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Where are new grads finding job opportunities?

As hiring slows and automation expands, LinkedIn’s latest data shows where opportunities remain.



The Class of 2026 Is Entering One of the Toughest Job Markets in Years

Graduating into a strong economy is a luxury this year's class won't have. Hiring has slowed across multiple industries, competition is fierce, and AI has begun absorbing many of the entry-level tasks that once served as the traditional on-ramp to a career.

The numbers tell a sobering story. The unemployment rate for college graduates ages 22 to 27 hit 5.8% at the end of 2025, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Overall hiring is down 7% year over year and remains well below pre-pandemic levels, says Kory Kantenga, LinkedIn's head of economics.

To help new graduates navigate the uncertainty, LinkedIn just released its 2026 Grad's Guide — an analysis of millions of LinkedIn profiles identifying which roles are actively hiring, which industries are expanding, and which cities offer the best odds.

The five fastest-growing roles for new grads are AI engineer, marketing coordinator, recruitment assistant, legal specialist, and human resources operations specialist. The five fastest-growing industries are technology, information, and media; real estate; financial services; utilities; and construction.

On location, the expected tech hubs appear — San Francisco and Seattle remain strong — but a few surprises made the list. Orlando, Florida, cracked the top two, which tracks with WalletHub's recent ranking of it as the second-best city to start a career in 2026, citing its high concentration of entry-level job openings per capita and low unemployment rate. The full top five: San Francisco, Orlando, Atlanta, Charleston (South Carolina), and Tampa.

Not every new grad is chasing a traditional offer, though. Many are opting out of the conventional path entirely.

"We're seeing a lot of new grads turning to more alternative types of employment — gig work, retail, restaurants," says career strategist Hanna Goefft. "There's more scrappiness in Gen Z, and more visibility online of people taking different paths."

The data backs that up. A separate LinkedIn survey found that 68% of Gen Zers in the U.S. are considering starting their own business, and more than half said they're actively pursuing freelance or contract work over full-time roles. Kantenga calls it "a reflection of how early careers are evolving, with Gen Z adapting quickly and finding opportunity where it exists."

Amid all the change, some fundamentals still hold. Building connections, developing your skills, and staying curious remain as relevant as ever. But there's one capability that job seekers can't afford to overlook — because hiring managers certainly won't.

That's AI. Specifically, the ability to use it to sharpen your work, solve real problems, and build something tangible. In a market this competitive, it's less a bonus skill than a baseline expectation.

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