F# Job Trends in the North of England

F#
England > North of England

The table below provides summary statistics and salary benchmarking for jobs advertised in the North of England requiring F# skills. It covers permanent job vacancies from the 6 months leading up to 7 November 2025, with comparisons to the same periods in the previous two years.

6 months to
7 Nov 2025
Same period 2024 Same period 2023
Rank - 296 283
Rank change year-on-year - -13 +159
Permanent jobs citing F# 0 1 4
As % of all permanent jobs in the North of England - 0.008% 0.052%
As % of the Programming Languages category - 0.030% 0.13%
Number of salaries quoted 0 0 4
10th Percentile - - -
25th Percentile - - £40,000
Median annual salary (50th Percentile) - - £52,500
75th Percentile - - £70,000
90th Percentile - - -
England median annual salary £115,000 £40,000 £82,500
% change year-on-year +187.50% -51.52% +37.50%

All Programming Languages
North of England

F# falls under the Programming Languages category. For comparison with the information above, the following table provides summary statistics for all permanent job vacancies requiring coding skills in the North of England.

Permanent vacancies with a requirement for coding skills 2,033 3,341 3,028
As % of all permanent jobs advertised in the North of England 21.20% 26.75% 39.40%
Number of salaries quoted 1,347 1,807 2,417
10th Percentile £30,000 £35,000 £36,250
25th Percentile £40,000 £42,500 £43,750
Median annual salary (50th Percentile) £55,000 £55,000 £55,000
75th Percentile £71,250 £67,500 £70,000
90th Percentile £80,000 £80,000 £82,548
England median annual salary £62,500 £65,000 £65,000
% change year-on-year -3.85% - -

F#
Job Vacancy Trend in the North of England

Historical trend showing the proportion of permanent IT job postings citing F# relative to all permanent IT jobs advertised in the North of England.

F# job vacancy trend in the North of England

F#
Salary Trend in the North of England

Salary distribution trend for jobs in the North of England citing F#.

Salary distribution trend for jobs in the North of England citing F#