Lately, there’s a lot of buzz about the demise of recruiting because AI will eventually replace all recruiters. Let’s review that.
The labor market still expects human recruiting work.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects HR specialists (including recruiters) will grow by 8% from 2023 to 2033, faster than average. That’s not a market pricing in replacement—it’s one planning for ongoing demand.
The law increasingly requires human oversight.
Two major regulatory anchors make fully automated hiring a non-starter:
- EU AI Act: AI used for recruitment is classified as high-risk, triggering strict obligations—risk management, high-quality data, transparency, and human oversight. In force since Aug 1, 2024, it codifies that people must stay in the loop.
- NYC Local Law 144: Employers using automated employment decision tools must conduct independent bias audits, publish results, and give candidates notice—again, pushing toward accountable, human-supervised processes.
These are just two examples. Dozens of U.S. states (including California, Illinois, and Colorado) and many cities are advancing similar measures, as are many countries. Laws, once enacted, are difficult to change. Full automation of recruiting without human oversight will remain restricted. When the rules say “keep a person in charge,” end-to-end robot recruiting isn’t just risky—it’s out of bounds.
Candidate experience still hinges on… people.
Research from SHRM and Talent Board shows that tech can improve the experience, but poor automation erodes trust. Candidates want tools for speed and convenience and a human they can read, question, and build rapport with—especially for high-stakes moves. Candidates like the speed of AI, especially for answering questions, scheduling, and fast status updates. But surveys show a majority of candidates still prefer a human contact for feedback, negotiation, and relationship-building. We’re not at the point where most candidates “trust AI more.”
Courts and complaints are spotlighting AI’s limits.
Recent legal actions show why human judgment and review are essential:
- Mobley v. Workday: A federal judge allowed parts of a class action to proceed over alleged bias in AI-driven screening—signaling potential vendor and employer exposure if human checks are missing.
- ACLU complaint v. Intuit & HireVue: Alleges AI tools disadvantaged a deaf, Indigenous employee—a reminder that automated interviews can mishandle disability and intersectional identity without robust human safeguards.
If using AI carries real legal risk, removing recruiters from oversight is the last thing prudent companies will do.
AI has created new recruiting work that humans must do.
Generative tools didn’t just speed up outbound and screening; they also unleashed new challenges. AI-crafted résumés and application floods require more authenticity checks, structured interviews, and human vetting. Many employers are adding steps (live exercises, deeper reference work) precisely because automation made it easier to submit low-effort applications.
Those are human tasks: relationship-heavy, context-dependent, reputationally sensitive.
Will AI replace recruiters?
Back in 2018, I wrote a post asking the same question. The core claim I made was that AI can handle narrow tasks in recruiting (such as sourcing or scheduling), but it lacks the sophistication to handle complex human-centered tasks. I predicted that low-skill, high-volume roles could be automated within five years. AI now performs many recruiting tasks—especially early-stage screening. Virtual recruiters powered by LLMs are now routinely used to conduct preliminary phone or video screenings before a human interviewer steps in. These tools can schedule, ask structured questions, and even summarize candidate responses, but they still lack deep empathy and nuance, especially when navigating ambiguous responses.
AI is transforming recruiting, but not by eliminating recruiters. Regulations require human oversight, the public doesn’t accept AI-only decisions, courts are testing algorithmic hiring, and credible research finds augmentation is more common than automation for knowledge work. The winners will be recruiters who use AI to clear the busywork and go deeper on the human parts of hiring: judgment, equity, persuasion, and trust.
Recruiting is one of the oldest professions in the world (but not the oldest). The earliest known references to recruiters date to 2686 BC. A profession that has survived almost 5,000 years is unlikely to disappear. The reasons are not that different from why the oldest profession won’t be replaced by AI: the human touch is preferred over a virtual one. This is a family publication, so I won’t expand on that.