- 89% of engineers feel AI-ready, but only 19% actually build AI/ML systems
- 55% cite lack of time, and 49% point to budget constraints as key blockers
- 86% of recruiters say they can’t find AI-ready talent
- Women engineers face sharper barriers: 65% report severe time constraints; 56% cite lack of AI mentors
Bengaluru, 26th February, 2026: India’s engineering workforce is at a critical inflexion point, facing a widening “AI confidence–capability gap,” according to a new joint study by Scaler and CyberMedia Research (CMR). The study, surveying 400 experienced software engineers and tech recruiters, finds that while AI is reshaping engineering roles, there is a significant gap between perceived AI readiness and the actual deep expertise required. A striking 89% of engineers believe they are AI-ready, yet only 19% are deeply engaged in building AI/ML systems, highlighting a substantial gap between confidence and demonstrable skill.
This disparity isn’t due to a lack of intent, but rather deeply embedded structural challenges. Engineers cite key obstacles to upskilling: 55% cite a lack of time due to work demands, and 49% highlight the financial barriers to accessing quality training. These considerations prevent even highly motivated professionals from gaining the hands-on experience and depth required for advanced AI work. The study also uncovers a pronounced equity risk for women in tech. 65% of women engineers report severe work-life balance pressures that limit their learning time, and 56% cite a lack of AI mentors or role models as a significant barrier. These disproportionate challenges risk exacerbating existing gender disparities in the evolving AI landscape.
“The study clearly shows India’s AI ‘confidence–capability gap’: immense enthusiasm for AI, but a real lack of great, hands-on skills to build and own AI systems. In today’s uncertain job market with ongoing changes, this gap threatens individual careers and India’s tech leadership. Companies need engineers with proven, practical AI skills – not just familiarity with tools – to drive innovation. Closing this gap is crucial. It means offering structured, project-based learning to make engineers vital builders of our AI future,” says Abhimanyu Saxena, Co-Founder of Scaler.
The implications of this gap are acutely felt in hiring. Recruiters are tightening standards, with 86% reporting challenges in finding genuinely AI-skilled candidates. This pushes companies to rely more on practical validation, such as technical tests and real-world projects, rather than self-reported proficiencies, making it harder for candidates to demonstrate their capabilities if they lack deep, applied experience.
“Our research highlights a core paradox in India’s AI talent ecosystem: signal versus substance,” says Prabhu Ram, Vice President, Industry Research Group at CyberMedia Research. “While 89% of engineers express AI readiness, only 19% are engaged in sustained AI system development. This divergence is distorting hiring signals and creating friction for both employers and candidates. Recruiters are responding by tightening evaluation frameworks and placing greater emphasis on technical tests, real-world projects, and depth of problem-solving. As learning pathways mature and market signals become more consistent, India has a clear opportunity to translate its scale of engineering talent into deeper, execution-led capability. This would require moving beyond surface-level tool adoption to genuine system-building expertise.”
This study reveals an urgent need for a strategic reset in India’s AI skilling approach. Bridging the “confidence-capability gap” will require accessible, structured, and project-based learning that builds demonstrable AI expertise. This aligns with the Union Budget’s focus on strengthening human capital and industry-aligned skilling, as well as prioritising application-driven AI innovation. The findings advocate deeper collaboration among academia, industry, and government to build an inclusive, future-ready AI workforce and address persistent barriers.
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