The numbers: what the data actually shows
The average job application response rate — meaning a recruiter contacts you for a phone screen — is approximately 2–3% across all industries and roles. That means for every 100 applications you submit, you can expect 2–3 callbacks on average.
To convert those callbacks into interviews and offers, the funnel narrows further:
- 100 applications → ~2–3 phone screens
- 2–3 phone screens → ~1 first-round interview
- 3–5 first-round interviews → ~1 offer
This means most job seekers need between 100 and 300 applications to receive a single offer, depending on their field, level, and how well-targeted their applications are.
These numbers are consistent with data from job search platforms, recruiter surveys, and analyses of large application datasets. A 2025 report found that job seekers applied to over 200 roles on average before landing an offer in competitive markets.
How the numbers vary by industry and seniority
Technology (software engineering, data, product): Response rates are among the lowest at 0.5–2%. High application volumes from a global talent pool mean even strong candidates face significant rejection. Expect 150–400 applications per offer in competitive markets.
Finance and consulting: 1–3% response rate at most firms. Prestige-brand roles (top banks, MBB consulting) are significantly harder. Mid-market firms tend to respond more.
Healthcare (clinical roles): 5–10% response rate, often higher. Genuine talent shortages in many specialties mean qualified candidates get faster responses.
Marketing, operations, general business: 2–5% response rate. More variable than tech.
By seniority: Entry-level roles paradoxically often have lower response rates than mid-level because they attract the highest application volumes. Senior and director-level roles have slightly higher response rates but longer hiring cycles.
What this means for your job search strategy
If the average job search requires 100–300 applications, and the average manual application takes 20–30 minutes, a fully manual job search requires 33–150 hours of application time alone — before accounting for interview prep, networking, or research.
At 10 manual applications per day (a reasonable sustained pace), it takes 10–30 days to reach the volume needed — assuming you're applying every single day. Most job seekers don't sustain that pace, which is why the average job search takes 3–6 months rather than a few weeks.
The most effective job searches combine targeted effort (tailoring for top-priority roles, networking) with volume through automation (letting a tool handle the high-volume, time-consuming submission work across multiple platforms). This gives you the best of both: quality where it matters and quantity everywhere else.