Austin's Job Market: Strong Growth, Tech Layoffs, and Shifting Suburbs episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 19, 2026 · 4 MIN

Austin's Job Market: Strong Growth, Tech Layoffs, and Shifting Suburbs

from Austin Job Market Report · host Inception Point AI

Austin’s job market remains one of the strongest in the country, though it is cooling from the explosive growth of the past few years. According to the Texas Workforce Commission, Texas employment reached roughly 14.4 million jobs in May and continues to set record highs, with statewide unemployment around 4.3 percent; Austin’s metro rate is typically lower, hovering near the mid‑3 percent range based on recent state labor releases and local reporting. KLBJ Radio in Austin reports that Texas job growth has recently outpaced the national rate, and officials continue to highlight the Austin region as a key driver of technology and professional services employment in the state. The employment landscape in Austin is dominated by technology, government, education, healthcare, advanced manufacturing, and professional and business services. Major employers include the State of Texas, the University of Texas at Austin, the City of Austin, large hospital systems, and major tech and semiconductor firms such as Dell, Apple, Samsung, and Tesla, along with a dense startup and venture-backed ecosystem. The National Venture Capital Association notes that Austin continues to attract venture capital, supporting growth in software, fintech, AI, and clean energy startups. At the same time, 2026 layoff tallies reported by outlets like the Houston Chronicle and Dallas Fed commentary show that Texas ranks near the top for layoffs, particularly in tech and logistics, even as net job creation remains positive; this indicates churn beneath headline growth. Trends and recent developments include continued in‑migration of skilled workers, high housing costs, and strong demand for healthcare, energy, and public-sector talent. Pflugerville’s Point 45 Industrial Park, highlighted by Spyglass Realty, illustrates ongoing growth in industrial and logistics jobs on Austin’s periphery, shifting some employment toward the north and east suburbs and shortening commutes for those workers. Overall commuting patterns remain car‑heavy, with growing use of park‑and‑ride and telework; Project Connect and related transit investments are intended to gradually change this, but major rail components are still in planning or early implementation, leaving a data gap on long‑term commuting impacts. Seasonally, Austin typically sees hiring spikes in late summer and early fall tied to the university calendar and government and education budgets, with retail and hospitality picking up in spring and around major festivals like South by Southwest. State and local government initiatives focus on maintaining a business‑friendly tax and regulatory environment, supporting semiconductor and EV manufacturing, expanding workforce training, and incentivizing large corporate relocations and expansions. Precise, up‑to‑the‑month metro‑level statistics, including current Austin‑specific unemployment and sector breakdowns, often lag by a month or more in official federal and state releases, so listeners should note that some figures may have shifted modestly. Current openings that illustrate today’s market include a Senior Product Owner role with McLane Company in Austin, leading master data management platforms in a hybrid office model; a CAPPS Talent Management Analyst focused on PeopleSoft HCM through CornerStone Technology Talent Services in Austin; and a Public Information Specialist Senior position with the City of Austin’s Communications and Technology Management department, supporting digital services for municipal agencies. These postings underscore strong demand for IT, data, HR systems, and public-sector communications skills. Key findings: Austin remains a high‑growth, relatively low‑unemployment metro with strong technology and professional services cores, increasing industrial and clean‑energy activity, and ongoing housing and cost‑of‑living pressures. The market is evolving from breakneck tech expansion to a more balanced mix of sectors, with notable churn from layoffs but continued net job gains, robust in‑migration, and active government and employer investment in infrastructure and talent pipelines. 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

Austin’s job market remains one of the strongest in the country, though it is cooling from the explosive growth of the past few years. According to the Texas Workforce Commission, Texas employment reached roughly 14.4 million jobs in May and continues to set record highs, with statewide unemployment around 4.3 percent; Austin’s metro rate is typically lower, hovering near the mid‑3 percent range based on recent state labor releases and local reporting. KLBJ Radio in Austin reports that Texas job growth has recently outpaced the national rate, and officials continue to highlight the Austin region as a key driver of technology and professional services employment in the state. The employment landscape in Austin is dominated by technology, government, education, healthcare, advanced manufacturing, and professional and business services. Major employers include the State of Texas, the University of Texas at Austin, the City of Austin, large hospital systems, and major tech and semiconductor firms such as Dell, Apple, Samsung, and Tesla, along with a dense startup and venture-backed ecosystem. The National Venture Capital Association notes that Austin continues to attract venture capital, supporting growth in software, fintech, AI, and clean energy startups. At the same time, 2026 layoff tallies reported by outlets like the Houston Chronicle and Dallas Fed commentary show that Texas ranks near the top for layoffs, particularly in tech and logistics, even as net job creation remains positive; this indicates churn beneath headline growth. Trends and recent developments include continued in‑migration of skilled workers, high housing costs, and strong demand for healthcare, energy, and public-sector talent. Pflugerville’s Point 45 Industrial Park, highlighted by Spyglass Realty, illustrates ongoing growth in industrial and logistics jobs on Austin’s periphery, shifting some employment toward the north and east suburbs and shortening commutes for those workers. Overall commuting patterns remain car‑heavy, with growing use of park‑and‑ride and telework; Project Connect and related transit investments are intended to gradually change this, but major rail components are still in planning or early implementation, leaving a data gap on long‑term commuting impacts. Seasonally, Austin typically sees hiring spikes in late summer and early fall tied to the university calendar and government and education budgets, with retail and hospitality picking up in spring and around major festivals like South by Southwest. State and local government initiatives focus on maintaining a business‑friendly tax and regulatory environment, supporting semiconductor and EV manufacturing, expanding workforce training, and incentivizing large corporate relocations and expansions. Precise, up‑to‑the‑month metro‑level statistics, including current Austin‑specific unemployment and sector breakdowns, often lag by a month or more in official federal and state releases, so listeners should note that some figures may have shifted modestly. Current openings that illustrate today’s market include a Senior Product Owner role with McLane Company in Austin, leading master data management platforms in a hybrid office model; a CAPPS Talent Management Analyst focused on PeopleSoft HCM through CornerStone Technology Talent Services in Austin; and a Public Information Specialist Senior position with the City of Austin’s Communications and Technology Management department, supporting digital services for municipal agencies. These postings underscore strong demand for IT, data, HR systems, and public-sector communications skills. Key findings: Austin remains a high‑growth, relatively low‑unemployment metro with strong technology and professional services cores, increasing industrial and clean‑energy activity, and ongoing housing and cost‑of‑living pressures. The market is evolving from breakneck tech expansion to a more balanced mix of sectors, with notable churn from layoffs but continued net job gains, robust in‑migration, and active government and employer investment in infrastructure and talent pipelines. 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

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This episode is 4 minutes long.

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This episode was published on June 19, 2026.

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Austin’s job market remains one of the strongest in the country, though it is cooling from the explosive growth of the past few years. According to the Texas Workforce Commission, Texas employment reached roughly 14.4 million jobs in May and...

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