Austin Job Market Report

Austin's Job Market Thrives: Tech, Construction, and Growth Opportunities in 2026

2 min · 17 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Austin's Job Market Thrives: Tech, Construction, and Growth Opportunities in 2026

Descripción

Austin's job market remains resilient amid a stable Texas economy, with nonfarm jobs statewide at 14.4 million in February 2026 after a slight monthly dip, reflecting 0.5 percent annual growth outpacing the nation per the Texas Workforce Commission. Employment landscape shows steady demand in tech, construction, and professional services, bolstered by major players like Dell, IBM, AMD, Apple, and Alphabet, where tech workers number 180,500 or 13.7 percent of the workforce according to a 2024 CompTIA survey cited by Built In Austin. Unemployment hovers around Texas's 4.3 percent seasonally adjusted rate, with national metro trends from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics indicating January 2026 rates up slightly year-over-year to about 4.7 percent in many areas, though Austin-specific metro data lags until late April releases. Trends favor industry-specific gains, with construction leading annual growth at 2.7 percent for 19 months, professional services adding 6,300 jobs monthly, and manufacturing up 2,500. Growing sectors include AI, semiconductors, biotech, cloud computing, and hardware, fueled by 4.5 billion dollars in 2024 VC funding. Major industries encompass tech, construction, manufacturing, and emerging life sciences with data centers. Recent developments feature the 2026 City of Austin Career Expo connecting seekers and employers. Seasonal patterns align with national benchmarks, showing minor winter upticks in unemployment. Commuting trends emphasize Austin's vibrant ecosystem tied to University of Texas engineering talent and events like South by Southwest. Government initiatives via Workforce Solutions Capital Area promote high-demand careers in construction, manufacturing like semiconductor technicians, and agriculture. Market evolution points to tech dominance and diversified growth despite data gaps in latest Austin metro payrolls and unemployment specifics. Key findings highlight a competitive market favoring skilled tech and construction roles with low unemployment and robust employer bases. Current openings include Immigration and Mobility Specialist at Avride, Utility Services Specialist Senior with the City of Austin, and Porter in rigging at Bigge Crane near Austin Industrial. Thank you listeners for tuning in and please 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.

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161 episodios

episode Austin's Job Market: Strong Growth, Tech Layoffs, and Shifting Suburbs artwork

