The headline numbers
Vermont employers added approximately 2,400 net new jobs in Q1 2026 — modest growth, but the composition matters. Manufacturing led with roughly 700 added positions (primarily in CNC, welding, and production). Hospitality recovered from its winter trough, adding 600 positions ahead of the spring tourist season. Warehousing flattened. Healthcare support continues steady growth at +400 for the quarter.
Where wages moved
Manufacturing wages rose 4–6% year-over-year across most roles. CNC machinist median wages in Chittenden County are now $30/hr, up from $28.50/hr a year ago. Warehouse wages rose more modestly at 2–3%. Healthcare support wages are up sharply for LNA roles — 7–10% — driven by a continuing statewide shortage.
What employers are reporting
Vermont employers we work with report tightening on three fronts: second-shift coverage, mid-skill manufacturing (machinists with 3–7 years experience), and licensed healthcare support. The looser markets are entry-level warehouse, customer service, and seasonal hospitality — though hospitality will tighten as summer approaches.
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