UK Market • Multi-layered Smart analysis • Updated April 2026
Production LLM Deployment & Optimisation — 58% demand vs 12% supply (46-point gap)
Most ML practitioners have experimented with LLM APIs but very few have experience deploying, scaling, and optimising large language models in production (quantisation, serving frameworks like vLLM/TGI, latency tuning). This is the single largest gap in the AI Engineer market.
MLOps & Model Lifecycle Management — 52% demand vs 18% supply (34-point gap)
Companies need engineers who can build reproducible training pipelines, model registries, monitoring, and automated retraining loops. The supply of ML engineers with genuine MLOps platform experience (not just notebook-based work) remains well below demand.
RAG Architecture & Vector Databases — 38% demand vs 8% supply (30-point gap)
RAG has become the default enterprise GenAI pattern, but the technology is so new (mainstream since mid-2023) that few engineers have battle-tested production experience with chunking strategies, embedding models, reranking, and vector stores like Pinecone, Weaviate, or pgvector.
Fine-tuning & RLHF/DPO Techniques — 22% demand vs 7% supply (15-point gap)
As companies move beyond prompt engineering to customise models for domain-specific tasks, demand for engineers skilled in parameter-efficient fine-tuning (LoRA/QLoRA), RLHF, and DPO is rising, but this expertise remains concentrated in a small pool of researchers and ex-big-tech practitioners.
AI Safety, Evaluation & Guardrails — 18% demand vs 4% supply (14-point gap)
With regulatory pressure mounting and high-profile failures from hallucinating models, demand for engineers who can implement robust evaluation frameworks, red-teaming, content filtering, and guardrails is growing fast from a low base, but almost no candidates have formal experience.
The most sought-after skills for AI Engineer roles in the UK include Python, Machine Learning, Deep Learning, Natural Language Processing (NLP), PyTorch. These are classified as essential by the majority of employers.
The median AI Engineer salary in the UK is £72,000, with a typical range of £50,000 to £110,000 depending on experience and location. In London, the median rises to £85,000 reflecting the capital's cost-of-living weighting.
Freelance and contract AI Engineer day rates in the UK typically range from £450 to £900 per day, with a median of £600/day. London-based contractors can expect around £725/day.
The top skills gaps in the AI Engineer market are Production LLM Deployment & Optimisation, MLOps & Model Lifecycle Management, RAG Architecture & Vector Databases, Fine-tuning & RLHF/DPO Techniques, AI Safety, Evaluation & Guardrails. The largest is Production LLM Deployment & Optimisation with 58% employer demand but only 12% of professionals listing it. Most ML practitioners have experimented with LLM APIs but very few have experience deploying, scaling, and optimising large language models in production (quantisation, serving frameworks like vLLM/TGI, latency tuning). This is the single largest gap in the AI Engineer market.
Emerging skills for AI Engineer roles include Prompt Engineering & LLM Orchestration (LangChain/LlamaIndex), Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG), AI Agents & Agentic Frameworks, Fine-tuning & RLHF/DPO, Responsible AI / AI Safety & Governance. These are increasingly appearing in job postings and represent future demand.
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