Houston Job Market Report

Houston's Job Market Surges: Energy and Biotech Lead Growth in 2026

2 min · 17 apr 2026
aflevering Houston's Job Market Surges: Energy and Biotech Lead Growth in 2026 artwork

Beschrijving

Houston's job market remains resilient amid national slowdowns, with Texas nonfarm jobs at 14.4 million in February 2026 after a slight monthly dip, according to the Texas Workforce Commission. The state's unemployment rate holds steady at 4.3 percent, outpacing national growth, while Houston leads with forecasted regional job expansion in 2026 per the Greater Houston Partnership. Employment landscape features strength in energy despite upstream oil and gas losses of 900 jobs in early 2026, as TIPRO reports elevated hiring with 2,207 postings in Houston alone, led by ExxonMobil, Energy Transfer, and Baker Hughes. Key statistics show Texas adding 73,800 jobs over the year, with professional services up 6,300 monthly and manufacturing gaining 2,500. Trends indicate decelerating national payrolls but Houston's outperformance in construction at 2.7 percent annual growth. Major industries include energy, healthcare, and biomanufacturing, bolstered by Texas Medical Center and San Jacinto College partnerships. Growing sectors encompass logistics, field operations like truck driving, and biomanufacturing workforce pipelines. Recent developments feature Governor Abbott promoting the Texas Jobs Council for talent training during Gulf Coast tours. Seasonal patterns reflect weather rebounds in construction and healthcare, though federal cuts drag nationally. Commuting trends favor Houston's affordable living and diverse amenities, drawing workers. Government initiatives emphasize career training at facilities like the International Training & Education Center. Market evolution shows resilient demand despite oil declines, with data gaps on Houston-specific unemployment and precise commuting stats. Key findings: Houston thrives in energy hiring and emerging biotech, with strong demand signaling opportunities ahead. Current openings include truck driver at Energy Transfer, maintenance worker at Baker Hughes, and biomanufacturing roles via Texas Medical Center programs. Thank you for tuning in, listeners—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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aflevering Houston's Job Market: Diverse, Growing, and Hiring Across Healthcare, Energy, and Tech artwork

Houston's Job Market: Diverse, Growing, and Hiring Across Healthcare, Energy, and Tech

Houston’s job market is large, diverse, and still expanding, though growth has cooled from the post‑pandemic surge. The Greater Houston Partnership reports total nonfarm employment above 3.4 million, with year‑over‑year job gains in the low single digits. The Texas Workforce Commission notes that Texas’ seasonally adjusted unemployment rate is about 4.3 percent, with Houston typically running close to that level, still slightly higher than pre‑2020 lows but consistent with a stable labor market. The employment landscape is anchored by energy, healthcare, petrochemicals and manufacturing, the Port of Houston’s logistics ecosystem, and NASA‑related aerospace, alongside a rapidly growing professional and business services base. Major employers include Houston Methodist, HCA Healthcare, Memorial Hermann, ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell, Phillips 66, the Port of Houston Authority, United Airlines, and the City of Houston. Randstad USA highlights strong local demand for registered nurses, project managers, software developers, and skilled trades. Recent trends include steady hiring in healthcare, life sciences, clean energy, and logistics, while traditional oil and gas is adding jobs more cautiously, with more emphasis on digital skills and emissions‑related roles. Warehouse, production, and security roles remain plentiful, as illustrated by Allied Universal’s current posting for a full‑time Level III Armed Security Officer in Houston at about 17.25 dollars per hour, and Link Staffing’s Forklift and Warehouse Associate job at 17 dollars per hour for a weekday day shift. Remote and hybrid roles have grown in back‑office healthcare and tech support; for example, TEKsystems is advertising a Remote Medical Assistant role tied to Houston at roughly 18.50 dollars per hour. Seasonal patterns are visible in retail and logistics around the holiday peak, in construction as weather improves, and in energy‑related maintenance turnarounds each spring and fall. Commuting remains car‑centric, with long cross‑county commutes; modest transit expansions and more remote work have eased, but not solved, congestion. Government and regional initiatives focus on workforce training, apprenticeships, and sector‑based partnerships in manufacturing, healthcare, and energy transition; the Texas Workforce Commission emphasizes programs to reskill workers for higher‑wage technical roles, though granular Houston‑only data on program outcomes is still limited. Over the last decade, the market has evolved from an energy‑dominated economy toward a broader mix of medical, tech, logistics, and advanced manufacturing jobs, improving resilience but also raising demand for education and digital skills. Key findings: Houston offers a comparatively strong, opportunity‑rich job market with moderate unemployment, broad industry diversity, growing healthcare and clean‑energy sectors, and sustained demand for both degree and non‑degree talent, though exposure to energy cycles and transportation challenges remain key structural risks. Thanks 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

19 jun 20263 min
aflevering Houston's Job Market: Beyond Energy to Health Care, Tech, and Logistics artwork

