Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 8th April 2026, 10:37 PM

Singapore’s insurance industry has recorded a noticeable slowdown in recruitment activity, accompanied by a pronounced reduction in remote and hybrid working arrangements, according to the latest Indeed Singapore Hiring Lab report. The findings underscore a broader moderation in labour demand across the city-state, even as overall employment conditions remain relatively resilient compared with pre-pandemic norms.
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Total job postings in Singapore declined by 4.5% in February, reversing three consecutive months of gains and signalling a renewed softening in recruitment momentum. On a year-on-year basis, job listings are down 12.0%, marking the weakest level of hiring activity since March 2021.
Despite this downturn, the labour market continues to show underlying structural strength. Job postings remain around 32% above pre-pandemic levels, while approximately 92% of occupations still record higher demand than in February 2020. This indicates that although hiring activity is cooling, Singapore’s employment landscape remains well above its pre-COVID baseline.
Within this broader environment, the insurance industry stands out less for a collapse in demand and more for a structural reconfiguration of workplace arrangements. The share of insurance job postings offering remote or hybrid working options fell by 7.5 percentage points year-on-year—among the steepest declines recorded across all sectors.
This shift points to a gradual but decisive return towards office-based operating models within insurers. Analysts suggest the change may be driven by heightened emphasis on collaboration, tighter regulatory expectations, improved client servicing requirements, and stronger oversight of productivity and operational risk.
Across the wider Singapore labour market, only 8.6% of job postings in February included remote working options, slightly up from 8.4% a year earlier. The relative stability at aggregate level contrasts sharply with the insurance sector’s more aggressive reduction, highlighting a sector-specific recalibration of workplace norms.
| Indicator | Latest Figure | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly job postings (February) | -4.5% | Reversal of recent recovery |
| Year-on-year change | -12.0% | Weakest since March 2021 |
| Postings vs pre-pandemic | +32% | Still above February 2020 levels |
| Occupations above pre-pandemic demand | 92% | Broad-based labour resilience |
| Remote work share (overall market) | 8.6% | Slight increase year-on-year |
| Insurance remote work change | -7.5 percentage points | One of the sharpest sector declines |
Even with declining job postings, Singapore’s labour market remains relatively tight. The unemployment rate stood at around 2% at the end of last year, reflecting continued stability in employment conditions. However, job postings have now fallen roughly 45% from their peak in July 2022, signalling a sustained cooling phase following the post-pandemic hiring surge.
Economists attribute this moderation to global economic uncertainty, persistent inflationary pressures, and weakening external demand. While recruitment continues across sectors, employers are becoming increasingly selective, particularly in roles that require long-term headcount commitments.
Looking ahead, hiring activity in Singapore is expected to ease further into 2026 as firms adjust to a softer global economic outlook. In the insurance sector, recruitment strategies are likely to become more targeted, with stronger emphasis on efficiency, operational resilience, and in-office collaboration.
Although remote working remains part of the broader employment landscape, its gradual retreat within insurance signals a wider recalibration of workplace expectations. The sector appears to be entering a more disciplined phase, where productivity control, regulatory alignment, and cost efficiency increasingly outweigh flexibility as key hiring priorities.
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