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Chicago's Job Market Stays Strong Despite Rising Unemployment in Early 2026
Published 2 weeks ago
Description
Chicago's job market in early 2026 shows resilience amid rising unemployment, with the Illinois Department of Employment Security reporting a not seasonally adjusted unemployment rate of 7.2 percent in January, up from 6.2 percent the prior year in the Chicago metro area. Total nonfarm employment dipped slightly by 100 jobs month-over-month but marked 58 consecutive months of year-over-year growth, including a 14,100 job gain or 0.4 percent increase in the Chicago-Naperville-Schaumburg division, per U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data released April 9, 2026. The employment landscape remains diverse, anchored by manufacturing, healthcare, education, finance, insurance, logistics, and tech, where 245,800 workers comprise 5.2 percent of the workforce according to a 2024 CompTIA survey cited by Built In Chicago. Major employers include McDonald's, Boeing, John Deere, and Morningstar, with growing sectors like artificial intelligence, biotechnology, fintech, and logistics tech attracting $2.5 billion in 2024 venture capital per Pitchbook.
Trends indicate slowing employment growth projected for 2026, as noted in Marcus & Millichap's outlook, though private education, health services, construction, transportation, warehousing, utilities, and government added jobs across most Illinois metros. Recent developments highlight record monthly jobs starting 2026 despite universal metro unemployment increases. Seasonal patterns show January upticks in unemployment, with nonfarm losses common early in the year. Commuting trends favor Chicago's affordability over coastal hubs, sustaining demand amid population out-migration. Government initiatives via IDES emphasize job growth continuity under Governor Pritzker. The market has evolved with tech's rise and logistics strength, though data gaps exist on post-January figures and precise commuting stats.
Key findings: Steady growth persists but unemployment rose; tech and health lead opportunities. Current openings include Inside Sales Rep at Fortune Brands Innovations, Envelope Machine Adjuster at Cenveo paying from $23 per hour, and Supervisor Design Engineering at McDonald's Corporation.
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Trends indicate slowing employment growth projected for 2026, as noted in Marcus & Millichap's outlook, though private education, health services, construction, transportation, warehousing, utilities, and government added jobs across most Illinois metros. Recent developments highlight record monthly jobs starting 2026 despite universal metro unemployment increases. Seasonal patterns show January upticks in unemployment, with nonfarm losses common early in the year. Commuting trends favor Chicago's affordability over coastal hubs, sustaining demand amid population out-migration. Government initiatives via IDES emphasize job growth continuity under Governor Pritzker. The market has evolved with tech's rise and logistics strength, though data gaps exist on post-January figures and precise commuting stats.
Key findings: Steady growth persists but unemployment rose; tech and health lead opportunities. Current openings include Inside Sales Rep at Fortune Brands Innovations, Envelope Machine Adjuster at Cenveo paying from $23 per hour, and Supervisor Design Engineering at McDonald's Corporation.
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