Top QA Challenges in 2025 You Can’t Ignore
Quality Assurance (QA) teams play a key role in delivering reliable software and products, but 2025 has brought its own set of challenges. In a fast-paced digital world driven by AI, automation, and growing user demands, QA teams are under pressure like never before. As someone with years of experience in the QA and tech industry, I’ve seen how these challenges evolve and how they’re affecting real teams today.
Let’s take a deep look at the top QA challenges in 2025 that every tech team should be aware of.
1. AI Testing Tools Are Evolving Faster Than Teams Can Adapt
AI-driven testing tools are becoming more common, but QA teams often struggle to keep up with how quickly these tools change. According to a 2024 Capgemini report, 73% of organizations are investing in AI-powered testing, but only 32% feel confident using them effectively.
This gap means that while companies are buying tools, their QA teams don’t always have the time or training to use them to their full potential. Learning curves, tool limitations, and integration issues are everyday problems. Platforms like Atlas help ease this transition by offering smart, easy-to-use insights that QA teams can act on without needing deep technical training making modern QA more manageable and efficient.
2. Test Automation Coverage Isn’t What It Should Be
Everyone talks about automation, but the reality is different on the ground. A SmartBear 2024 survey revealed that only 37% of testing is automated across organizations on average.
This leaves over 60% of QA work to manual testing, which increases time-to-market, creates human errors, and can overwhelm small QA teams. Automation requires a skilled team, time, and maintenance, resources many QA teams still lack in 2025.
3. More Devices, More Browsers, More Testing Complexity
With the rise of foldable devices, smart wearables, and more operating systems, QA teams are expected to test across an increasing number of platforms. Cross-browser and cross-device testing are no longer “nice to have”—they are essential.
In 2025, an average mobile app is expected to be tested on at least 25 different devices before launch, according to Applitools. QA teams are under pressure to simulate real-world conditions without having access to all these devices.
4. Security and Compliance Are Now QA Responsibilities
Security testing was once handled by specialized teams, but not anymore. With rising data privacy laws like the Digital Personal Data Protection Act (DPDP) in India and GDPR updates in the EU, QA teams are now expected to test not just for functionality, but also for compliance and security loopholes.
A Gartner study predicted that by 2025, 70% of QA teams will be involved in regulatory and security testing, a major shift from previous years. Many QA professionals are not trained in this area, leading to a skills gap that directly affects product release timelines.
5. Too Many Testing Tools, Not Enough Integration
Modern QA stacks are often cluttered with dozens of tools—Jira, Selenium, TestRail, Postman, Jenkins, and now AI-based test generators. While each tool serves a purpose, they don’t always work well together.
This leads to data silos, inconsistent reporting, and duplicated efforts. According to a TestGrid 2025 report, QA engineers spend nearly 20% of their time just managing test tools and environments, time that could be spent testing.
6. Remote QA Teams Face Communication Hurdles
Even in 2025, remote collaboration remains a challenge for QA teams. Test cycles require close coordination between developers, testers, and product teams. But when QA teams are distributed across time zones, issues like unclear test cases, delays in feedback, and overlooked bugs are common.
Despite using collaboration tools like Slack or Microsoft Teams, nearly 45% of QA leads say communication issues delay releases, according to Forrester’s State of DevOps 2024 report.
7. Burnout and Mental Fatigue Are Increasing
QA is often a thankless job. Testers work under tight deadlines, face constant pressure to “release fast,” and often get blamed when something breaks. In 2025, burnout among QA professionals is up by 30% compared to pre-pandemic levels, based on a TechWell survey.
This mental fatigue leads to lower test accuracy, higher turnover, and a drop in innovation. Organizations need to recognize this and invest more in mental health and support for their QA teams.
8. Flaky Tests Are Still a Major Problem
Flaky tests, that pass sometimes and fail at other times without code changes, continue to be a major productivity killer. In large test suites, even a 10% flakiness rate can waste hours of debugging time each sprint.
In fact, Google engineers have publicly shared that flaky tests can reduce developer productivity by 20–30%, and that’s in a company with highly advanced tooling. For smaller teams, this can completely derail testing cycles.
To stay ahead, QA leaders need tools that offer more than test coverage, they need real-time intelligence, regulatory insight, and historical patterns. That’s where Atlas Compliance tool is making a real impact. From understanding past FDA inspection trends to helping QA teams prepare for upcoming audits with confidence, Atlas is helping organizations shift from reactive to proactive.
In a year where a single oversight can cost millions, being prepared isn’t just smart—it’s essential.











