Surge in Demand for AI Skills in Accounting Job Listings
In a remarkable shift over the past year, the prevalence of accounting jobs requiring artificial intelligence (AI) competencies has soared.
This growth is highlighted in a recent study conducted by Datarails, a provider of financial planning and analysis (FP&A) solutions. The research scrutinized more than 5,000 job postings across four pivotal finance roles—Chief Financial Officer (CFO), FP&A professionals, controllers, and accountants—between January 2025 and January 2026.
The findings revealed that the proportion of accounting positions listing AI skills has escalated from 18% in 2025 to an impressive 30% in the current year. This represents the most substantial year-over-year increase observed across any functional area.
Notably, FP&A roles exhibited the highest demand for AI expertise, with 43% of job advertisements now stipulating such qualifications, a rise from 33% last year. Similarly, mentions of AI within controller roles have increased by 4%, with these skills now appearing in 24% of job postings.
The specific skills sought after encompass a range of proficiencies. For instance, the ability to recognize and implement process enhancements—particularly those involving automation and AI-driven solutions—has become essential in boosting operational efficiency and accuracy.
Moreover, familiarity with AI or automation tools aimed at refining accounting workflows is increasingly valued.
A recent survey also identified additional AI-related skills in high demand, such as stakeholder communication, the effective use of generative AI tools in daily operations, AI governance, risk management, and the capacity to translate client challenges into applicable AI use cases.
As organizations advance, accountants are witnessing a burgeoning need for collaborative abilities, with the demand for such partnership skills rising from 16% to 24% within the past year.
Moreover, financial modeling expertise has become pertinent, now appearing in 10% of accountant job listings and 12.9% for controller positions.
Datarails posits that as routine accounting functions become automated, professionals in the field must increasingly demonstrate their value through higher-order competencies.
Conversely, there has been an unexpected decline in the emphasis on certain traditional skills, including communication, self-motivation, critical thinking, and problem-solving.
Job advertisements requiring communication skills decreased by 2%, with self-motivation declining by 4.9%, critical thinking by 5.1%, and problem-solving by 5.7%.
Jonathan Marciano, Vice President of Brand Communications at Datarails, speculated that this shift does not indicate a diminished need for these skills, but rather an assumption that competent accountants inherently possess them.
“Based on three years of research, skills that appear less frequently in job listings are often perceived as too fundamental to mention explicitly,” remarked Marciano.
Communication and critical thinking may have simply reached a saturation point for accountants. Alternatively, as AI assumes more analytical and problem-solving responsibilities, employers may anticipate fewer of these competencies from human team members.
Notably, critical thinking remains essential for discerning the reliability of AI outputs.

One constant, however, remains unequivocal: proficiency in Excel is indispensable. The survey found that 82% of accountant job postings explicitly mentioned Excel, mirroring last year’s figures.
Similarly, 75% of controller job advertisements included this requirement. The sole exception was a modest increase in FP&A roles specifying Excel, which rose from 84% to 87% year-over-year.
Source link: Accountingtoday.com.






