A government report has found that surging investment has driven UK AI sector growth to outpace the wider economy by 150 times since 2022.
The UK’s AI sector is clearly in the throes of a boom, with revenues shattering previous records to hit £23.9 billion in the last year. The engine room of this growth is a thriving and rapidly expanding community of over 5,800 AI companies—a 58 percent increase since 2023 alone.
This isn’t just about big tech, either. The surge is being driven from the ground up by exciting startups. Small and medium-sized businesses make up over 90 percent of the new entrants, fuelling a wave of innovation across the country. This translates to real jobs, with employment in the sector jumping by a third to more than 86,000 people.
Feryal Clark MP, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for AI and Digital Government, said: “This means that since 2022, the UK AI sector has grown 150 times faster than the economy at large. This growth reflects the increasing integration of AI across the economy, from healthcare and finance to manufacturing and professional services.”
So, what’s fuelling this impressive expansion? A torrent of investment.
Investor confidence has not just returned; it has reignited, with a record £2.9 billion investment pouring into dedicated AI firms in 2024. The UK has also become a top destination for international capital, attracting £15 billion in inward investment projects this year, which are expected to create over 6,500 jobs.
While London and the South East remain the UK’s AI heartland, the boom is rippling out across the nation. Regions like the West Midlands, the North West, and Yorkshire and the Humber have seen the number of local AI firms at least double since 2022.
However, beneath the surface of these bullish headlines, the UK AI sector is suffering from growing pains.
According to Isabella Grandi, Director for Data Strategy and Governance at NTT DATA, “The sector is clearly booming, but the study also reveals the pressure points. Companies are struggling to find enough skilled people, and late-stage capital remains thin whilst the lines remain blurred.”
While the UK is a world-class incubator for new ideas, the report notes a frustrating lack of the later-stage growth funding needed to turn promising AI startups into global giants. As one investor put it, the UK is “very good at the start phase, but [that at] the scale up phase (beyond Series A), there’s a missing piece there”.
Beyond funding, businesses are calling for a clearer rulebook on how to operate. Grandi warns that long-term success of the UK AI sector depends on building trust, a task made harder by regulatory uncertainty.
“Successful AI adoption hinges on how much we can trust it,” Grandi says. “The government’s AI sector study shows rapid expansion alongside a security-first drift, but safety and ethics need to be kept firmly in view, or adoption will slow.”
She points to the EU’s more structured approach as a model for the clarity that companies are craving.
“Firms need a rule book that they can apply. Legislation such as the EU AI Act is backed by practical guidance, and countries such as Ireland are already outlining compliance steps,” Grandi explains. “It’s this level of certainty that gives companies a clear path forward, and the UK must provide the same clarity.”
Despite these challenges, the mood on the ground around AI investment remains positive. 58 percent of AI firms expect their revenues to grow by 50 percent or more in the coming year. The growth potential for the UK AI sector is undeniable, but as Grandi concludes, seizing it will require confronting these issues head-on to achieve “responsible, inclusive, and commercially viable AI innovation.”
As for the UK Government itself, a three-month trial by the Department for Business & Trade of Microsoft Copilot yielded less exciting results. It’s perhaps a good thing, then, that US federal government workers are getting free access to Copilot.
See also: Switzerland releases 100% open AI model
Want to learn more about AI and big data from industry leaders? Check out AI & Big Data Expo taking place in Amsterdam, California, and London. The comprehensive event is part of TechEx and is co-located with other leading technology events, click here for more information.
AI News is powered by TechForge Media. Explore other upcoming enterprise technology events and webinars here.
Read the full article here