Austin's Job Market: Strong Growth, Tech Layoffs, and Shifting Suburbs

Austin’s job market remains one of the strongest in the country, though it is cooling from the explosive growth of the past few years. According to the Texas Workforce Commission, Texas employment reached roughly 14.4 million jobs in May and continues to set record highs, with statewide unemployment around 4.3 percent; Austin’s metro rate is typically lower, hovering near the mid‑3 percent range based on recent state labor releases and local reporting. KLBJ Radio in Austin reports that Texas job growth has recently outpaced the national rate, and officials continue to highlight the Austin region as a key driver of technology and professional services employment in the state. The employment landscape in Austin is dominated by technology, government, education, healthcare, advanced manufacturing, and professional and business services. Major employers include the State of Texas, the University of Texas at Austin, the City of Austin, large hospital systems, and major tech and semiconductor firms such as Dell, Apple, Samsung, and Tesla, along with a dense startup and venture-backed ecosystem. The National Venture Capital Association notes that Austin continues to attract venture capital, supporting growth in software, fintech, AI, and clean energy startups. At the same time, 2026 layoff tallies reported by outlets like the Houston Chronicle and Dallas Fed commentary show that Texas ranks near the top for layoffs, particularly in tech and logistics, even as net job creation remains positive; this indicates churn beneath headline growth. Trends and recent developments include continued in‑migration of skilled workers, high housing costs, and strong demand for healthcare, energy, and public-sector talent. Pflugerville’s Point 45 Industrial Park, highlighted by Spyglass Realty, illustrates ongoing growth in industrial and logistics jobs on Austin’s periphery, shifting some employment toward the north and east suburbs and shortening commutes for those workers. Overall commuting patterns remain car‑heavy, with growing use of park‑and‑ride and telework; Project Connect and related transit investments are intended to gradually change this, but major rail components are still in planning or early implementation, leaving a data gap on long‑term commuting impacts. Seasonally, Austin typically sees hiring spikes in late summer and early fall tied to the university calendar and government and education budgets, with retail and hospitality picking up in spring and around major festivals like South by Southwest. State and local government initiatives focus on maintaining a business‑friendly tax and regulatory environment, supporting semiconductor and EV manufacturing, expanding workforce training, and incentivizing large corporate relocations and expansions. Precise, up‑to‑the‑month metro‑level statistics, including current Austin‑specific unemployment and sector breakdowns, often lag by a month or more in official federal and state releases, so listeners should note that some figures may have shifted modestly. Current openings that illustrate today’s market include a Senior Product Owner role with McLane Company in Austin, leading master data management platforms in a hybrid office model; a CAPPS Talent Management Analyst focused on PeopleSoft HCM through CornerStone Technology Talent Services in Austin; and a Public Information Specialist Senior position with the City of Austin’s Communications and Technology Management department, supporting digital services for municipal agencies. These postings underscore strong demand for IT, data, HR systems, and public-sector communications skills. Key findings: Austin remains a high‑growth, relatively low‑unemployment metro with strong technology and professional services cores, increasing industrial and clean‑energy activity, and ongoing housing and cost‑of‑living pressures. The market is evolving from breakneck tech expansion to a more balanced mix of sectors, with notable churn from layoffs but continued net job gains, robust in‑migration, and active government and employer investment in infrastructure and talent pipelines. 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

Ayer4 min
episode Austin's Job Market: Tech Growth, Low Unemployment, and What's Next artwork

Austin's Job Market: Tech Growth, Low Unemployment, and What's Next

Austin’s job market remains one of the strongest in the U.S., with solid employment growth, low unemployment, and ongoing demand in technology, government, health care, and advanced industries. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports the Austin–Round Rock metro unemployment rate recently hovering around 3 percent, below the national average, indicating a tight labor market and strong hiring demand. The Austin Chamber of Commerce and Greater Austin Chamber data show total nonfarm employment has been growing faster than the U.S. average in recent years, driven largely by professional and business services, information, and trade, transportation, and utilities. Major employers include the State of Texas, the University of Texas at Austin, Dell Technologies, Apple, Samsung, Tesla, Ascension Seton, and H-E-B, alongside a large ecosystem of startups and mid-sized tech firms. Apple’s own careers site highlights ongoing hiring in Austin for roles such as Data Scientist in AI and machine learning model quality, underscoring technology’s central role in the local labor market. According to the Texas Workforce Commission, government and education remain stable anchors, while health care, logistics, and construction support the metro’s rapid population and housing growth. Recent developments include expansion in semiconductors, clean energy, AI, and battery technology, supported by state and local incentives for manufacturing, R&D, and workforce training. Regional planners note increasing remote and hybrid roles, along with commuting patterns that include more reverse commutes to suburban campuses and persistent congestion on key corridors like I-35 and MoPac. Seasonal patterns are modest: hiring typically softens slightly in late Q4 and picks up in Q1 and summer, especially in education, hospitality, and internships. Workforce solutions programs and Texas Workforce Commission initiatives focus on digital skills, vocational rehabilitation, and apprenticeships to supply talent for tech, skilled trades, and health care. Some data gaps remain around very recent month-by-month sector employment and detailed commuting mode shares, which are still being updated by local agencies. Current Austin openings include a Lead Enterprise Data Scientist at CrowdStrike in downtown Austin, a Technology Instructor position with the Texas Workforce Commission’s Criss Cole Rehab Center, and a Power Markets Analyst role in Austin supporting battery valuation software for Aurora’s Chronos platform. Key findings: Austin’s job market is diverse and resilient, led by technology but balanced by government, education, and health care; unemployment remains low; advanced manufacturing, AI, and clean energy are rising; and infrastructure, housing costs, and skills alignment are the main constraints. 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

