Europe faces 502,000 driver vacancies; shortage is now structural

Europe faces 502,000 driver vacancies; shortage is now structural

trans.info — 2026-07-01

Land transportation

The International Road Transport Union says the driver shortage has now moved beyond the normal freight cycle, with vacancies remaining high even as freight demand softened after the post-pandemic peak.

Across the 18 markets covered in the report, IRU estimates that there are 2.9 million unfilled professional driver positions globally, equivalent to an 11% global shortage rate. In Europe, the shortage rate stands at 13%, up from 12% in the previous reading.

According to IRU, the 2025 figures exceeded every previous reading and show a “clear break from the economic cycle”. The organisation says that, while the reasons differ by region, the common feature is that the shortage is no longer correcting itself over time. In Europe and Australia, the main pressure comes from ageing workforces retiring faster than new entrants can replace them. In China and Uzbekistan, demand growth is outpacing transport capacity, while Mexico and Brazil continue to face structural labour constraints.

Driver shortage dominates European operators’ concerns

The scale of the issue is also reflected in operators’ business priorities. In Europe, 65% of trucking companies ranked driver shortage as their top concern in 2025, far ahead of operational costs, the economic landscape, decarbonisation and digitalisation.

The picture is different in other markets. In Australia, operational costs were ranked as the top concern by 42% of operators, compared with 32% for driver shortage. In Uzbekistan, driver shortage and the economic landscape were level at 41%. In China, driver shortage was still the biggest concern, but by a much narrower margin, at 36%, followed by the economic landscape and operational costs.

This suggests that Europe’s labour problem is particularly acute: while other regions are balancing driver availability against cost pressure and demand conditions, European operators appear to be facing a more direct workforce replacement problem.

Small operators most exposed

IRU’s report also points to a divide between large and small transport operators. According to the organisation, small operators account for 98% of EU road freight enterprises, but their shortage rate is six percentage points higher than that of large operators.

The organisation says smaller firms also have older workforces and more limited access to foreign recruitment. This leaves them more exposed to retirement-driven labour shortages and makes workforce renewal harder to manage.

IRU’s analysis disaggregates workforce risk by company size across 14 European markets, highlighting where replacement pressure is greatest.

Retirement wave already under way

The most serious long-term challenge for Europe is the approaching retirement wave. IRU says the continent already has more than 502,000 unfilled driver positions, and that further retirements before 2030 will create a growing replacement challenge across multiple markets.

The report frames this as a structural issue rather than a temporary mismatch between labour supply and freight demand. In almost every surveyed market, the 2025 shortage exceeded the 2021 baseline and remained elevated despite weaker freight activity in recent years.

For operators, this means the problem cannot be solved by waiting for a softer market to ease recruitment pressure. Instead, the sector faces a longer-term need to replace retiring drivers, improve retention and attract new groups into the profession.