is Accelerating Hiring, Not Slowing It
Contrary to expectations, immigration and regulatory uncertainties are not deterring expansion. They are accelerating it. 68% of organizations globally — and 67% in the US specifically — say changing immigration policies are accelerating workforce expansion and hiring decisions. Fewer than one in five report delays.
Meanwhile, 52% of organizations plan to expand their international presence in the next 18 months, compared to just 16% maintaining current structures. 90% of respondents say they feel prepared to navigate new or changing immigration policies, including 92% of US organizations.
“Volatility has become the baseline,” said Lulu Rufael, CHRO of Atlas HXM. “Organizations aren’t waiting for perfect stability. They’re building flexible workforce models that allow them to move confidently even when regulations shift.”
AI Is Boosting Skill Demand — Even as Human-Only Work Shrinks
The Global Atlas Report 2026 also highlights the accelerating impact of AI across international workforce management. One in ten decision-makers now report fully automating certain tasks using AI. At least 80% of HR leaders use AI for employment law research, regulatory monitoring, and report summarization.
Rather than eliminating work, AI appears to be reshaping skill demand, with 53% reporting increased demand for creativity and innovation, 52% for risk assessment, and 51% for human–AI collaboration. At the same time, 51% of organizations report widening skills gaps within their workforce.
“AI is not replacing human work at scale — it’s elevating the kind of human skills that matter,” said McCoy. “But adoption is moving faster than reskilling, and that poses a significant risk, especially to internationally dispersed organizations.”
Engagement Is Fracturing Across Distributed Teams
As global expansion and AI adoption accelerate, employee engagement is emerging as a major fault line. 69% of leaders say they find it challenging to keep their international workforce engaged across borders.
Organizations report increases in higher turnover and job-hopping (50%), cultural friction impacting collaboration (50%), burnout (48%), and quiet quitting (48%). Meanwhile, 54% report an increase in employees using AI-assisted workarounds.
Despite expanding globally, 77% of organizations say return-to-office mandates are “good to enforce,” rising to 83% in the US — highlighting a growing tension between global hiring ambitions and location-based workforce policies.
“Global hiring is accelerating faster than engagement strategy,” said Rufael. “Distributed work requires deliberate design. Employee engagement doesn’t scale automatically.”
A Structural Shift in Global Workforce Strategy
Taken together, the findings point to a fundamental transformation in global expansion strategy:
“The infrastructure to hire globally has matured,” said McCoy. “Now the differentiator is how strategically organizations design their workforce architecture.”
Atlas HXM is the pioneer of the direct Employer of Record model, enabling organizations to hire, onboard, manage, and pay global talent in more than 160 countries through a single, scalable solution. With deep local expertise, owned in-country entities, and a people-first technology platform, Atlas HXM empowers companies to expand globally while delivering consistent, high-quality experiences for their distributed workforce.
Guided by its principle “For People, by People,” Atlas HXM integrates Human Experience Management into every aspect of its platform and service delivery — ensuring that global employment is not only compliant, but genuinely human.
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