Dallas-Fort Worth Job Market Report

DFW Job Market Shifts: From Boom to Caution as Immigration and AI Reshape Texas Growth

4 min · 24. apr. 2026
episode DFW Job Market Shifts: From Boom to Caution as Immigration and AI Reshape Texas Growth cover

Description

The Dallas-Fort Worth job market remains robust yet is transitioning from rapid expansion to a more measured pace amid national economic shifts. According to the Dallas Federal Reserve Bank, Texas employment growth is forecasted at 1.4 percent for 2026, adding about 205,500 jobs statewide, down from earlier 1.9 percent projections due to declining immigration, which has slowed population inflows by over 65,000 in the metro area per Brookings Institution data. The unemployment rate has decreased slightly across most North Texas regions, though specific DFW figures for early 2026 are unavailable, highlighting a data gap. Major industries include manufacturing, logistics, professional and business services, information technology, energy, and healthcare, with top employers like American Airlines at DFW Airport, Texas Instruments, and AT&T driving stability. Infrastructure-heavy sectors such as data centers and real estate are surging, as D Magazine reports DFW leading the Texas Triangle's commercial real estate boom with first-quarter office net absorption of 332,300 square feet, despite 26.8 percent vacancy per JLL. Growing sectors encompass AI-related tech, professional services, and manufacturing, fueled by economic diversification that outpaces national averages over two decades, per Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas data. Recent developments show stalled hiring after 2025's near-zero growth, with Dallas posting a meager 0.1 percent job increase in February while Fort Worth declined 1.6 percent, according to Governing.com and Dallas Fed reports; layoffs have sharply dropped but so has expansion. Seasonal patterns typically peak in logistics and retail during holidays, though no 2026 specifics exist. Commuting trends favor the metro's extensive highways and DFW Airport hub, supporting hybrid work post-pandemic. Government initiatives include Dallas City Council's $200,000 allocation for studying buyouts of polluting roofing plants like TAMKO, per Dallas Express, and enhanced college-career readiness programs where 78 percent of 2025 high school seniors qualified, though only 30 percent pursued credentials, as noted by the Dallas Regional Chamber. The market has evolved from a post-pandemic boom averaging nearly 3 percent annual job growth through 2024 to a standstill, with immigration curbs and AI disruptions like Meta's workforce cuts adding uncertainty per CBS News. Key findings: DFW's diversification buffers volatility, but slower immigration and hiring signal caution; focus on tech, logistics, and infrastructure for opportunities. Current openings include Measure Technician in DFW at $23-26 hourly with benefits via ZipRecruiter, Professional Land Surveyor in Fort Worth via ZipRecruiter, and Entry-Level Landscape Manager at $50K in Dallas-Fort Worth per Glassdoor. 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. This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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154 episodes

episode DFW Job Market Boom: Tech, Healthcare, and Logistics Lead Growth in Texas artwork

