Philadelphia Job Market Report

Philadelphia's Resilient Job Market: Stability, Growth, and Workforce Initiatives in 2025


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Philadelphia’s job market in late 2025 is marked by steady employment, moderate unemployment, and dynamic shifts across key sectors. According to the Philadelphia Federal Reserve and MIG Market Watch, the city’s September 2025 unemployment rate stood at 4.4 percent, slightly above the prior year but still historically low. Payroll numbers rose by 119,000, and the overall job market is regarded as stable, with layoff rates holding steady and job openings consistent with national trends, as noted by AOL News. The labor force encompasses a wide swath of industries, from healthcare, education, and construction to emerging sectors such as enterprise digital solutions and biomedical sciences, per a Pew and Brookings analysis. Major employers include health systems like the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, universities such as Drexel, Comcast, pharmaceutical companies, and government agencies.

Recent years have seen notable growth in clean energy and technology. E2 reports clean energy jobs expanded five times faster than the rest of the state’s economy in 2024, employing over 100,000 across construction, manufacturing, and science roles. Biotech and life sciences remain regional strengths, underscored by Eli Lilly establishing a new incubator and investments from Thermo Fisher Scientific. These moves cement Philadelphia’s standing as a life sciences and precision medicine hub, despite restructuring at firms like Spark Therapeutics. Manufacturing’s contraction eased recently, and business optimism is rising, with the Philadelphia Fed’s business outlook index reaching its highest level in a year, according to the National Association of Manufacturers. Construction is robust, reflected in major projects like Turner Construction’s sports and infrastructure initiatives.

Government and philanthropic coalitions—including a $20 million workforce development fund led by the William Penn Foundation and City of Philadelphia—are addressing barriers to employment. These initiatives fund training programs for youth, reentry populations, healthcare, manufacturing, and English-language learners, aiming to expand job pipelines and inclusive hiring. Commuting patterns continue to shift, with hybrid or remote job postings reaching 36 percent nationally, and Philadelphia following this trend, as reported by Second Talent.

Seasonal trends bring surges in retail, hospitality, and event-driven employment around major conventions and holidays, such as the SHPE National Convention and other expo events drawing tens of thousands. Wage growth has been significant, with entry-level pay in the Philadelphia metro up 26 percent from 2020 to 2025, based on Glassdoor data via Axios. However, challenges remain, including noncompete agreements affecting wage mobility and the persistence of racial and zip code-based employment gaps. There are gaps in hyperlocal industry data for some niche fields, and certain October and November employment statistics lag due to reporting backlogs.

Listeners looking for current opportunities can explore roles such as healthcare assistant at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, data analyst at Comcast, and project engineer with Turner Construction. Thanks 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