Raleigh Job Juggernaut Leaves Housing Market In The Dust

Raleigh’s job engine is still revving hard heading into the back half of 2026, with the Raleigh–Cary metro adding workers at a clip that beats almost every other U.S. city. New analysis shows the region notched roughly 2.3% annualized job growth over the six months through May, one of the fastest hiring paces in the country. At the same time, local home values have slipped for several months, opening a rare affordability window even as pay gains pick up.

PNC: Broad hiring across sectors

A report by PNC Bank finds the Raleigh–Cary MSA’s six-month annualized hiring rate came in around 2.3% through May, putting the metro near the very top of the national pack to start 2026. The bank’s regional economists say the growth is unusually broad, with education and healthcare, professional and business services, and leisure and hospitality all adding workers rather than relying on a single hot industry.

“I don’t want to call Raleigh a unicorn,” Kurt Rankin, a senior economist at PNC, told Axios, even as the data make the region stand out.

Federal payroll numbers back the momentum

The Bureau of Labor Statistics May metro release backs up that story. Raleigh–Cary posted one of the largest over-the-year percentage gains in employment, about 2.2%, confirming the area’s rapid pace. That reading places Raleigh in a small group of metros with statistically significant job gains and shows the momentum is visible in official payroll counts as well as in private analysis.

Housing still soft despite stronger pay

PNC, citing CoreLogic’s Cotality Case–Shiller series, notes that Raleigh’s home price index is down roughly 1% year over year even as local wages rise. The bank’s researchers say that split could give first-time buyers a better opening into the market if the labor trend holds, although much will depend on whether sales volume and mortgage rates move in concert.

Local planners and developers will be watching to see whether softer prices translate into more closed sales or instead feed back into renewed upward pressure on rents…

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