DFW Job Market Boom: Tech, Healthcare, and Logistics Lead Growth in Texas

The Dallas–Fort Worth job market is one of the strongest and most diverse in the U.S., with rapid growth, relatively low unemployment, and a broad mix of white-collar, blue-collar, and service work. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports the Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington metro unemployment rate recently hovering around the mid-3 percent range, below the national average, indicating a tight labor market and strong employer demand. According to the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas and the Texas Workforce Commission, DFW continues to set or approach record highs in total employment, even after brief slowdowns tied to national interest-rate and tech adjustments, and statewide reports note Texas recently rebounded from several months of job losses to notch new employment records. Major industries include professional and business services, finance and insurance, transportation and warehousing, manufacturing, health care, retail, and a fast-growing tech sector concentrated in northern suburbs like Plano, Frisco, and Irving. Corporate anchors such as American Airlines, AT&T, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Texas Health Resources, Baylor Scott & White, Lockheed Martin, and major logistics and e‑commerce operations at and around DFW International Airport support large numbers of jobs. Growing sectors include logistics and warehousing, fintech, cybersecurity, data centers, healthcare, and construction and real estate, supported by large mixed-use and residential projects across North Dallas and North Fort Worth. Recent developments include continued in‑migration of companies from higher-cost states, ongoing office-rightsizing balanced by industrial and multifamily construction, and rising use of hybrid work. Seasonal patterns show hiring bumps in retail, logistics, and warehousing in late summer and fall, and cyclical swings in construction tied to weather and interest rates. Commuting trends remain car‑centric, with heavy cross‑county commuting between Dallas, Tarrant, Collin, and Denton counties; DART and Trinity Metro rail and bus networks support some transit‑oriented job clusters but remain secondary to highways. Government and civic initiatives focus on workforce training in tech, healthcare, and skilled trades, incentives for corporate relocations, and infrastructure expansion, though detailed, up‑to‑the‑minute figures on sector‑specific openings and wage levels can lag official publication cycles. Right now, listeners can find roles such as a Customer Support Specialist near DFW Airport with Uline, offering roughly 25 to 30 dollars an hour; warehouse and logistics positions like Warehouse Associate roles in Fort Worth; and higher‑skill openings such as faculty or clinician‑educator positions at institutions like TCU’s health and nursing programs in Fort Worth. Key findings: the DFW market is large, diversified, and still expanding; unemployment is relatively low; logistics, healthcare, tech, and professional services are leading growth; commuting remains challenging but manageable; and public and private initiatives continue to reshape the landscape as the region absorbs strong population and business inflows, even as detailed real‑time wage and sector microdata remain incomplete. 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

22. juni 20263 min
episode Dallas-Fort Worth Job Market: Tech, Logistics, and Hybrid Work Lead Growth artwork

Dallas-Fort Worth Job Market: Tech, Logistics, and Hybrid Work Lead Growth

Dallas-Fort Worth has one of the strongest large metro job markets in the country, supported by broad population growth, corporate relocation, and a diverse industry base. Recent data from the Texas Workforce Commission show Texas added more than 17,000 jobs in May and kept unemployment at 4.3 percent, while Dallas-Fort Worth generally tracks near or below the state average, though a current metro-specific rate was not available in the provided sources. The employment landscape is led by logistics, transportation, financial services, professional services, healthcare, technology, construction, and aerospace and defense, with major employers including American Airlines, Lockheed Martin, JPMorgan Chase, AT&T, and numerous distribution and data-analytics firms. Current openings in the market include a Business Data Analyst in Fort Worth at Addison Group, a Data and Analytics Specialist in Dallas at Addison Group, and a Data Analyst role at Lockheed Martin in Fort Worth. Growth is strongest in data, analytics, finance, advanced manufacturing, and supply-chain roles, reflecting the region’s shift toward higher-skill office and technical work. Recent developments point to continued hiring in hybrid and technical roles, especially around business intelligence, cloud and data platforms, and regulated industries. Seasonal patterns are visible in transportation, retail, construction, and education hiring, with summer and year-end retail ramps often lifting postings. Commuting trends still favor a wide suburban labor shed, with hybrid work remaining common in professional occupations and onsite schedules still important in logistics, manufacturing, and defense. Government initiatives at the state and regional level continue to emphasize workforce training, employer incentives, and apprenticeship-style pipelines, but a detailed current DFW-specific initiative list was not available in the provided sources. The market has evolved from pandemic disruption into a more balanced environment where hiring remains solid but employers are more selective, especially in higher-paying analytical and operations roles. Key findings are that Dallas-Fort Worth remains a large, diversified, and still-expanding labor market, demand is strongest in technical and logistics-related jobs, and the main data gap is the lack of a current metro-specific unemployment figure in the supplied sources. Thank you 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

19. juni 20262 min
episode Dallas-Fort Worth's Strong Job Market: Growth, Diversity, and Opportunity artwork

