Workforce Trends in 2025 and How Providers Can Stay Ahead in 2026
Ryan Valentine, Managing Director

The Australian Allied Health, Social and Community Services and Nursing workforce continued to change significantly throughout 2025. Candidate expectations shifted, demand increased, compliance pressures strengthened and regional areas continued to face ongoing staffing challenges. Providers who adjust early will be in the strongest position as 2026 approaches.
Below is a closer look at what shaped the workforce in 2025 and how these patterns will influence the year ahead.
Candidates Are Asking For More
Clinicians across Allied Health, Social and Community Services and Nursing have been clear about what they want. Competitive pay, real flexibility, transparency and balance were the most consistent drivers of candidate behaviour in 2025.
The sector now employs more than 2.3 million Australians within Health Care and Social Assistance. With so many career options, candidates engaged strongly with roles that offered choice, clarity and realistic workloads.
Flexibility played a major role. Predictable rosters, part time options, compressed weeks and structured shift patterns attracted higher interest than traditional schedules. When providers communicated clearly and moved quickly, engagement increased significantly.
Graduates Want Structured Support
Graduates and early career professionals entering the workforce in 2025 expected meaningful onboarding, ongoing supervision and clear development pathways. These expectations are shaping how providers build entry level programs across Allied Health, Social and Community Services and Nursing.
Australia has approximately 456,000 aged care workers across residential and community programs. Many of these roles rely on strong supervision and structured development. This reinforces the importance of clear support pathways for graduates stepping into Aged Care, Allied Health or Community roles.
Recent national workforce reviews highlight the same pattern. The Draft National Allied Health Workforce Strategy emphasises the need for stronger transition support for graduates and structured development at every career stage, noting that supervision is critical for capability and retention.
The federal Scope of Practice Review also found that early career health professionals are more likely to stay when roles provide consistent supervision, mentoring and predictable workload support rather than ad-hoc assistance.
Workforce findings specific to rural and regional settings reinforce this. A 2025 review of Allied Health professionals in remote areas reported that access to senior supervision, structured guidance and local career progression are key factors influencing retention for early career clinicians.
Across the year, graduate retention improved when providers offered
- consistent check ins
- structured guidance
- clear progression steps
- visible support
- realistic expectations
The difference was clear. When graduates felt guided, they stayed. When support was inconsistent or unclear, they moved on quickly.

Regional and Remote Workforce Pressure Continued
Regional and remote staffing pressure remained one of the most visible challenges in 2025.
National data shows that around 7 million Australians which is roughly 27 to 28% of the population live in rural or remote areas where access to health and community services is consistently lower than in major cities. This creates ongoing difficulty for providers trying to fill roles across Allied Health, Social and Community Services and Nursing.
Workforce planning updates released in 2025 highlight the same pattern. There are persistent shortages across multiple clinical disciplines in regional areas and limited local workforce pipelines to meet demand.
More providers shifted to flexible models, including FIFO schedules, block rotations and travel supported placements. These options were especially effective in Allied Health, Social and Community Services and Nursing, where clinicians responded strongly to predictable rosters and structured support.
Roles that highlighted community impact, lifestyle benefits and balanced scheduling attracted more interest than those that focused solely on financial incentives.
Compliance and Quality Are Influencing Workforce Demand
Compliance and quality became central to workforce planning in 2025. With updated aged care legislation and stronger national expectations, providers increased demand for Care Managers, Quality Leaders, Governance Specialists and senior Coordinators. The focus on strengthened governance is consistent with national updates across the health workforce reform agenda.
Providers that invested early in quality and governance roles found themselves better positioned for audits, risk oversight and service delivery. These organisations also became more appealing to clinicians. Many people now choose employers with strong quality systems and clear leadership.
Confidence in compliance is increasingly linked to workforce attraction.
Mental Health Capability Is Becoming Essential
Demand for mental health capability increased across all three sectors. Community programs, aged care, disability services and multidisciplinary teams required clinicians with strong psychosocial and mental health experience.
National planning resources such as the Health Workforce Data portal show sustained demand for mental health professionals across the country. Providers strengthened capability by hiring Mental Health Nurses, Mental Health Social Workers and Mental Health OTs or by creating blended roles and upskilling pathways for existing staff.
Strong mental health capability helped teams manage more complex presentations and provide integrated support across programs.
Clinicians Are Moving More Freely Across Settings
Mobility across Allied Health, Social and Community Services and Nursing grew noticeably in 2025. Clinicians shifted into new settings at a higher rate than the years before. For example
- Aged care nurses transitioned into community roles
- Emergency nurses moved into remote area nursigivng
- Allied health professionals explored contracting for greater flexibility and earning potential
With more than 920,000 registered health practitioners in Australia, professional mobility is high.
Providers who recognised transferable skills rather than seeking narrow experience matches were more successful. Internal mobility pathways became a valuable retention strategy. When clinicians could move between programs without leaving the organisation, overall retention improved.
Faster Hiring Has Become a Clear Advantage
Recruitment speed had a major impact on outcomes in 2025. Providers who responded quickly secured talent, while slow processes led to the loss of strong applicants to faster moving organisations.
Employment in Health Care and Social Assistance grew by approximately five percent over the year to August 2025 as reported on Jobs and Skills Australia. With increased demand, candidates expect timely communication and simple recruitment steps.
The strongest hiring results came from processes that featured
- shortlisting within days
- straightforward interviews
- consistent communication
- rapid decision making
- streamlined compliance checks
Partnerships with specialist agencies also improved speed and quality of placements, particularly in hard to fill roles.
Looking Ahead to 2026
The patterns seen in 2025 are unlikely to ease in the year ahead. Candidate expectations will remain strong. Early career professionals will continue to seek structured development. Regional and remote areas will face ongoing workforce gaps. Compliance and quality will sit firmly at the centre of workforce planning. Mental health capability will continue to expand and mobility across clinical settings will remain high.
Providers who adapt early, modernise their workforce models and align with what clinicians expect will be well positioned for 2026.
Curamoir partners with organisations across Allied Health, Social and Community Services and Nursing to support permanent recruitment, contractor solutions and workforce planning. If you are preparing for the year ahead, get in touch with our team today.












