Chicago's Job Market Thrives: Tech, Construction, and Fortune 500 Growth in 2026 episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 3, 2026 · 3 MIN

Chicago's Job Market Thrives: Tech, Construction, and Fortune 500 Growth in 2026

from Chicago Job Market Report · host Inception Point AI

Chicago's job market remains robust, with over 2.5 million residents fueling diverse opportunities in a city ranked third largest in the U.S., according to Extra Space Storage data from April 2026. The employment landscape spans healthcare, technology, manufacturing, transportation, and finance, home to the second-largest number of Fortune 500 headquarters like Exelon, AbbVie, and United Airlines. Key statistics show a median household income of $62,097 and average salaries around $77,775 annually for various roles, per ZipRecruiter March 2026 figures, though data gaps exist for city-specific unemployment as state-level Illinois data from the Department of Employment Security indicates a 4.9% rate in January 2026, up slightly from prior months amid 18,000 net job gains. Trends point to steady growth, with construction adding 13,500 jobs, manufacturing 8,400, and trade/transportation/utilities 1,800 in January, offsetting losses elsewhere, as reported by Illinois state employment releases. Tech employs 245,800 workers or 5.2% of the workforce, per 2024 CompTIA surveys cited by Built In Chicago, with $2.5 billion in 2024 venture funding boosting AI, biotech, fintech, software, and logistics. Major employers include McDonald's, Boeing, Morningstar, PwC, and RSM US LLP. Growing sectors like tech and construction drive expansion, exemplified by the $800 million Foundry Park project promising 600-800 construction jobs and 2,500 permanent roles on a former steel site, per ConstructConnect news. Recent developments include active lateral attorney hiring into early 2026, per Lateral Link, and mismatched raise expectations—workers anticipating 8.6% versus companies' 3-4% plans, as noted by Chicago Business Journal. Seasonal patterns favor construction surges in warmer months, while commuting relies on a transit score of 65 with robust public options. Government initiatives support immigrant integration via resources like Centro Romero. The market evolves toward tech diversification and phased developments amid economic shifts. Key findings: Strong job addition in construction and manufacturing counters minor unemployment upticks; tech and mixed-use projects signal optimism. Current openings include UX Researcher at Attain, Tax Innovation User Experience Intern at PwC for summer 2026, and Environmental Organizer in Chicago at $38,250-$44,450 annually via Conservation Job Board. 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.

Chicago's job market remains robust, with over 2.5 million residents fueling diverse opportunities in a city ranked third largest in the U.S., according to Extra Space Storage data from April 2026. The employment landscape spans healthcare, technology, manufacturing, transportation, and finance, home to the second-largest number of Fortune 500 headquarters like Exelon, AbbVie, and United Airlines. Key statistics show a median household income of $62,097 and average salaries around $77,775 annually for various roles, per ZipRecruiter March 2026 figures, though data gaps exist for city-specific unemployment as state-level Illinois data from the Department of Employment Security indicates a 4.9% rate in January 2026, up slightly from prior months amid 18,000 net job gains. Trends point to steady growth, with construction adding 13,500 jobs, manufacturing 8,400, and trade/transportation/utilities 1,800 in January, offsetting losses elsewhere, as reported by Illinois state employment releases. Tech employs 245,800 workers or 5.2% of the workforce, per 2024 CompTIA surveys cited by Built In Chicago, with $2.5 billion in 2024 venture funding boosting AI, biotech, fintech, software, and logistics. Major employers include McDonald's, Boeing, Morningstar, PwC, and RSM US LLP. Growing sectors like tech and construction drive expansion, exemplified by the $800 million Foundry Park project promising 600-800 construction jobs and 2,500 permanent roles on a former steel site, per ConstructConnect news. Recent developments include active lateral attorney hiring into early 2026, per Lateral Link, and mismatched raise expectations—workers anticipating 8.6% versus companies' 3-4% plans, as noted by Chicago Business Journal. Seasonal patterns favor construction surges in warmer months, while commuting relies on a transit score of 65 with robust public options. Government initiatives support immigrant integration via resources like Centro Romero. The market evolves toward tech diversification and phased developments amid economic shifts. Key findings: Strong job addition in construction and manufacturing counters minor unemployment upticks; tech and mixed-use projects signal optimism. Current openings include UX Researcher at Attain, Tax Innovation User Experience Intern at PwC for summer 2026, and Environmental Organizer in Chicago at $38,250-$44,450 annually via Conservation Job Board. 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.

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Chicago's Job Market Thrives: Tech, Construction, and Fortune 500 Growth in 2026

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This episode was published on April 3, 2026.

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Chicago's job market remains robust, with over 2.5 million residents fueling diverse opportunities in a city ranked third largest in the U.S., according to Extra Space Storage data from April 2026. The employment landscape spans healthcare,...

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