Charted: Cities with the biggest job growth
Add Axios as your preferred source to
see more of our stories on Google.

The hottest job markets in the country aren't in big cities. Instead, smaller metro areas look mighty at the moment.
Why it matters: The labor market is slowing down, particularly for white-collar professionals in tech-heavy cities.
Zoom in: The number of job listings in San Francisco declined 37% from February 2020 to October, according to new data from jobs site Indeed.
- Seattle had a 35% decline.
- Smaller markets, particularly those reliant on health care jobs, have remained more resilient.
Zoom in: Small metro areas that saw gains had labor markets more weighted toward health care, and leisure and hospitality, says Allison Shrivastava, an economist at Indeed Hiring Lab.
The big picture: Those two sectors accounted for more than 100% of net job gains in 2025 so far, Bloomberg recently reported.
Between the lines: The white-collar pullback is also partly due to Trump administration's job cuts and the hiring freeze in place for much of the year.
- The Washington, D.C., area has seen a decline of 24% in job listings — driven also by the White House drive to cut headcount and a pullback in government contracting work.
The bottom line: The job market looks a lot like the real estate market; it's all about location, location, location.
