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Denver's Tight Job Market: Resilience Amid High Costs and Uneven Growth

Denver's Tight Job Market: Resilience Amid High Costs and Uneven Growth

Published 4 months, 1 week ago
Description
Denver’s job market is moderately tight and slowly expanding, shaped by strong professional services, health care, and government employment but constrained by high living costs and slowing population growth. The Colorado Department of Labor and Employment, reported by the Denver Gazette, puts the state unemployment rate at about 4.1 percent as of September, slightly below the national rate, with roughly 134,000 people unemployed and job growth of about 0.6 percent year over year. Colorado Public Radio notes that recent gains have been tilted toward government, which added about 700 jobs in September while the private sector shed about 200, underscoring a cooler but still growing labor market. Colorado Politics and the Colorado Chamber of Commerce’s 2025 Scorecard highlight that Colorado’s average posted full-time salary has risen above $57,000 and state GDP is up more than $25 billion since 2023, yet Denver has become one of the nation’s least affordable large metros, with average home prices near $700,000 and cost-of-living pressures weighing on employer recruitment and on commuting decisions, including longer trips from more affordable suburbs. Major industries in Denver include professional and business services, health care and education, government, energy, financial services, aerospace, and advanced manufacturing, with recent statewide job gains led by education and health services, leisure and hospitality, and information, while finance, trade and transportation, and construction have lost jobs. According to Metro Denver Economic Development Corporation commentary, site selectors still praise the region’s highly educated workforce but flag regulatory and cost hurdles, so many growing sectors are higher-wage: tech, clean energy, aerospace and defense, logistics, and health innovation. Seasonal patterns remain typical: leisure and hospitality hiring picks up in summer and around winter tourism; construction is more volatile and weather sensitive. On the policy side, ColoradoBiz reports that state leaders have proposed unifying higher education and workforce programs into a single agency to better align training with employer demand, while Denver has tightened wage enforcement and raised local minimum wages, strengthening worker protections but adding cost for some employers; data gaps remain because the latest metro-level federal employment figures lag several months behind and some sector detail is only available at the state, not Denver, level. Current examples of openings in Denver include a Category Manager III role with Airswift supporting a major oil and gas client, as well as multiple Bank of America positions in global technology and enterprise credit. Key findings for listeners: Denver offers a resilient, diversified job base and competitive wages, but high housing and living costs, slower in‑migration, and uneven sector growth are reshaping where and how people work, commute, and hire. Thank you for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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