Denver’s job market in late 2025 remains one of the strongest among major US metro areas, with rising demand for STEM talent and robust momentum for high-skill sectors according to RCLCO Real Estate Consulting’s 2025 STEM Job Growth Index. The area’s employment landscape is shaped by a highly educated workforce, steady private investment, and a startup ecosystem that attracts both national firms and venture capital as reported by Fundraise Insider. The city’s labor market shows resilience, with Colorado’s announced job cuts in the last month at 6,982—half the figure from the previous year’s 13,826, according to Denver7’s analysis of state data, suggesting that Denver is faring better than much of the country as national layoff numbers hit 22-year highs.
By the latest available measure from the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported by KUTV in August, Denver’s metro unemployment rate is 4.3 percent, just above full-employment benchmarks. Job growth has decelerated across the region with businesses adding only 22,000 jobs in August, but this pace still reflects labor market tightness with workforce growth slowing due to retiring baby boomers and lower immigration, as outlined by the Kansas City Federal Reserve. The median household income in Denver reached $91,681 for 2025 according to AOL. Top job sectors include healthcare, aerospace, finance, and especially STEM, which have driven both wage growth and demand for skilled professionals as highlighted by RCLCO and recent venture capital activity in The Business Journals.
Major employers fueling Denver’s employment engine include HCA HealthONE, recently awarded Military Friendly Employer status per Viqtory, major healthcare networks, aerospace giants, and a thriving cohort of software and clean tech startups, with HCA, Lockheed Martin, and Davita remaining among the top hirers. Fundraising for startups in sectors such as software, climate tech, healthtech, and advanced manufacturing is supporting rapid expansion and new hiring sprees. According to Fundraise Insider, this dynamic has kept demand for technical, marketing, engineering, and sustainability roles especially high.
Trends show an increase in remote and hybrid work, with Denver boasting 93 coworking spaces and 25 percent of the workforce in remote-capable jobs, according to Allwork.Space. Commuting times have stabilized with more flexible work arrangements, though housing pressures and a strong population influx continue to push new multifamily housing projects as reported by Multifamily Dive and The Denver Business Journal. Seasonal shifts show hiring spikes in spring and late summer, but trends have flattened as remote work increases. Government action has included workforce development programs and incentives for STEM and green energy companies, while large urban redevelopment initiatives seek to address rising housing needs and support regional job creation per ColoradoBiz.
Data gaps exist for the past two months due to a federal shutdown that prevented release of official jobs data, leaving economists with unclear views of current conditions as the last published figures are from August, with private sector sources suggesting continued stability but slowing hiring. Despite modest slowdowns, Denver remains a destination for talent thanks to its high incomes, diversified economy, and entrepreneurial growth. Current job openings in Denver include a software engineer at a climate tech startup, a registered nurse with HCA HealthONE, and a marketing analyst at a leading outdoor innovation company.
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
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI