Minneapolis Job Market Report

Minneapolis Job Market Booming: 70,000 Openings Across Healthcare, Education, and Transportation

2 min · 27. Apr. 2026
Episode Minneapolis Job Market Booming: 70,000 Openings Across Healthcare, Education, and Transportation Cover

Beschreibung

Minneapolis boasts a robust job market with over 70,000 openings as of late April 2026, according to Indeed, amid a diverse employment landscape driven by healthcare, education, transportation, and professional services. The unemployment rate hovers around national averages, though specific local figures remain unavailable in recent reports, with broader Midwest trends showing stability despite federal workforce shifts elsewhere. Major industries include healthcare and education, anchored by employers like Minneapolis Public Schools and Twin Cities hospitals, alongside transportation hubs like Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, which maintains an 80.8% on-time flight rate per USAFacts, supporting logistics roles. Growing sectors encompass event technology and hospitality, with Encore Global listing multiple AV positions, and trades like journeyman roles averaging $71,000 annually per ZipRecruiter. Trends indicate steady demand in entry-level transportation and public sector jobs, though immigration enforcement changes following April 2026 Minneapolis events have led to a 12% drop in ICE arrests, per Courthouse News Service, potentially tightening migrant-dependent sectors like agriculture without direct local data. Recent developments feature high job volume on platforms like Indeed, but data gaps persist on precise unemployment and seasonal patterns, which historically peak in winter for construction and tourism. Commuting trends favor efficient MSP airport access via services like Rightway Parking, aiding on-time travel. Government initiatives are limited in reports, with no major Minneapolis-specific programs noted. The market has evolved toward service and tech roles post-2025 federal contractions seen in DC areas, per Slow Boring. Key findings highlight abundant opportunities in education, transport, and events, with resilience in airport operations but needs for updated unemployment stats. Current openings include Truck Driver Class A Entry Level at Core-Mark paying $1,575 weekly, School Bus Driver at Minneapolis Public Schools, and Specialist roles at Apple paying $23 to $30 hourly. Thank you listeners for tuning in, and please subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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Episode Minneapolis Jobs in 2024: Strong Market, Tight Talent Pool, and the Future of Work Cover

Minneapolis Jobs in 2024: Strong Market, Tight Talent Pool, and the Future of Work

Minneapolis currently enjoys a relatively tight labor market, with low unemployment and steady hiring, though wage pressures and housing costs create affordability challenges. According to the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development, the Minneapolis–St. Paul metro unemployment rate has recently hovered near 3 percent, below the national average, indicating strong demand for labor but also a constrained talent pool. The employment landscape is diversified: major industries include healthcare and social assistance, professional and technical services, finance and insurance, manufacturing, education, and retail. Large employers such as Target, UnitedHealth Group, 3M, Mayo Clinic in the broader region, and the University of Minnesota shape demand for both high-skill and mid-skill roles. The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis reports that the region has added jobs steadily in recent years, particularly in healthcare, logistics, tech-enabled business services, and construction, while some traditional manufacturing roles have declined or upskilled. Recent trends include increased remote and hybrid work for professional occupations, sustained demand in healthcare and IT, and continued labor shortages in hospitality, childcare, and skilled trades. Seasonal patterns are visible in construction, tourism, retail, and teen summer jobs, which rise in late spring and early summer but remain more competitive than in past decades. Commuting trends show a growing share of workers using light rail, buses, biking, and remote work instead of solo driving, according to the Metropolitan Council, though driving remains dominant and congestion remains an issue on key corridors. Government initiatives from the City of Minneapolis and the State of Minnesota focus on workforce training, apprenticeships, small-business support, and equitable hiring, including programs aimed at reducing racial employment gaps and supporting immigrant entrepreneurs. Over the past decade, the market has evolved toward more service, healthcare, and knowledge work, with automation and AI reshaping routine office and production jobs; data on AI’s local job impact remain limited and evolving. For current openings, examples include a software engineer role at Target’s Minneapolis headquarters, a registered nurse position at Abbott Northwestern Hospital, and a warehouse logistics coordinator with a regional distribution firm. Key findings: unemployment is low but uneven across neighborhoods and demographics, healthcare and professional services are core growth pillars, and ongoing training and transit investment will heavily influence future opportunity. Thank you for tuning in, and remember to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

12. Juni 20263 min
Episode Minneapolis Job Market Update: Health Care and Logistics Lead Strong June 2026 Hiring Cover

Minneapolis Job Market Update: Health Care and Logistics Lead Strong June 2026 Hiring

Minneapolis has a large and diverse labor market anchored by health care, finance, retail, education, manufacturing, and professional services, with the broader Twin Cities economy remaining one of the Midwest’s most stable. Current online job boards show very high hiring volume in the metro, including more than 90,000 postings for Minneapolis ZIP code 55407 on Indeed, though that count is a platform snapshot rather than an official labor statistic and should be treated as directional only. Indeed reports demand for delivery, sales, and labor roles, while public-sector openings also remain visible through federal agencies. The latest official unemployment data for Minneapolis itself is limited in the sources available here, so city-level conditions must be inferred from regional and state indicators. Minnesota’s unemployment rate has recently been in the low-4 percent range, and national job-market commentary in June 2026 described unemployment as unchanged at 4.3 percent, suggesting a still-firm labor market with moderate cooling. Recent business sentiment also points to Minnesota’s strong quality-of-life ranking, which can support talent attraction and retention. Major employers in the Minneapolis area include health systems, universities, retailers, banks, insurers, manufacturers, and government bodies. The Minneapolis VA Health Care System serves more than 100,000 veterans across 15 locations, and Amazon continues to advertise warehouse and delivery roles in the metro. Growing sectors include health care, logistics, technology-enabled services, construction-related trades, and hospitality tied to downtown recovery and travel demand. Seasonal patterns are clear: landscaping, construction, retail, and logistics hiring typically strengthen in spring and summer, while holiday fulfillment and winter weather services also create spikes. Commuting trends continue to reflect a hybrid work market, with downtown foot traffic improving but not fully back to pre-pandemic norms; this has shifted demand toward flexible schedules, suburban worksites, and distribution hubs. Government initiatives in the region emphasize workforce development, veteran employment, infrastructure investment, and business permitting support, but up-to-date Minneapolis-specific program data was not fully available in the supplied sources. The market has evolved from a traditional office-centered economy toward a more mixed model built on health care, e-commerce logistics, and service work. Current openings visible in the search results include Medical Support Assistant at the Minneapolis VA Medical Center, delivery station roles at Amazon in Minneapolis, and entry-level sales positions in the metro. Key findings: the market is broad, hiring remains active, health care and logistics are leading engines, and the main data gap is the lack of recent official Minneapolis city unemployment figures. Thanks for tuning in, please subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

8. Juni 20263 min
Episode Minneapolis Job Market 2026: Healthcare Leads Tight Labor Market Near 3 Percent Unemployment Cover

Minneapolis Job Market 2026: Healthcare Leads Tight Labor Market Near 3 Percent Unemployment

Minneapolis has a diverse, resilient job market anchored by healthcare, finance, education, and advanced manufacturing, with solid but slightly cooling growth in line with national trends. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Minneapolis–St. Paul–Bloomington metro unemployment rate has hovered near the mid‑3 percent range in recent months, below the national rate of about 4.3 percent reported by multiple news outlets for spring 2026, indicating a relatively tight labor market. Local employment is concentrated in healthcare and social assistance, professional and business services, retail, finance and insurance, manufacturing, education, and government, with major employers including Target Corporation, U.S. Bank, 3M (metro-based operations), Allina Health, Fairview Health Services, Hennepin Healthcare, the University of Minnesota, and several large financial and tech services firms. Recent trends show continued hiring in healthcare, life sciences, logistics, data and cloud services, and green construction, while some corporate and tech roles are growing more slowly amid cost controls. Regional economic reports note steady office-to-hybrid work patterns, with strong transit and highway networks supporting commuting from suburbs throughout the Twin Cities; however, detailed 2026 mode-share data are still limited, creating a gap on precise transit versus driving trends. Seasonal patterns remain important: retail, hospitality, construction, and landscaping typically expand hiring in spring and summer, while corporate and education hiring often spikes late summer and early fall. The State of Minnesota and the City of Minneapolis have promoted workforce initiatives focused on tech training, green jobs, small business support, and inclusive hiring, though some 2026 program outcome data are not yet fully published. Over the past decade, the market has evolved from a traditional corporate and manufacturing hub toward a more services- and knowledge-based economy, with notable growth in healthcare, fintech, medical devices, and shared services centers. As of early June 2026, Indeed lists over ninety thousand open roles in the Minneapolis area, ranging from entry-level service jobs to specialized professional positions, underscoring the breadth of opportunity. For a snapshot of current openings, listeners could consider a Patient Services Representative role at Twin Cities Pain Clinic in the metro, a Lawn Maintenance Crew Leader position in nearby New Brighton, or a New Business Developer role with a Twin Cities landscaping firm, all posted with active hiring. Key findings: unemployment is low but edging up slightly, healthcare and professional services anchor demand, seasonal and sectoral shifts are significant, and government and private initiatives are steadily pushing the market toward higher-skill, tech-enabled, and green-focused work, even as some granular 2026 statistics are still emerging. Thank you for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

