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Internship Openings Fell 15% In Two Years As Companies Lean On AI

Published May 30, 2026
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Summary:
  • Available internships fell more than 15% between 2023 and 2025.
  • A Hult International Business School study found 37% of managers would rather use AI than hire an entry-level worker.
  • AI-focused internships are growing fast even as the old ones shrink.

The same tool taking intern jobs away is quietly creating the hottest new ones. Companies are handing routine work to chatbots instead of students, and the fastest-growing roles are now built around the very tech doing the cutting.

Intern Work Is Getting Automated

A lot of intern work is exactly what AI is good at, like summing up documents, drafting first versions, and cleaning up data. That used to be how a 20-year-old got a foot in the door, but a manager can now do it in minutes without hiring anyone.

The shift shows up in the count, with available internships falling more than 15% between 2023 and 2025. A Drexel University survey backs that up, finding more companies cut their programs each year while fewer add to them.

A Hult International Business School study put a sharper point on it, with more than a third of managers saying they would rather hand a task to AI than to an entry-level worker.

If you want to follow how AI is reshaping company costs and hiring, Market Briefs breaks it down every morning in five minutes, and you get a free investing masterclass when you join.

New AI Roles Are Replacing Old Ones

Here's the twist: the companies leaning hardest on AI are also building brand-new internships to run it. Sony Pictures is hiring a summer intern just to help roll out ChatGPT, while Meta is adding internships in AI and machine learning.

It looks a lot like the early internet, which wiped out plenty of jobs before creating a new kind of work for the people who got it. The students learning to manage AI are now walking into roles that did not exist two years ago.

What To Watch

The split is the real story, with one door closing on routine intern work as another opens for anyone who can put AI to use. For investors, it is an early read on how AI changes the cost of labor, since fewer entry-level hires can mean wider profit margins now and a thinner talent pipeline later.

The bottom rung of the career ladder is being rebuilt around AI.

If you want this kind of read on the market every morning, join the 4 million people reading Market Briefs - you also get a 45-minute investing course thrown in as a bonus.

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