C-Suite Hire UK: Full-Time vs Fractional Senior Leadership in 2026
Last updated: 31 May 2026
A C-suite hire is the appointment of a senior executive — CEO, CFO, COO, CMO, CIO, CTO, CHRO or CRO — who takes board-level responsibility for a defined part of the business. In 2026, UK businesses have three credible routes for any C-suite hire: full-time permanent, interim, or fractional. Choosing the right one matters: a permanent C-suite hire can take 4-6 months to land and costs the business £200,000-£500,000 fully loaded in the first year. A fractional alternative can start within a week from £1,795 a month.
This guide walks through what each option actually costs, when each makes sense, and how UK mid-market businesses should think about the decision.
What is a C-suite hire?
A C-suite hire is any executive-level appointment with formal board responsibility — the people whose decisions shape strategy, capital allocation, risk and culture. In a UK mid-market business the C-suite typically includes:
- Chief Executive Officer (CEO) or Managing Director
- Chief Financial Officer (CFO) or Finance Director
- Chief Operating Officer (COO)
- Chief Marketing Officer (CMO)
- Chief Information Officer (CIO) or IT Director
- Chief Technology Officer (CTO)
- Chief People Officer / HR Director
- Chief Revenue Officer or Sales Director
- Chief Data / AI Officer (now common in regulated and tech-led businesses)
The traditional route to filling any of these has been full-time permanent recruitment via executive search. That has changed materially over the last three years, with fractional and interim models now mainstream.
The three routes for any UK C-suite hire
Each model has a distinct cost base, time-to-impact and risk profile.
1. Full-time permanent hire
A permanent C-suite executive joins the business on a standard employment contract, typically with 3-6 months’ notice. They are full-time, dedicated and on the payroll.
- Time to start: 4-6 months from brief to first day, on average
- Annual base salary (mid-market UK): £100,000-£250,000 depending on function, per the Exec Capital 2026 UK salary guide
- Recruitment fee: 25-35 per cent of first-year compensation, with minimum fees of £30,000-£40,000 at reputable search firms, per the UK Headhunters cost guide
- Fully loaded first-year cost: £180,000-£500,000+ once National Insurance, pension, bonus and search fees are added
2. Interim executive
An interim is an experienced executive engaged for a defined period — typically 3-12 months — to deliver a specific outcome (turnaround, integration, IPO prep, gap cover after a sudden departure).
- Time to start: 1-3 weeks
- Day rate: £600-£800 for SME and less complex mandates; £1,500-£3,500 for FTSE or major crisis assignments (Exec Capital 2026 data)
- Typical engagement: 6-9 months, full-time or near-full-time
- Total cost: £150,000-£600,000 over the assignment
Interims are useful for short, intense pieces of work — but they are not designed to be ongoing leadership.
3. Fractional executive
A fractional executive is a senior, experienced operator who works with the business one to three days a week on a flexible monthly arrangement. They are part-time but ongoing, sitting on the board and owning their function.
- Time to start: Often within a week
- Typical monthly cost: £1,795-£8,000 a month depending on seniority and days
- Annualised cost: £20,000-£100,000 — typically 25-40 per cent of an equivalent full-time package
- No long-term tie-ins with the better UK providers
The fractional market has grown dramatically. Industry research shows year-on-year growth of around 68 per cent in fractional executive demand, with Gartner forecasting that more than 30 per cent of mid-market enterprises will have at least one fractional executive on retainer by 2027.
Why the C-suite hiring model has shifted
Three structural changes have pushed UK mid-market businesses towards fractional and interim models:
- Margins are tighter. Higher employer National Insurance, energy and finance costs leave less room for £250,000+ fixed overhead in a business turning over £5-25 million.
- Speed matters more. A permanent search that takes six months means six months of strategic drift. A fractional CFO or CMO can be in the chair next week.
- The talent pool is genuinely senior. Executive-level freelancing is no longer a downshift — it is a deliberate career choice for many 20-30 year veterans, which means the fractional pool is now deep, experienced and credible.
The Institute of Directors and other UK governance bodies now openly acknowledge fractional and interim leadership as a mainstream model for SME and mid-market boards.
