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.
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