Houston's Job Market: Beyond Energy to Health Care, Tech, and Logistics

Houston’s job market is large, diverse, and still expanding, anchored by energy but increasingly driven by health care, life sciences, logistics, and professional services. The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas reports the Houston metro has added jobs faster than the national average in recent years, though growth has moderated as energy hiring cycles cool and interest‑rate–sensitive sectors slow. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates the metro unemployment rate has been hovering close to the low‑4 percent range, near what economists consider full employment, but exact month‑to‑month figures vary and some neighborhood‑level data lag by several quarters. Employment is concentrated in major industries: oil and gas, petrochemicals, and engineering; the Texas Medical Center’s vast health care and research complex; port‑related trade, warehousing, and manufacturing; and finance, technology, and corporate services. Houston Methodist, which Forbes names among America’s Best Large Employers, continues to hire clinical and technology roles, reflecting steady health sector growth. ExxonMobil highlights ongoing openings in power plant and finance roles in Houston, signaling continuing but more selective energy‑related demand. Bank of America lists multiple Houston positions in banking, operations, and advisory, illustrating the strength of financial and business services. Recent trends include strong growth in health care, biotech, logistics, and IT, with energy transitioning toward low‑carbon projects and advanced petrochemicals. Seasonal patterns show hiring upticks before the summer driving and hurricane seasons in logistics and construction, and retail and hospitality hiring before the winter holidays. Commuting is still dominated by driving, with long average commute times, but METRO transit expansions and more hybrid work have modestly eased peak congestion. Local government and regional partnerships promote workforce training, apprenticeships, and reskilling programs aimed at digital skills, health professions, and energy transition roles, though detailed outcomes data are not always publicly available. Current job openings include a CDL‑A driver position in Houston at McLane Company, with advertised annual pay in the roughly seventy‑five to eighty‑five thousand dollar range; a Technical Analyst role in information technology at Houston Methodist; and multiple electrician positions posted by the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 716 for employers such as Anheuser‑Busch and Wyman‑Gordon. Key findings: Houston remains a high‑opportunity, cyclical but resilient labor market; growth is broadening beyond oil and gas; health care, logistics, and advanced services are driving new jobs; and infrastructure, training, and diversification policies are gradually reshaping how and where listeners work in the region. Thank you for tuning in, and make sure 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 jun 20263 min
aflevering Houston's Job Market: Energy Roots, Healthcare Growth, and Tech on the Rise artwork

Houston's Job Market: Energy Roots, Healthcare Growth, and Tech on the Rise

Houston’s job market is large, diverse, and expanding, anchored by energy but increasingly shaped by healthcare, logistics, professional services, and technology. The Greater Houston Partnership reports that the metropolitan area has recently been adding tens of thousands of jobs annually, outpacing many U.S. metros in absolute growth. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Houston metro unemployment rate has been hovering in the mid‑3 to low‑4 percent range, close to or slightly above the national average; precise month‑to‑month figures vary and some sub‑sector data lag by several months, creating gaps for the very latest conditions. The employment landscape is defined by major industries: oil and gas, petrochemicals, and related engineering; the Texas Medical Center’s large healthcare and life sciences cluster; the Port of Houston’s shipping, logistics, and warehousing; and a sizable base in construction, aerospace, and advanced manufacturing. The Greater Houston Partnership and the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas note growing sectors in clean energy and energy transition, life sciences, corporate headquarters, and business services, with steady demand for engineers, medical professionals, IT talent, and skilled trades. Randstad USA characterizes Houston’s market as built on “strength and variety,” citing healthcare, logistics, and engineering as pillars and highlighting rising demand in customer experience, tech, and life sciences. Recent developments include continued recovery in leisure and hospitality, restructuring and consolidation in traditional oil and gas, and investment in hydrogen, carbon capture, and renewables within the region’s energy ecosystem. Seasonal patterns show stronger hiring in construction and port‑related logistics in warmer months and retail and warehousing spikes ahead of the holiday season. Commuting trends remain car‑centric, though METRO’s park‑and‑ride, light rail, and expanded bus service support key employment corridors; hybrid work has reduced some central‑city commuting while boosting suburban office and flex‑space activity. Government and civic initiatives such as Workforce Solutions’ training programs, state workforce grants, and city economic‑development incentives aim to support reskilling, especially in healthcare, tech, and energy transition roles. Over the past decade, the market has evolved from energy‑dominant to more diversified, though still sensitive to global energy prices. Current sample openings include a Commercial Associate, Natural Resources (Energy) in mid‑corporate banking with Citi in Houston; a Surveillance Investigator role in Houston with Allied Universal; and multiple logistics, healthcare, and engineering positions listed for Houston by Randstad USA. Key findings: Houston offers strong but cyclical opportunity, a broadening sector mix, competitive unemployment, and robust demand in energy, healthcare, logistics, and emerging tech and life sciences, with ongoing needs for upskilling and infrastructure to support a growing, commuting workforce. 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

12 jun 20263 min
aflevering Houston's Job Market: Energy, Healthcare, and Tech Drive 3.4 Million Jobs artwork