Which model fits which situation
The honest answer is that most UK mid-market businesses are best served by a mix, not a dogma. A useful decision framework:
Full-time permanent makes sense when
- The function is a permanent, daily operational requirement (e.g. a full-time CFO for a regulated business doing £50m+)
- The role requires deep institutional knowledge that builds over years
- The business has the budget headroom to absorb a £200k+ fixed cost without distorting decisions
- Investors, lenders or regulators explicitly expect a full-time named executive
Interim makes sense when
- There is a defined, time-bound piece of work — turnaround, integration, IPO prep, crisis recovery
- A permanent search is underway but the seat cannot be left empty
- The business needs heavy lifting now and the answer in 12 months will be different
Fractional makes sense when
- The business needs senior strategic judgement, not full-time presence
- Marketing, finance, IT or operations needs leadership but not headcount
- Cash and equity are too valuable to hand a full salary to a permanent executive
- The business is between £2m and £50m turnover and growing
- Speed and flexibility are commercial advantages
For most UK businesses turning over £2-25 million, fractional is the right starting point for most C-suite roles. Permanent hires can be added later as the business and the role mature.
How to run a good C-suite hire — whichever model you choose
A bad C-suite hire is expensive in any model. The disciplines are the same:
- Write the mandate down. What specific commercial outcomes does this person own in year one? Vague briefs produce vague hires.
- Define success metrics. 30-60-90 day deliverables and 12-month KPIs in writing.
- Map the existing team and budget. What is the new executive inheriting, and where are the gaps?
- Choose the engagement model deliberately. Permanent, interim, or fractional — each carries different cost, speed and risk profiles. Do not default.
- Reference and culture-check thoroughly. Senior hires that fail almost always fail on culture or board fit, not on capability.
- Build in early review. A formal 90-day review with the board is non-negotiable.
- Avoid long lock-ins on permanent hires. Notice periods and bonus mechanics should reflect real performance, not retention for its own sake.
For specific deep-dives, see our guides on fractional CMO services, fractional CIO services, and part-time CTO leadership.
How Leadership Services compares to traditional executive search
Traditional executive search remains the right tool for senior permanent hires at large or listed UK businesses. For mid-market companies that need a single C-suite seat filled quickly, the economics are very different.
A typical retained search for a £150,000 mid-market CFO will cost £37,500-£52,500 in fees alone (25-35 per cent), plus 10-15 per cent expenses, and take 4-6 months. The same business could engage a fractional finance director for £1,795-£4,000 a month starting next week, with no search fee and no permanent salary commitment — and still progress a permanent search in parallel if needed.
Leadership Services places fractional and part-time directors across all C-suite functions — finance, marketing, IT, operations, sales, HR, data and AI — from a network of 500+ senior UK directors. Engagements start from £1,795 a month with no long-term tie-ins. Most start within a week.
Frequently asked questions about C-suite hires
Q: What is a C-suite hire?
A: A C-suite hire is an appointment to one of the most senior executive roles in a business — CEO, CFO, COO, CMO, CIO, CTO, CHRO or CRO — with formal board-level responsibility for that function. In UK mid-market businesses these roles can be filled on a permanent, interim or fractional basis depending on cost, speed and the work required.
Q: How much does a C-suite hire cost in the UK?
A: For a permanent UK mid-market C-suite hire, expect a fully loaded first-year cost of £180,000-£500,000 — base salary £100,000-£250,000, plus 25-35 per cent recruitment fee, employer National Insurance, pension, bonus and onboarding costs. Interim day rates run £600-£3,500. Fractional executives typically cost £1,795-£8,000 a month, or 25-40 per cent of an equivalent permanent package annualised.
Q: How long does a permanent C-suite hire take in the UK?
A: A retained executive search for a permanent UK C-suite role typically takes 4-6 months from brief to first day. That includes 2-3 months of search and shortlisting, 4-8 weeks of interviews and offer, and the successful candidate’s notice period of 3-6 months. Interim and fractional hires can start in 1-3 weeks and within a week respectively.
Q: What is the difference between an interim and a fractional executive?
A: An interim executive is engaged full-time or near-full-time for a defined, time-bound piece of work — typically 3-12 months — usually paid on a day rate. A fractional executive works one to three days a week on an ongoing monthly retainer, sitting on the board and owning their function over a longer horizon. Interims are short, intense and outcome-focused. Fractionals are continuous and strategic.
Q: When should a UK mid-market business use a fractional C-suite hire instead of a permanent one?
A: A fractional C-suite hire is usually the right starting point when the business is turning over £2-25 million, needs senior strategic judgement rather than full-time presence, and cannot or should not commit to a £200k+ fixed cost. Marketing, finance, IT and operations leadership are the most common fractional roles. A permanent hire can be added later once scale, complexity or regulatory requirements demand it.
Ready to make a senior leadership hire?
Leadership Services places fractional and part-time C-suite directors with UK businesses from £1,795 a month — typically starting within one week, with no long-term tie-ins. Our 500+ senior directors cover every C-suite function across finance, marketing, IT, operations, sales, HR and data. Book a free consultation to talk through whether a permanent, interim or fractional hire is right for your business, or explore our part-time finance director services to see how the model works in practice.