DFW Job Market Sees Modest Recovery in 2026 Amid Labor Shortages and Immigration Policy Changes episode artwork

EPISODE · Feb 13, 2026 · 3 MIN

DFW Job Market Sees Modest Recovery in 2026 Amid Labor Shortages and Immigration Policy Changes

from Dallas-Fort Worth Job Market Report · host Inception Point AI

The Dallas-Fort Worth job market shows modest recovery in 2026 after a near-flat 2025, with Texas employment projected to grow by 1.1 percent, adding around 155,000 jobs statewide according to the Dallas Fed forecast, though below the historical 2 percent trend due to labor shortages and restrictive immigration policies. The employment landscape reflects a low hiring, low firing environment nationally, with North Texas facing impacts from H-1B visa changes like new fees and freezes at state agencies, reducing immigrant labor that drove over 50 percent of prior growth. Key statistics include Texas adding fewer than 11,000 net jobs in 2025 while GDP rose via AI productivity gains, and recent U.S. data showing 130,000 jobs added in January 2026 per the Labor Department, with unemployment insurance claims at 227,000 for early February signaling stabilization as noted by Oxford Economics. Unemployment remains low, far below 2008 levels per Colliers analysis, though specific D-FW rates are unavailable in recent reports. Major industries encompass tech, construction, and data centers, where D-FW hosts half of Texas's 388 facilities with $11 billion in 2025 contracts doubling prior year per Dallas Fed data; top employers include accounting firms hiring over 4,378 CPAs across North Texas firms as listed by Dallas Business Journal, plus retailers like H-E-B. Growing sectors feature data centers, AI boosting productivity, and upcoming World Cup events, offsetting residential construction slowdowns from population dips—Texas international arrivals projected at 37,000 in 2026 versus 355,000 in 2024 per Census data cited by Dallas Fed. Recent developments highlight tariff burdens on U.S. firms at 86-94 percent pass-through per New York Fed, chilling immigrant participation and hitting one in five businesses. Seasonal patterns show no strong data, but multifamily distress in high-supply areas from 2024-2025 oversupply per Colliers may ease with job upticks. Commuting trends lack specifics, while government initiatives like Gov. Abbott's H-1B freeze aim to prioritize locals amid debates in Frisco. Market evolution points to cyclical reset, not crisis, with opportunities in workforce housing. Data gaps exist on precise D-FW unemployment, commuting, and seasonal hiring. Key findings: Growth constrained by policy but buoyed by tech infrastructure; low unemployment supports stability. Current openings include H-E-B bakery, deli, and produce roles at their new Mid Cities store hiring fair on February 18 per H-E-B careers; City of Fort Worth general positions via their job board; and accounting roles at North Texas CPA firms per Dallas Business Journal. Thank you for tuning in, listeners, and 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.

The Dallas-Fort Worth job market shows modest recovery in 2026 after a near-flat 2025, with Texas employment projected to grow by 1.1 percent, adding around 155,000 jobs statewide according to the Dallas Fed forecast, though below the historical 2 percent trend due to labor shortages and restrictive immigration policies. The employment landscape reflects a low hiring, low firing environment nationally, with North Texas facing impacts from H-1B visa changes like new fees and freezes at state agencies, reducing immigrant labor that drove over 50 percent of prior growth. Key statistics include Texas adding fewer than 11,000 net jobs in 2025 while GDP rose via AI productivity gains, and recent U.S. data showing 130,000 jobs added in January 2026 per the Labor Department, with unemployment insurance claims at 227,000 for early February signaling stabilization as noted by Oxford Economics. Unemployment remains low, far below 2008 levels per Colliers analysis, though specific D-FW rates are unavailable in recent reports. Major industries encompass tech, construction, and data centers, where D-FW hosts half of Texas's 388 facilities with $11 billion in 2025 contracts doubling prior year per Dallas Fed data; top employers include accounting firms hiring over 4,378 CPAs across North Texas firms as listed by Dallas Business Journal, plus retailers like H-E-B. Growing sectors feature data centers, AI boosting productivity, and upcoming World Cup events, offsetting residential construction slowdowns from population dips—Texas international arrivals projected at 37,000 in 2026 versus 355,000 in 2024 per Census data cited by Dallas Fed. Recent developments highlight tariff burdens on U.S. firms at 86-94 percent pass-through per New York Fed, chilling immigrant participation and hitting one in five businesses. Seasonal patterns show no strong data, but multifamily distress in high-supply areas from 2024-2025 oversupply per Colliers may ease with job upticks. Commuting trends lack specifics, while government initiatives like Gov. Abbott's H-1B freeze aim to prioritize locals amid debates in Frisco. Market evolution points to cyclical reset, not crisis, with opportunities in workforce housing. Data gaps exist on precise D-FW unemployment, commuting, and seasonal hiring. Key findings: Growth constrained by policy but buoyed by tech infrastructure; low unemployment supports stability. Current openings include H-E-B bakery, deli, and produce roles at their new Mid Cities store hiring fair on February 18 per H-E-B careers; City of Fort Worth general positions via their job board; and accounting roles at North Texas CPA firms per Dallas Business Journal. Thank you for tuning in, listeners, and 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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DFW Job Market Sees Modest Recovery in 2026 Amid Labor Shortages and Immigration Policy Changes

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This episode was published on February 13, 2026.

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The Dallas-Fort Worth job market shows modest recovery in 2026 after a near-flat 2025, with Texas employment projected to grow by 1.1 percent, adding around 155,000 jobs statewide according to the Dallas Fed forecast, though below the historical 2...

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