WORKFORCE INTELLIGENCE LAB · Construction Labor Shortage Index · Updated 2026-06-05

Construction labor shortage in Oregon.

How tight is construction hiring in Oregon? AlphaHire normalizes open construction roles against the state's population to measure demand against the available workforce — not raw job-post volume.

30/100 Manageable pressure #36 of 51 states 2.76 posts / 100k residents
30
Open Role Pressure Index
-17 vs national avg
#36
National rank
of 51 states
2.8
Posts per 100k residents
Population-normalized
117
Construction job posts
Tracked in Oregon
The reading

What 30/100 means for hiring in Oregon.

Oregon ranks #36 of 51 for construction hiring pressure, with an Open Role Pressure Index of 30 — below the national reading of 47. Employers posted 117 construction roles in Oregon, or 2.76 per 100,000 residents. Applicant access is comparatively healthy relative to demand — though individual role families may still run tight.

The heaviest demand is concentrated in Electricians, Project Managers, Superintendents. Because this index normalizes by population, it surfaces where the open-role burden is heaviest relative to the people available to fill it — a different and more operationally useful signal than which states simply post the most jobs.

Demand by role family

Where Oregon's construction hiring is concentrated.

Electricians
12
Project Managers
11
Superintendents
9
Civil / Infrastructure
9
Estimators
8

Construction job posts in Oregon by role family, from AlphaHire's job-posting dataset. Counts are directional and refreshed continuously.

Methodology

How the index is built.

The Construction Labor Shortage Index is a directional workforce-intelligence product from the AlphaHire Workforce Intelligence Lab. U.S. construction job postings are deduplicated, classified by construction relevance, assigned to a state, and normalized against the latest U.S. Census resident-population estimates:

open_roles_per_100k = construction_job_posts / state_population × 100,000

Every state's value is percentile-ranked into a 0–100 Hiring Competition Index and classified by severity: Critical (85–100), Severe (75–84), Elevated (60–74), Tightening (45–59), Manageable (below 45). Built on a 3,743,416-row job-posting dataset; 12,452 U.S. construction roles classified.

Compare

Adjacent states by pressure.

Hiring construction leadership in Oregon?

Where applicant pressure is this tight, inbound applications won't fill the role. Tell us the role and market — we'll read the local talent pool and bring the candidates.