Philadelphia Job Market Report

Philadelphia Job Market Shifts: Moderate Growth, Evolving Sectors, and Workforce Adaptations


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Philadelphia’s job market in November 2025 is defined by moderate growth, steady but elevated unemployment, and significant sector shifts. According to ALM First, the unemployment rate stands at 4.3 percent with a labor force participation rate of about 62.3 percent, numbers that mirror national averages and underscore a market that remains slightly slack compared to the pre-pandemic era. ZipRecruiter finds the average annual salary in Philadelphia is $142,335, about 0.7 percent above the state average, with wage growth limited and little variation between top-paying cities in the metro area. The Bureau of Labor Statistics notes a nationwide slowdown in annual job growth, which in Philadelphia means employment gains continue but at a one-percent pace, lower than prior years. Initial jobless claims—according to Trading Economics—fluctuate, evidence of greater volatility and less predictability compared to earlier expansionary periods.

The city is home to over 30 Fortune 1000 companies, according to Double the Donation, with leading industries in healthcare, education, life sciences, advanced manufacturing, technology, finance, logistics, and consumer goods. Major local employers include large hospital systems, universities, pharmaceutical and biotech firms, financial services such as insurance and banking, and a cluster of logistics and transportation companies. Eventbrite and recent Philadelphia career fairs highlight ongoing demand for accountants, software developers, educators, engineers, logistics operators, and service professionals. Notably, the tech sector shows momentum—Technical.ly reports strong venture deals, company launches, and national awards for local startups in data analytics (like dbt Labs), medical devices, and robotics. The presence of major conventions, such as the 2025 SHPE National STEM Career Fair, reflects robust recruitment efforts by firms such as Bank of America and Comcast.

Despite stability, recent developments have included significant layoffs, especially at Spark Therapeutics after a merger, and expanded investment rounds and rebranding by companies like Philly's Best Steak Co., as reported by the Philadelphia Business Journal and Provisioner Online. Retail seasonal hiring in Philadelphia aligns with national trends: BLS reports a typical fall-winter surge (over 490,000 retail hires nationwide in late 2024), but the subsequent retention rate dropped, creating more churn and short-term opportunities.

Commuting patterns remain commuter-heavy but are influenced by remote work options, especially for tech and finance roles. Public programs have targeted digital equity and STEM talent through initiatives like a now-canceled $12 million Digital Equity Act grant. Meanwhile, staffing agencies such as Open Systems Technologies continue to streamline professional placements in IT, finance, and healthcare.

Structural market evolution points to slower, more volatile hiring due to advances in automation and technology, as outlined by Altus Group Research, but also to new growth in healthcare, logistics, renewable energy, and data-driven industries. According to PA WARN notices, layoffs remain episodic rather than systemic, generally tied to restructuring or acquisitions.

Open positions highlighted on ZipRecruiter and in national STEM fairs include Internship Manual QA Tester at $87,383, Geotechnical Intern at $58,907, and Physical Science Technician at $55,320 annually in the local area, with additional roles in trucking and logistics at top Philadelphia firms like Greatwide Dallas Mavis and Pipco Transportation.

Key findings: Philadelphia’s job market is steady but shifting—marked by moderate pay, historically average unemployment, major sector pivots, strong healthcare and tech footprints, rising opportunities in logistics and life sciences, episodic layoffs, and continued investment in workforce development. While conditions are not robustly expansionary, the market remains diverse and capable of supporting both traditional and emerging career pathways. 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.

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Philadelphia Job Market ReportBy Inception Point Ai