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Denver's Robust Job Market Fuels Growth in Tech, Healthcare, and Green Sectors

Denver's Robust Job Market Fuels Growth in Tech, Healthcare, and Green Sectors

Published 2 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
Denver's job market remains robust in early 2026, with an economy described as quite strong by Mayor Mike Johnston during his recent State of the City address, despite a slight uptick in unemployment to around 4 to 4.5 percent according to the mayor's report. Indeed.com lists over 90,000 job openings in the Denver area as of February 2, 2026, spanning diverse sectors like healthcare, technology, retail, warehousing, and hospitality, reflecting a vibrant employment landscape fueled by population growth and business activity. Key statistics highlight this strength, though data gaps exist on precise metro-wide unemployment breakdowns and long-term forecasts specific to Denver, with national trends suggesting steady growth amid minor inequalities.

Major industries include aerospace, energy, information technology, health care, construction, tourism, and green technology, as represented at the upcoming Denver Job Fair on February 26, 2026, hosted by Best Hire Career Fairs at the DoubleTree by Hilton in Greenwood Village. Top employers draw from these fields, with growing sectors like clean energy, child care, and affordable housing support emphasized in city goals. Recent developments feature the mayor's push to fill 3 million square feet of downtown office and retail space, add 2,500 affordable housing units, and install 5,000 clean energy systems such as solar and EV chargers, alongside youth job connections. Seasonal patterns show hiring peaks around events like job fairs, while commuting trends lean hybrid with flexibility noted in postings. Government initiatives focus on crime reduction aiding business vibrancy, with a 45 percent drop in street homelessness since 2023. The market has evolved positively, stabilizing rental prices through housing supply increases per the mayor.

Current openings include Cookie Crew at Insomnia Cookies in Denver paying $18.81 an hour with paid training and pet insurance; Server at Hillstone in Cherry Creek earning $150 to $400 per shift including tips and health insurance; and Grocery Stocker at CRO-US in Park Hill at $21 an hour part-time with mileage reimbursement.

Key findings: Denver's market offers ample opportunities in tech, health, and green sectors amid low unemployment, bolstered by proactive city leadership, though watch for rising costs in insurance and regulations.

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