Dallas-Fort Worth's Strong Job Market: Growth, Diversity, and Opportunity

Dallas–Fort Worth continues to post one of the strongest job markets in the United States, with solid employment growth, low unemployment, and a diversifying economy that attracts both corporate relocations and skilled workers. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington metro unemployment rate has recently hovered around the mid‑3 percent range, below or near the national average, and payroll employment has been growing faster than most large metros, especially in professional and business services, construction, and healthcare. The Texas Workforce Commission notes that North Texas benefits from steady population growth, a relatively low cost of living compared with coastal metros, and pro‑business regulations, all of which support hiring and corporate expansion across the region. The employment landscape is broad: major industries include finance and banking, technology, telecommunications, transportation and logistics, defense and aerospace, healthcare, and a large professional and business services sector. Major employers include American Airlines, AT&T, Lockheed Martin, Bank of America, Texas Health Resources, Baylor Scott & White, JPMorgan Chase, and a growing number of tech and fintech firms concentrated in areas like Plano, Frisco, and Irving. According to the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, recent trends show strong gains in higher‑wage professional roles alongside continued demand in logistics, warehousing, and construction, partly driven by e‑commerce, ongoing in‑migration, and large infrastructure and real estate projects around the metro. There are some data gaps around very recent sub‑metro unemployment by specific suburb and detailed post‑pandemic remote‑work patterns, which are still evolving and are often reported with a lag. Recent developments include major corporate campus expansions, continued build‑out of industrial and warehouse space near DFW Airport and along key highway corridors, and anticipation of hospitality and service‑sector hiring tied to events such as the 2026 World Cup matches scheduled for AT&T Stadium, as highlighted by local media in Dallas–Fort Worth. Seasonal patterns show retailers, warehousing, and logistics firms ramping up temporary hiring in the second half of the year ahead of the holiday season, while construction employment remains more sensitive to interest rates and weather. Commuting trends are shaped by a sprawling metro, heavy car dependence, and expanding public transit; Dallas Area Rapid Transit and Trinity Metro have been working on bus network redesigns and rail expansions that may gradually widen job access, though most commuters still drive. Government and regional initiatives from the City of Dallas, the City of Fort Worth, and the North Central Texas Council of Governments focus on workforce development, technical training, and incentives to attract employers in technology, advanced manufacturing, clean energy, and life sciences. Over the past decade, the market has evolved from a primarily logistics and corporate back‑office hub into a more diversified center with stronger technology, finance, and healthcare ecosystems, while still maintaining a large base of blue‑collar and middle‑skill jobs. Current job openings illustrate this breadth. Indeed lists more than one hundred thousand open roles across Dallas–Fort Worth, including positions such as a Customer Support Specialist at Uline near DFW Airport, offering full‑time hours and advancement potential, and numerous healthcare roles like family practice physicians in Fort Worth on platforms such as DocCafe. ZipRecruiter highlights roles such as a Measure Technician in the DFW area, reflecting demand for technical field skills tied to construction and home services. Key findings: the Dallas–Fort Worth job market is broad, growing, and relatively low‑unemployment, with strong corporate presence, expanding high‑skill sectors, persistent demand in logistics and construction, and ongoing public efforts to improve skills and connectivity, though data on the most current micro‑trends in commuting and remote work remain incomplete. 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

15. juni 20264 min
episode Dallas-Fort Worth Tech Boom: 11,000 New Jobs Expected in 2026 artwork

