Is Manufacturing, Construction & Field Services a Good Job Market in New York-Newark-Jersey City, NY-NJ?

Produced by Callings.ai on May 10, 2026

Executive Verdict

Market rating: competitive | Confidence: High

This is a competitive but still workable market. The metro still shows real volume, with more than 8,500 postings across more than 3,900 companies over the last 90 days, and hiring is fragmented rather than dominated by one employer.[13][14] But the backdrop has softened: metro manufacturing employment was down 2.7% year over year in March 2026, total metro nonfarm employment was down 0.6%, and metro unemployment was 5.3% in February.[7][34][6] Statewide occupation signals sharpen that picture: employment for this job family in New York was essentially flat, while active postings were down 8.0% year over year in April 2026, according to Revelio Public Labor Statistics.[16][17]

Best positioned: Licensed tradespeople, site coordinators, and manufacturing/process candidates who can show project management, troubleshooting, plumbing/HVAC depth, or Lean continuous-improvement results have the best odds right now.[8][5][27]

Main caution: Do not read the category's annual salary bands as typical pay for every trade role; local postings split between manager/engineer salaries and hourly field work, and about 90% of jobs are on-site.[1][2][10]

What Changed Recently

What This Means for You

Entry-Level Candidates

Difficulty: Moderate to high.

Best target: Helper, apprentice, maintenance, and field-service openings that emphasize communication, troubleshooting, customer service, and plumbing-adjacent work rather than pure factory production.[8][7]

Biggest mistake: Applying only to manager-title postings or assuming hybrid options will be common.

Next step: Get OSHA 30 underway, prepare proof of on-site availability, and build a short work log with safety, tool, and jobsite examples.[9][10]

Mid-Career Candidates

Difficulty: Moderate if you have a license, specialty trade depth, or measurable project results; high if your experience is generic.

Best target: MEP/service, site coordination, project delivery, and manufacturing/process roles where project management or Lean continuous-improvement wins are visible.[8][5][11]

Biggest mistake: Sending a resume that lists duties instead of downtime reduced, crews coordinated, punch lists closed, service tickets resolved, or safety outcomes.

Next step: Create two resume versions: one trade/field version and one supervisor/project version, and target firms across construction, engineering, manufacturing, and real estate instead of staying in one lane.[11]

Career Switchers

Difficulty: High unless you can show adjacent hands-on experience or a fast credential.

Best target: Facilities/property operations, BIM-support, safety, or project-controls roles are better first pivots than jumping straight into construction manager jobs.[11][12][9]

Biggest mistake: Trying to rebrand as a manager before proving site, systems, or compliance credibility.

Next step: Pick one bridge credential or tool stack, then build a portfolio around building systems, safety, drawings, schedules, or process improvement rather than generic interest.

Salary Reality

high pay highly concentrated

Observed local pay signals are mixed because this category combines trades and managers: local postings center on about $92k to $125k for annual-salary jobs and about $28 to $38 / hour for hourly jobs, while metro plumbers had a historic median of $88,140/year and New York mean offered salary on new openings for this occupation group was about $73,229 (n=804), according to Revelio Public Labor Statistics.[1][2][3][4] A fresh local proxy example shows a manufacturing engineer opening at $100,000 - $135,000 tied to Lean Six Sigma work.[5]

Pay can be good here, but only if your background fits a specific lane. Manager, engineer, and licensed-trade roles pull the averages up, while helper, maintenance, and generic production roles will usually land lower.

The upside is offset by a softer local backdrop, with metro unemployment at 5.3% in February 2026 and metro manufacturing employment down 2.7% year over year in March.[6][7]

Best-paying path: The strongest pay tends to sit in project leadership, manufacturing/process engineering, and licensed specialty trades rather than general labor, with local annual postings centered on about $92k to $125k and a recent manufacturing engineer opening at $100,000 - $135,000.[1][5]

Caution: Top-end figures are easy to overread because the posted ranges mix construction managers, engineers, and industrial leadership roles with frontline hourly craft jobs.[1][2]

Where the Opportunities Are Concentrated

Opportunity is concentrated much more in construction-heavy and project-delivery work than in generic factory hiring. In the last 90 days, we observed more than 8,500 postings across more than 3,900 companies in the metro, with the mix led by construction at about 40%, engineering at about 20%, manufacturing at about 15%, and real estate at about 10%.[13][11] That matters because the market is not one giant employer wave; it is a long tail of firms, and hiring is fragmented across employers.[14] Within that mix, employers keep asking for project management and communication at about 15% each, plus problem solving, plumbing, troubleshooting, and customer service at about 10% each.[8] That pattern favors candidates who can bridge field execution and coordination: service techs who can talk to customers, tradespeople who can document schedules and safety, and supervisors who can keep jobs moving. The seniority mix also stays practical, at about 45% entry and about 45% mid, versus about 10% senior and less than 5% lead+.[15] The weaker pocket is pure manufacturing. Metro manufacturing employment was down 2.7% year over year in March 2026, while Revelio Public Labor Statistics shows New York employment for this occupation group essentially flat and active postings down 8.0% year over year in April.[7][16][17] If you are coming from production or plant work, target maintenance, process improvement, field service, and manufacturing-engineer lanes instead of waiting for broad factory expansion.

Where to focus: Prioritize construction-adjacent and MEP/service roles where project management, troubleshooting, or trade licensing transfer directly, and treat pure manufacturing production as a narrower lane until local factory demand improves.

Skills and Credentials Worth Pursuing

Adjacent Roles to Consider

30 / 60 / 90-Day Plan

First 30 Days

Days 31-60

Days 61-90

Methodology and Confidence

This April 2026 report was generated on May 10, 2026. Latest direct national data: May 2026. Latest direct New York-Newark-Jersey City, NY-NJ data: May 2026.

Confidence: Overall confidence: High. Based on 16 direct local occupation data points and 37 total local evidence items with recent coverage.

Limitations

References

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