5. Juni 20263 min
Episode Minneapolis Job Market Steady at 4.5% Unemployment Despite Year-Over-Year Cooling Cover

Minneapolis Job Market Steady at 4.5% Unemployment Despite Year-Over-Year Cooling

The Minneapolis job market reflects a stable yet cooling landscape in the Twin Cities region, with Minnesota's seasonally adjusted unemployment rate holding steady at 4.5 percent in March 2026, above the national rate of 4.3 percent according to the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development. Overall employment in the Twin Cities shrank by nearly 1,800 positions year-over-year, amid statewide job growth of just 0.3 percent or about 9,200 jobs, as reported by MPR News and KROC-AM News. Indeed lists over 90,600 job openings in Minneapolis, signaling persistent demand despite slower hiring rates noted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Major industries include healthcare, manufacturing especially medical devices, technology, and professional services, with key employers like Mayo Clinic affiliates and tribal businesses expanding into leisure, hospitality, and federal contracting per Minneapolis Fed analysis. Growing sectors encompass biotechnology, software, water technology, and AI-driven innovation, supported by state grants totaling 15.75 million dollars for 15 projects as detailed in Twin Cities Business. Recent developments feature job losses in hospitality down 5,700 and construction down 4,400 from December to February due to immigration enforcement impacts, prompting a Minnesota Senate aid package for affected businesses according to News from the States. Seasonal patterns show flat March growth with only 800 nonfarm jobs added, while labor force participation dipped to 67.6 percent. Commuting trends align with regional forecasts from the Metropolitan Council predicting steady population and job expansion over 30 years in the seven-county area. Government initiatives include infrastructure boosts for aviation and targeted economic grants. The market has evolved from post-pandemic gains to modest cooling, with relative strength in low unemployment and high openings per Minnesota 2026 Report Card, though data gaps exist on precise Minneapolis-specific commuting and seasonal hiring. Key findings highlight resilient demand in tech and health amid broader slowdowns. Current openings include Truck Driver at various firms, Plumber positions, and Medical Assistant at Twin Cities Pain Clinic paying 21 to 23 dollars per hour full-time days. Thank you listeners for tuning in and remember to subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

1. Mai 20263 min
Episode Minneapolis Job Market Booming: 70,000 Openings Across Healthcare, Education, and Transportation Cover

Minneapolis Job Market Booming: 70,000 Openings Across Healthcare, Education, and Transportation

Minneapolis boasts a robust job market with over 70,000 openings as of late April 2026, according to Indeed, amid a diverse employment landscape driven by healthcare, education, transportation, and professional services. The unemployment rate hovers around national averages, though specific local figures remain unavailable in recent reports, with broader Midwest trends showing stability despite federal workforce shifts elsewhere. Major industries include healthcare and education, anchored by employers like Minneapolis Public Schools and Twin Cities hospitals, alongside transportation hubs like Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, which maintains an 80.8% on-time flight rate per USAFacts, supporting logistics roles. Growing sectors encompass event technology and hospitality, with Encore Global listing multiple AV positions, and trades like journeyman roles averaging $71,000 annually per ZipRecruiter. Trends indicate steady demand in entry-level transportation and public sector jobs, though immigration enforcement changes following April 2026 Minneapolis events have led to a 12% drop in ICE arrests, per Courthouse News Service, potentially tightening migrant-dependent sectors like agriculture without direct local data. Recent developments feature high job volume on platforms like Indeed, but data gaps persist on precise unemployment and seasonal patterns, which historically peak in winter for construction and tourism. Commuting trends favor efficient MSP airport access via services like Rightway Parking, aiding on-time travel. Government initiatives are limited in reports, with no major Minneapolis-specific programs noted. The market has evolved toward service and tech roles post-2025 federal contractions seen in DC areas, per Slow Boring. Key findings highlight abundant opportunities in education, transport, and events, with resilience in airport operations but needs for updated unemployment stats. Current openings include Truck Driver Class A Entry Level at Core-Mark paying $1,575 weekly, School Bus Driver at Minneapolis Public Schools, and Specialist roles at Apple paying $23 to $30 hourly. Thank you listeners for tuning in, and please subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

27. Apr. 20262 min