
By Marni Baker Stein, Chief Content Officer, Coursera
Looking back on 2025, GenAI skills remain a major focus for learners worldwide — but this year, we also saw a powerful surge in foundational workforce skills like project management, leadership, and data literacy.
As AI rapidly transforms everything we know, what unites us across universities and industries is how we can help the world’s learners master the right skills they need to grow their careers.
2025 year in review: Platform growth and learner demand
This year, 22 million new learners joined Coursera — nearly 82,000 people every day. A typical day saw 150,000 enrollments, 14 enrollments every minute in GenAI courses, and the launch of 10 new pieces of content. Coursera reached:
- 191 million total global learners
- Recorded 41.8 million enrollments, a 14% increase year-over-year
- 5.4 million GenAI enrollments, nearly double last year’s total
We now offer 12,000+ courses, Specializations, and certificates, with 2,750+ new pieces of content added this year from our 375+ university and industry partners like Anthropic, Cambridge University, Harvard Business Publishing, Pearson, and UC Santa Barbara.
*Data as of September 30, 2025
Most popular courses in 2025
Learners continue to balance technical upskilling with broad professional readiness. In 2025, learners sought out technical skills like Foundations: Data, Data, Everywhere, AI For Everyone and Python for Data Science, AI & Development, and paired them with foundational skills like English for Career Development, The Science of Well-Being, Excel Skills for Business: Essentials, and Foundations of Project Management.
Most popular courses in 2025 from industry partners
- Foundations: Data, Data, Everywhere (Google)
- AI For Everyone (DeepLearning.AI)
- NEW! Introduction to Generative AI (Google Cloud)
- Foundations of Project Management (Google)
- Foundations of Cybersecurity (Google)
- Foundations of Digital Marketing and E-commerce (Google)
- NEW! Generative AI: Prompt Engineering Basics (IBM)
- NEW! Introduction to AI (Google)
- Python for Data Science, AI & Development (IBM)
- Introduction to Artificial Intelligence (AI) (IBM)
Most popular courses in 2025 from university partners
- Supervised Machine Learning: Regression and Classification (Stanford University)
- English for Career Development (University of Pennsylvania)
- Financial Markets (Yale University)
- Programming for Everybody (Getting Started with Python) (University of Michigan)
- Prompt Engineering for ChatGPT (Vanderbilt University)
- The Science of Well-Being (Yale University)
- Introduction to Psychology (Yale University)
- English for Common Interactions in the Workplace: Basic Level (Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile)
- First Step Korean (Yonsei University)
- Excel Skills for Business: Essentials (Macquarie University)
Universities remain the go-to for rigor, foundational literacy, and interdisciplinary problem-solving that anchor growth, while industry partners accelerate innovation by bringing emerging tools and real-world workflows into the learning experience.
Micro-credentials: Scaled trust from both ecosystems
Micro-credentials, such as Professional Certificates and Specializations, are reshaping the way people learn and work. These focused learning pathways are becoming a trusted signal of job-readiness, with 96% of employers saying that micro-credentials strengthen a candidate’s job application. Entry-level employees with micro-credentials report tangible career benefits: 28% received a pay increase and 89% built or strengthened their soft skills, especially critical thinking (72%) and problem solving (72%).
Rising demand for these credentials is reflected across the platform.
New Professional Certificates from
New Specializations from
As learners look for pathways to good jobs, and companies seek job-ready talent, micro-credentials are proving to be a critical bridge between education and employment.
Fastest growing skills for 2026
Underneath every course, certificate, and GenAI breakthrough lies the same essential driver of progress: skills. They’re what connects learning to opportunity, and they are evolving faster than ever. According to the World Economic Forum, nearly four in ten core skills today are expected to shift by 2030, with technical capabilities like AI and foundational skills rising faster than any other.
These aren’t just future trends. They are transformations we see unfolding every day on Coursera, as learners around the world build the capabilities that prepare them for the future of work. Based on millions of recent enrollments, these are the top skills to learn in 2026.
AI is reshaping roles across every sector, but lasting career mobility still depends on durable, human-centered skills. Learners are investing in problem solving, decision making, and collaboration — with critical thinking rising from seventh to the top skill by Q3 this year. These capabilities strengthen judgment and communication in ways technology cannot, and combined with emerging technical skills, they define a resilient, future-ready workforce.
AI and Tech Skills
- Advanced prompting
- AI agents
- Human-AI collaboration
- AI app creation
- AI-assisted design
Non-AI Foundations With Sustained Growth
- Business
- Data Science
- Tech
Human Skills
- Personal Development
- Collaboration
- Arts and Humanities
As the pace of change accelerates, learning remains a powerful engine of opportunity. Universities provide the rigor that builds lasting skills, while industry partners bring the tools that prepare learners for what’s next. Together, they create flexible pathways and trusted credentials that strengthen confidence, employability, and momentum — delivering the right learning at the right time.
With Coursera Plus, learners can explore thousands of university and industry courses, credentials, and applied AI learning to help them stay job-ready.
