As of 2026, women make up approximately:
Despite gradual improvement over the past decade, representation is uneven. Women are more likely to be found in non-technical or support functions, while remaining underrepresented in core engineering, infrastructure, and cybersecurity roles.
Leadership continues to show the most persistent gap:
While FTSE board diversity has improved significantly in recent years (with women approaching parity on many boards), this progress does not yet translate into executive technical leadership, particularly in product, engineering, and infrastructure-heavy roles.
The STEM pipeline remains a key constraint:
While participation is slowly increasing at undergraduate level, attrition remains high at the transition into technical careers.
Beyond entry-level representation, retention is a critical issue:
This results in a “leaky pipeline” where early gains in participation do not translate into leadership equity.
To combat these persistent disparities, the UK Women in Tech Taskforce has intensified its focus on shifting the industry from general awareness to mandatory accountability. Operating as a critical bridge between government policy and industry leaders, the Taskforce leads initiatives designed to plug the “leaky pipeline” by advocating for standardised, transparent reporting on gender retention and mid-career progression.
Rather than focusing solely on entry-level hiring metrics, the Taskforce actively collaborates with tech hubs, venture capital firms, and enterprise employers to establish robust sponsorship frameworks that fast-track women into technical leadership roles, particularly within high-growth sectors like AI and cybersecurity. By pushing for structural reforms, their objective is to ensure that the UK’s digital evolution is driven by a truly diverse and equitable leadership landscape.
Experts and industry reports consistently highlight three priorities:
Without deliberate structural change, the UK risks replicating existing inequalities in the next generation of AI and digital infrastructure.
The UK is making measurable progress in women’s representation across STEM and technology, particularly at entry and board level. However, 2026 continues to show a clear imbalance in technical leadership and high-growth disciplines.
The central challenge is no longer entry into tech — it is progression, retention, and equitable access to leadership in the most influential areas of the digital economy.