Chicago Job Market Report
Chicago’s job market is diverse and moderately tight, with solid hiring in services, healthcare, tech, logistics, and professional services, but uneven wage gains and neighborhood disparities. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports the Chicago-Naperville-Elgin metro unemployment rate recently hovering around the mid‑4 percent range, near the national May 2026 rate of 4.3 percent, indicating a labor market that is neither overheated nor weak. According to the Illinois Department of Employment Security and BLS metro tables, total nonfarm employment in the Chicago area has been growing slowly year over year, led by professional and business services, health care and social assistance, transportation and warehousing, and hospitality. Major industries include finance and insurance clustered in the Loop, manufacturing and logistics around O’Hare and the I‑55 and I‑80 corridors, and a strong tech and data hub in Fulton Market and River North. Key employers include JPMorgan Chase, United Airlines, Boeing’s Chicago-area operations, Walgreens Boots Alliance, Accenture, and major hospital systems such as Northwestern Medicine and Rush. Growing sectors include cloud and fintech roles, data science, logistics and warehousing tied to e‑commerce, and healthcare support roles; local tech ecosystems like Built In Chicago highlight steady demand for software engineers and data scientists. Seasonal patterns show stronger hiring in retail, hospitality, events, and tourism in spring and summer, with large convention traffic at McCormick Place driving temporary work, and a winter slowdown outside of healthcare and core corporate roles. The Regional Transportation Authority notes that most workers still commute from the suburbs into the city via Metra, CTA rail and buses, or the expressways, though remote and hybrid work have reduced five‑day downtown commuting and shifted some jobs to suburban hubs. City and state initiatives, such as Chicago Cook Workforce Partnership programs, apprenticeships with employers like Accenture, and state incentives for advanced manufacturing and clean energy, aim to expand inclusive hiring and upskilling, but detailed, up‑to‑the‑minute neighborhood‑level data on wages and underemployment remain limited or lagged. As of early June 2026, examples of job openings include a Manager, Market Research role with Capital One in Chicago, a Data Scientist, Economic Insights and Research position listed on Built In Chicago, and multiple hospitality roles through an Indeed Flex hiring event for servers, bartenders, cooks, dishwashers, and event staff. Key findings for listeners: Chicago offers a broad, service‑heavy job base with stable but not spectacular growth; tech, healthcare, and logistics are the strongest long‑term bets; commuting and remote work patterns are still evolving; and outcomes vary sharply by skill level and neighborhood, making targeted training and mobility crucial. 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
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