Nearly 1 in 2 UK public sector IT leaders say their cybersecurity tools fall short

London, UK – 26th August 2025 – Nearly half (44%) of surveyed UK public sector IT leaders believe their cybersecurity tools are only moderately effective at safeguarding sensitive data, raising significant concerns about the sector's ability to adequately protect critical infrastructure. This is according to new data from SolarWinds, a leading provider of simple, powerful, secure observability and IT management software.

Based on a survey of 100 public sector IT decision-makers, the research reveals that system complexity and budget limitations are two main issues contributing to the reported cybersecurity gaps. The study found that 58% of IT leaders describe their technology environments as 'extremely' or 'very' complex, with health and education sector respondents reporting the highest levels of IT complexity (70%) compared to regional and central governments (45%).

Nearly one in four respondents (23%) cited financial limitations as the top barrier to strengthening cybersecurity. While complexity might explain the current state of cybersecurity readiness, restricted budgets hinder the ability to modernise systems, perform upgrades or invest in essential staff training.

"These findings reflect a public sector under mounting pressure to address rising cyberthreats while navigating regulatory and fiscal constraints", said Richard Giblin, Head of Public Sector and Defence at SolarWinds. "Despite the clear need to modernise, complexity, cost and trust remain substantial barriers."

Human factors also remain a critical concern. The majority of respondents (56%) cite the biggest security threat as coming from careless or untrained insiders. This underscores the importance of improving cyber hygiene and implementing robust awareness and education programmes within organisations.

The research indicates an increasing interest in observability and AI-powered solutions as ways to boost resilience against cyberthreats, with 53% stating that enhancing system and process observability is a top priority for the future. These technologies are valued for their ability to support real-time monitoring, expedite incident response and facilitate predictive threat detection.

"To make meaningful progress, public sector organisations must align across departments and integrate technologies such as observability and AI with well-defined governance, comprehensive training and a shared commitment to security at all levels", Giblin added. "Technology alone is insufficient – it must be part of a broader, strategic approach to cyber-resilience."

Methodology

SolarWinds partnered with Market Connections to conduct an online survey in December 2024, targeting 100 UK and 200 US IT decision-makers and influencers from federal, state, local and education sectors. The report assessed the confidence levels and concerns related to managing IT environments while exploring barriers to achieving digital modernisation, the current state of visibility and observability and the usage and implementation of AI by organisations.

For the full UK Public Sector Cybersecurity Survey Report, please visit: https://try.solarwinds.com/report/uk-next-gen-government-it/delivery