15 de jun de 20263 min
episode Austin's Job Market Thrives: Tech, Healthcare, and Government Lead Growth in 2026 artwork

Austin's Job Market Thrives: Tech, Healthcare, and Government Lead Growth in 2026

Austin’s job market remains one of the strongest in Texas, with broad demand in technology, health care, government, retail, hospitality, and professional services. Indeed listed about 59,625 jobs in Austin on June 12, 2026, and the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that employment rose across many large Texas counties in late 2025, signaling continued metro-level resilience[1][2]. Recent labor data show a softer but still healthy statewide backdrop. The U.S. unemployment rate was 4.3 percent in May 2026, according to the latest national labor report, while Austin-specific unemployment was not provided in the available results, so a current metro rate could not be verified here[5]. Austin’s economy continues to be anchored by major employers and industry clusters in technology, semiconductors, cloud computing, biotechnology, higher education, government, health care, and insurance, with public-sector and specialized professional roles also appearing in current postings[6][9][10][11]. Growing sectors include software, data engineering, AI, semiconductors, public health, and aerospace-related work. Current openings in the results include entry-level software engineer at Cox Enterprises, senior data engineer at General Motors, and a public-health economist role with the Texas Water Development Board, which suggests ongoing hiring across both private and public employers[6][8][11]. A public-health job board also showed 78 Austin listings, reinforcing continued demand in that field[10]. Recent developments point to slower Texas job growth overall in 2025, but Austin appears to be outperforming some of the broader state trend, helped by productivity gains and still-solid labor demand. That said, the available results do not provide a full Austin metro employment series, so month-to-month trend detail is limited in this report[7]. Seasonal hiring remains strongest in retail, hospitality, and office support, especially around holidays and campus cycles, while tech and government hiring tend to be steadier through the year; the provided results do not include enough local seasonality data to quantify that pattern precisely[1][15]. Commuting trends were not directly documented in the search results, but Austin’s in-person postings and office-based roles indicate continued hybrid-to-onsite demand in some occupations[1][6][15]. Government initiatives remain important through state agencies and public-sector hiring in Austin, including planning, water, health, and space-related roles, reflecting the city’s evolving mix of private innovation and public administration[11][12]. Key findings: Austin’s market is still expanding, tech and public-sector jobs are prominent, unemployment data for the metro was not available in the results, and current openings remain broad across skill levels. Thank you for tuning in and 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

12 de jun de 20263 min
episode Austin's Hot Job Market: Tech, Service, and Growth Opportunities in 2026 artwork