Dallas-Fort Worth Tech Boom: 11,000 New Jobs Expected in 2026

Dallas–Fort Worth has one of the strongest major-metro job markets in the United States, supported by rapid population growth, corporate relocations, and a diverse industry base. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports metro unemployment hovering near the low 4 percent range, slightly below or in line with the national rate, indicating a relatively tight labor market. The region’s employment landscape is broad: professional and business services, finance and insurance, transportation and warehousing, healthcare, construction, and hospitality all employ large shares of workers, with major employers including American Airlines, AT&T, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Texas Health Resources, Baylor Scott & White, and major logistics and distribution companies clustered around the airports and interstate corridors. CompTIA’s Tech Jobs Report, as summarized by Dallas Innovates, notes that Dallas–Fort Worth recorded net tech employment of roughly 377,000 workers in 2025, with tech accounting for about 8.7 percent of the overall workforce and the metro ranking third nationally for tech job postings, trailing only New York and Washington, D.C. CompTIA projects DFW will add more than 11,000 net tech jobs in 2026, with projected tech occupation growth above 3 percent, more than double the national rate, highlighting software, cybersecurity, cloud, and data roles as key growth areas. Logistics, warehousing, and manufacturing remain major pillars; staffing firms such as LINK Staffing point to strong, ongoing demand for warehouse, logistics, and skilled trades talent across the metro. Healthcare systems and Dallas College indicate continued hiring in clinical, support, and higher education roles as the region’s population expands. Recent developments include sustained industrial construction, near-record corporate leasing, and an active housing market; however, up-to-the-month local unemployment and sector-by-sector wage data can lag, and some granular neighborhood-level stats are limited or proprietary. Commuting patterns remain highly car-oriented, but transit connections through DART rail, Trinity Metro, and planned expansions around the airports are gradually reshaping some job corridors. Local and state initiatives focus on workforce training, especially community college career pathways, tech reskilling, and incentives for corporate relocations and industrial development, supporting a long-run evolution toward higher-value services and advanced logistics. Overall, key findings are that Dallas–Fort Worth combines low-to-moderate unemployment, strong tech and logistics growth, robust healthcare and finance, and ongoing in-migration, positioning the market for continued expansion but with pressure on housing, infrastructure, and skills alignment. As of June 2026, examples of current openings include a Freight Forwarder, Gateway Air Import role with DSV at Dallas–Fort Worth International Airport, a Branch Manager position in the Northeast Dallas district with Wells Fargo, and an Assistant Women’s Soccer Coach opportunity with Dallas College. 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. juni 20263 min
episode DFW Job Market Booming: 450K New Jobs, Top Talent Hub, and Growing Opportunities artwork

DFW Job Market Booming: 450K New Jobs, Top Talent Hub, and Growing Opportunities

The Dallas–Fort Worth job market is strong, diversified, and growing, with population and corporate in‑migration supporting steady employment gains. The Dallas Regional Chamber reports that DFW has added roughly 450,000 net new jobs so far this decade and ranks as the top U.S. metro for attracting talent, according to labor analytics firm Lightcast. Unemployment in the metro has generally tracked slightly below the national average in recent years, reflecting robust demand for workers, though precise month‑by‑month local rates can lag in official publication and may differ by county and industry. The employment landscape is anchored by major industries including finance, technology, defense and aerospace, transportation and logistics, healthcare, education, manufacturing, and a rapidly expanding professional services sector. Large employers include American Airlines, AT&T, Lockheed Martin, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Texas Instruments, Baylor Scott & White Health, and major logistics and warehousing operations near DFW International Airport. The Dallas College system, which notes it is one of the largest community college systems in Texas with seven campuses around DFW, is itself a significant education employer and a pipeline for local talent. Recent trends show growth in tech, fintech, data centers, e‑commerce logistics, healthcare, and corporate headquarters relocations, helped by no state income tax and comparatively lower business costs. Venture funding and small business formation, including Black‑owned startups, have been rising in DFW, as highlighted by coverage in Emerald Book of new Black business hubs in Texas. Remote and hybrid work have softened some traditional downtown office demand while increasing suburban and exurban employment nodes. Seasonal patterns include stronger hiring in retail, warehousing, delivery, and hospitality in the fourth quarter, and cyclical hiring in construction and leisure jobs as weather improves. Commuting trends still center on car travel across a sprawling metro, though expansion of light rail, commuter rail, and toll lanes has slightly diversified options. Government and civic initiatives focus on workforce upskilling, community college expansion, and targeted incentives to attract advanced manufacturing, semiconductor, and clean‑energy firms, though the exact impact of each program can be hard to quantify because of limited long‑term evaluation data. For listeners seeking concrete opportunities, current examples include a Central Monitoring Station Surveillance Officer role with Trinity Industries in Dallas in corporate security operations, an adjunct faculty position in the competency‑based Bachelor in Management program with Dallas College serving multiple campuses across DFW, and multiple full‑time certified registered nurse anesthetist openings in the region listed on DocCafe in anesthesiology‑dental settings. Key findings: DFW remains a high‑growth, business‑friendly labor market with unemployment below or near national levels; its economy is diversified, reducing exposure to single‑industry downturns; and growth sectors in tech, healthcare, logistics, and advanced services are likely to drive future employment, contingent on broader national conditions and continued in‑migration. 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

8. juni 20263 min