X++ Job Trends in the Thames Valley

X++
South East > Thames Valley

The table below provides summary statistics and salary benchmarking for jobs advertised in the Thames Valley requiring X++ skills. It covers permanent job vacancies from the 6 months leading up to 13 January 2026, with comparisons to the same periods in the previous two years.

6 months to
13 Jan 2026
Same period 2025 Same period 2024
Rank - 178 194
Rank change year-on-year - +16 -
Permanent jobs citing X++ 0 1 2
As % of all permanent jobs in the Thames Valley - 0.030% 0.050%
As % of the Programming Languages category - 0.089% 0.15%
Number of salaries quoted 0 0 2
10th Percentile - - -
25th Percentile - - £61,250
Median annual salary (50th Percentile) - - £67,500
75th Percentile - - £73,750
90th Percentile - - -
South East median annual salary - - £67,500

All Programming Languages
Thames Valley

X++ 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 Thames Valley.

Permanent vacancies with a requirement for coding skills 586 1,126 1,348
As % of all permanent jobs advertised in the Thames Valley 14.54% 33.27% 33.87%
Number of salaries quoted 437 663 1,024
10th Percentile £33,250 £36,350 £37,500
25th Percentile £45,000 £47,500 £45,000
Median annual salary (50th Percentile) £56,623 £62,500 £55,000
Median % change year-on-year -9.40% +13.64% -8.33%
75th Percentile £71,250 £77,500 £72,500
90th Percentile £79,250 £87,500 £85,000
South East median annual salary £56,750 £60,000 £55,000
% change year-on-year -5.42% +9.09% -4.35%

X++
Job Vacancy Trend in the Thames Valley

Historical trend showing the proportion of permanent IT job postings citing X++ relative to all permanent IT jobs advertised in the Thames Valley.

X++ job vacancy trend in the Thames Valley

X++
Salary Trend in the Thames Valley

Salary distribution trend for jobs in the Thames Valley citing X++.

Salary distribution trend for jobs in the Thames Valley citing X++