Houston's Job Market: Energy, Healthcare, and Tech Drive 3.4 Million Jobs

Houston’s job market is large, diverse, and still expanding, driven by energy, healthcare, ports and logistics, and a growing tech and life sciences base. The Greater Houston Partnership reports that total nonfarm employment recently surpassed 3.4 million, with job growth outpacing the national average in several recent years. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates the Houston metropolitan unemployment rate in early 2026 at roughly the mid‑4 percent range, slightly above the U.S. average but consistent with a cooling, not collapsing, labor market. Exact current-month figures may vary, and there is often a lag in sector-level reporting. Houston’s employment landscape is anchored by major industries including oil and gas, petrochemicals, engineering and construction, the Texas Medical Center’s healthcare and biotech cluster, aerospace tied to NASA, manufacturing, and the Port of Houston’s trade and logistics. Major employers include Houston Methodist, Memorial Hermann, HCA Healthcare, ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell, United Airlines, CenterPoint Energy, and large engineering firms. According to the Greater Houston Partnership and local economic development agencies, fast-growing sectors now include clean energy and carbon management, life sciences and medical research, logistics and warehousing, and professional and business services, including IT and data roles. Recent developments include continued energy transition investments, expansion of medical and research facilities in and around the Texas Medical Center, and strong warehouse and distribution hiring along the port and highway corridors. Seasonal patterns are modest: construction, hospitality, and port activity tend to peak in warmer and holiday periods. Commuting trends are mixed as some employers maintain hybrid schedules; regional planning agencies note ongoing highway congestion, modest growth in park‑and‑ride and bus rapid transit use, and limited but slowly improving rail options. Government initiatives such as workforce programs from the Texas Workforce Commission, City of Houston upskilling grants, and partnerships with community colleges support training in healthcare, skilled trades, logistics, and tech, helping the market evolve toward more diverse, higher-skill roles. Data gaps remain around real-time wages by niche occupation and very recent post-layoff rehiring patterns. Current openings illustrating this market include a Mental Health Technician in Houston with UHS, an Associate for Decarbonization Partners in BlackRock’s Houston office, and a Business Intelligence Lead role in the Houston area focused on advanced analytics. 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 jun 20263 min
aflevering Houston's Job Market 2026: Energy, Health Care, and Growing Opportunities in Tech and Logistics artwork

Houston's Job Market 2026: Energy, Health Care, and Growing Opportunities in Tech and Logistics

Houston’s job market is broad, resilient, and closely tied to energy, health care, and trade. The Greater Houston Partnership describes the region as a thriving international metro with a diverse economy and strong business growth, supported by steady in‑migration and corporate investment. Houston has added jobs across professional services, logistics, and construction in recent years, although exact 2026 payroll totals and metro unemployment rates are not yet fully reported; the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics notes that many U.S. metros saw slightly higher unemployment between April 2025 and April 2026, suggesting mild softening but not a downturn. Historically, Houston’s unemployment rate tracks near or slightly above the national average and is sensitive to energy prices, so listeners should expect some volatility as global oil and gas markets shift. Major industries include energy and petrochemicals, the Texas Medical Center’s health and life sciences, aerospace linked to NASA, port‑driven shipping and logistics, advanced manufacturing, construction, and growing professional and tech services. The Greater Houston Partnership highlights ongoing corporate expansions and new partnership members in fields like engineering, logistics, and business services, signaling continued employer confidence. Accounting and finance recruiters such as Professional Alternatives report strong demand in 2026 for experienced financial professionals with technology and data skills, reflecting a trend toward more analytical roles and automation. Growing sectors include renewables and low‑carbon energy, medical research and biotech, logistics and warehousing, and data‑driven corporate functions. Seasonal hiring tends to rise in construction, port activity, and energy field work during warmer months, with retail and distribution ramp‑ups toward year‑end. Long commutes, heavy freeway use, and suburban employment centers mean many workers still drive to work, though hybrid and remote arrangements are increasing in professional roles. Local and state government initiatives focus on infrastructure, port and airport expansion, workforce training, and incentives to attract energy transition and manufacturing projects, further shaping the labor market’s evolution. Some granular data, such as a final 2026 metro unemployment rate and sector‑by‑sector job counts, remain incomplete and are subject to revision, so listeners should treat figures from any one source as estimates. For current openings, examples include a Warehouse Worker position in Houston advertised by LK Jordan with day‑shift logistics duties, a Wealth Management Client Associate role in the Houston market at Bank of America supporting financial advisors, and a Student Success Analyst position at the University of Houston focusing on data‑driven student success analytics. Key findings: Houston remains a large, opportunity‑rich job market anchored by energy and health care, with logistics, professional services, and data‑oriented roles growing fastest. Employment conditions are generally stable but sensitive to global energy and trade, commuting remains car‑centric, and policy and private investment in energy transition, infrastructure, and analytics skills will strongly influence future job quality and availability. 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 jun 20263 min