Austin's Hot Job Market: Tech, Service, and Growth Opportunities in 2026

Austin’s job market is one of the strongest and fastest‑growing in the country, driven by technology, government, and a diverse service economy. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the Austin–Round Rock metro unemployment rate has recently hovered near 3 percent, well below the national average, indicating a tight labor market and strong demand for talent. The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas notes that regional employment growth has been led by professional and business services, information, and leisure and hospitality, with total payrolls surpassing pre‑pandemic levels by a wide margin. Local workforce agencies highlight that population growth, corporate relocations, and a robust startup scene continue to expand the employment base, though detailed 2026‑specific sector data are still being updated, creating some gaps in the most current figures for individual industries. Major industries include technology, semiconductors, software, advanced manufacturing, healthcare, education, government, and hospitality. Large employers range from global tech firms such as Apple, Google, Tesla, Dell, and IBM to the State of Texas, the University of Texas at Austin, and major hospital systems. Apple’s Austin careers site lists numerous roles in software engineering, silicon design, and operations, while Google’s jobs portal shows openings such as Senior Data Center Engineer in electrical engineering based in Austin. According to the City of Austin and Capital Metro, commuting trends show continued growth in telework and hybrid schedules for white‑collar jobs, along with increased use of public transit corridors and congestion on major highways during peak hiring cycles. Seasonal patterns include strong summer hiring in leisure and hospitality and year‑end spikes in retail and logistics. The Austin Chamber of Commerce and Workforce Solutions Capital Area describe growing sectors in artificial intelligence, data science, electric vehicles, clean energy, and construction tied to large industrial projects. Recent developments include ongoing government and regional initiatives to expand workforce training in tech and skilled trades, invest in transit, and increase housing supply to support labor force growth. Overall, key findings are that Austin’s job market remains tight and competitive, tech and professional services are primary growth engines, service and construction jobs are expanding, and infrastructure and affordability pressures are emerging constraints. Current openings include a Senior Applied AI Data Scientist role at Charles Schwab in Austin, a Staff Services Officer III with the Texas Health and Human Services Commission in Austin, and multiple cashier, barista, and kitchen crew positions at Eggman ATX breakfast locations across the city. 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

8 de jun de 20263 min
episode Austin's Strong Job Market: Tech, Growth, and Rising Living Costs artwork

Austin's Strong Job Market: Tech, Growth, and Rising Living Costs

Austin’s job market is strong and diversified, with rapid population and business growth keeping labor demand relatively high but also tightening housing and commuting conditions. The Austin Chamber of Commerce and Texas Workforce Commission report that metro Austin unemployment has recently hovered around the mid‑3 percent range, up slightly from post‑pandemic lows but still below U.S. averages, indicating a relatively tight labor market. The employment landscape is led by technology, government, education, health care, and professional services, anchored by major employers such as the State of Texas, the University of Texas at Austin, Dell Technologies in nearby Round Rock, Apple, Samsung, Tesla’s Gigafactory, Amazon, and Meta. Listeners should note that the most recent metro‑specific figures often lag by one to two months, creating short data gaps when discussing “current” conditions. According to the Texas Workforce Commission, Austin continues to add jobs year over year, with especially strong gains in professional and business services, health care, advanced manufacturing, and leisure and hospitality. Growing sectors include clean energy and electric vehicles around Tesla and its supplier base, semiconductor manufacturing tied to Samsung’s expansion, data science and AI roles within large tech firms and startups, and public sector and nonprofit roles as the population expands. Recent developments include continued corporate in‑migration, expansion of remote and hybrid roles, and wage pressure in high‑skill tech and engineering occupations, even as lower‑wage service jobs contend with higher living costs. Bureau of Labor Statistics metro data show that unemployment in many U.S. metros, including Texas cities, has edged up over the past year, suggesting Austin is transitioning from a red‑hot to a more sustainable, but still favorable, labor market. Seasonal patterns in Austin include stronger hiring in summer for hospitality, construction, and retail, and in late summer and early fall for education and university‑related jobs. Commute trends from Capital Area Metropolitan Planning Organization sources show longer drive times on key corridors like I‑35 and MoPac, but rising transit, biking, and remote‑work adoption slightly easing peak congestion. Local and state government initiatives emphasize business recruitment, workforce training in tech and skilled trades, and incentives for semiconductor and EV manufacturing, which are reshaping the region’s long‑term employment base. Key findings for listeners: Austin remains a high‑growth, low‑unemployment market anchored by tech and government; cost of living and congestion are growing challenges; and advanced skills in technology, health care, and skilled trades are increasingly rewarded. To illustrate current openings, the Texas Health and Human Services Commission is hiring an Oral Health Epidemiologist in Austin in its Maternal and Child Health Epidemiology unit, the Texas Department of Insurance is recruiting an Attorney III in its Office of Financial Counsel based in Austin, and Charles Schwab is seeking a Principal Data Scientist with roles listed for Austin and Southlake. 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

5 de jun de 20263 min