OpenAI Signals UK Hiring Boom with New London HQ, Hundreds of Jobs Coming

OpenAI Signals UK Hiring Boom with New London HQ, Hundreds of Jobs Coming

A woman shaking hands with a man outside a building with OpenAI sign written on it. The flag of UK is seen on the background.

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Aminu Abdullahi
Aminu Abdullahi
Apr 14, 2026
3 minute read
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London just became the stage for OpenAI’s next big hiring wave.

After months of operating out of temporary spaces, the US-based AI leader OpenAI has signed a lease for its first permanent UK headquarters. The company is taking over a massive 88,500-square-foot space at Regent Quarter in King’s Cross.

The new office, which includes Jahn Court and the Brassworks Building, will accommodate 544 team members. While OpenAI currently employs about 200 people in the capital, this signals a major hiring push in research, engineering, and sales. The site is expected to open in 2027.

The announcement comes at a bit of a push-and-pull moment for the company’s relationship with Britain. Just last week, OpenAI confirmed it was pausing its Stargate UK project, a plan for a massive data center that would have been spread across sites like Newcastle and Northumberland.

The company cited high energy costs and a tough regulatory environment as reasons for putting those infrastructure plans on ice. However, this new office deal seems to be an olive branch to the UK government, showing that while they might be hesitating on hardware, they are doubling down on British talent.

Why London?

OpenAI has made it clear that it wants London to be its primary research base outside of its San Francisco headquarters. According to reports, the move is designed to tap into the city’s deep pool of machine learning experts and university researchers.

Phoebe Thacker, OpenAI’s global head of data research programmes and London site lead, highlighted the importance of the region in a statement, according to The Independent.

“The UK has an incredible depth of talent and a strong track record in AI.” Thacker also noted the existing momentum in the capital, “London is already a key hub for our research and teams, and this new office gives us the space to keep building here.”

She added that the move is about more than just floor space, “This investment reflects our long-term commitment to the UK and the role it can play in shaping how AI is developed safely and used to benefit people all over the world.”

Joining the AI quarter

By moving into King’s Cross, OpenAI is positioning itself in what is becoming a global AI neighborhood. The new office is just a stone’s throw from Google’s European HQ and its DeepMind division.

While the UK still trails behind the US and China in total funding, the local scene is heating up. So far this year, UK AI startups have raised $6.7 billion, according to Dealroom data cited by CNBC

The new headquarters signals hundreds of new jobs across research, engineering, and sales. At a time when the UK is eager to solidify its AI credentials, OpenAI’s bet on local talent could help turn London into not just a hub of ideas but a factory for the next generation of AI innovation.

Also read: OpenAI is expanding in London as the UK debates tougher AI copyright limits and other rules that could shape the country’s AI market.

Aminu Abdullahi

Aminu Abdullahi is an experienced B2B technology and finance writer and award-winning public speaker. He is the co-author of the e-book, The Ultimate Creativity Playbook, and has written for various publications, including TechRepublic, eWEEK, Enterprise Networking Planet, eSecurity Planet, CIO Insight, Enterprise Storage Forum, IT Business Edge, Webopedia, Software Pundit, Geekflare and more.

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