EPISODE · Jun 15, 2026 · 4 MIN
Denver's Job Market: Tech, Healthcare, and Construction Lead Recovery
from Denver Job Market Report · host Inception Point AI
Denver’s job market is expanding but uneven, with employers still hiring aggressively in key sectors while some wage growth and postings have cooled from pandemic-era peaks. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Denver–Aurora–Lakewood metro unemployment rate has recently hovered near the low to mid 3 percent range, slightly below or close to the national average, indicating a generally tight labor market with pockets of slack. The employment landscape is dominated by professional and business services, healthcare, government, technology, financial activities, construction, and tourism-related services; state and local economic reports consistently list technology, aerospace, healthcare, energy, and financial services among Denver’s core industries. Major employers include large health systems, state and federal government offices, the University of Denver and other higher education institutions, financial firms, and national technology and aerospace companies whose Colorado operations are frequently cited in regional business rankings. Built In Colorado reports that major tech-related employers in the broader region include firms in software, artificial intelligence, aerospace, and e‑commerce, underscoring Denver’s role as a Rocky Mountain tech hub. Recent trends show strong growth in technology, data and analytics, clean energy, construction, logistics, and remote-capable corporate roles, while some white-collar fields are seeing more competition per opening and more cautious salary offers compared with 2021–2022. Local business press and recruiting firms note that job postings and permanent salaries in Denver cooled slightly in late 2022 and 2023 as interest rates rose, though demand for specialized talent remains high. Seasonally, hiring tends to soften in late Q4 and pick up in Q1 and late spring, especially in construction, hospitality, and outdoor recreation. Regional transportation and planning agencies report that commuting has shifted toward hybrid work, with a permanent uptick in remote days reducing central business district transit ridership while suburban commuting remains strong. Government initiatives by the State of Colorado and the City and County of Denver emphasize incentives for clean energy, advanced industries, small business formation, and workforce training in technology and healthcare, which is gradually reshaping the market toward higher-skill roles; however, detailed 2026 program impact data are still limited, and some sector-level employment figures lag by several quarters. Illustrative current openings in the Denver area include a Senior Data Analyst role at EchoStar in the $90,000 to $118,800 annual range, a construction Superintendent position in Denver advertised by Michael Page with a salary band around $110,000 to $130,000 plus bonuses, and a Senior Manager, Education role supporting REMAX with a focus on communications, customer service, education and training, and real estate. Key findings for listeners are that Denver remains a relatively low-unemployment, high-opportunity metro with particularly strong prospects in technology, healthcare, construction, and clean energy; wage and posting growth have normalized but not collapsed; commuting and workplace patterns are structurally more hybrid than before; and public and private investment is continuing to push the region toward a more knowledge- and innovation-intensive economy, even as real-time data on specific initiatives and the most current monthly statistics can lag official publication cycles. Thank you for tuning in, and be sure 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
What this episode covers
Denver’s job market is expanding but uneven, with employers still hiring aggressively in key sectors while some wage growth and postings have cooled from pandemic-era peaks. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Denver–Aurora–Lakewood metro unemployment rate has recently hovered near the low to mid 3 percent range, slightly below or close to the national average, indicating a generally tight labor market with pockets of slack. The employment landscape is dominated by professional and business services, healthcare, government, technology, financial activities, construction, and tourism-related services; state and local economic reports consistently list technology, aerospace, healthcare, energy, and financial services among Denver’s core industries. Major employers include large health systems, state and federal government offices, the University of Denver and other higher education institutions, financial firms, and national technology and aerospace companies whose Colorado operations are frequently cited in regional business rankings. Built In Colorado reports that major tech-related employers in the broader region include firms in software, artificial intelligence, aerospace, and e‑commerce, underscoring Denver’s role as a Rocky Mountain tech hub. Recent trends show strong growth in technology, data and analytics, clean energy, construction, logistics, and remote-capable corporate roles, while some white-collar fields are seeing more competition per opening and more cautious salary offers compared with 2021–2022. Local business press and recruiting firms note that job postings and permanent salaries in Denver cooled slightly in late 2022 and 2023 as interest rates rose, though demand for specialized talent remains high. Seasonally, hiring tends to soften in late Q4 and pick up in Q1 and late spring, especially in construction, hospitality, and outdoor recreation. Regional transportation and planning agencies report that commuting has shifted toward hybrid work, with a permanent uptick in remote days reducing central business district transit ridership while suburban commuting remains strong. Government initiatives by the State of Colorado and the City and County of Denver emphasize incentives for clean energy, advanced industries, small business formation, and workforce training in technology and healthcare, which is gradually reshaping the market toward higher-skill roles; however, detailed 2026 program impact data are still limited, and some sector-level employment figures lag by several quarters. Illustrative current openings in the Denver area include a Senior Data Analyst role at EchoStar in the $90,000 to $118,800 annual range, a construction Superintendent position in Denver advertised by Michael Page with a salary band around $110,000 to $130,000 plus bonuses, and a Senior Manager, Education role supporting REMAX with a focus on communications, customer service, education and training, and real estate. Key findings for listeners are that Denver remains a relatively low-unemployment, high-opportunity metro with particularly strong prospects in technology, healthcare, construction, and clean energy; wage and posting growth have normalized but not collapsed; commuting and workplace patterns are structurally more hybrid than before; and public and private investment is continuing to push the region toward a more knowledge- and innovation-intensive economy, even as real-time data on specific initiatives and the most current monthly statistics can lag official publication cycles. Thank you for tuning in, and be sure 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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Denver's Job Market: Tech, Healthcare, and Construction Lead Recovery
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