Las Vegas Tops U.S. Cities in Construction Job Losses for 2025

By Matthias Binder
Las Vegas lost the most construction jobs of any US city last year, report says (Featured Image)

Record Decline Hits Local Workforce (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Las Vegas – The city’s construction sector experienced the sharpest decline in jobs among major U.S. metro areas last year.

Record Decline Hits Local Workforce

Construction employment in the Las Vegas Valley plummeted by 11 percent over 2025, according to data from the Associated General Contractors of America (AGC).[1][2] The metro area shed 8,600 positions, dropping from 79,200 jobs in December 2024 to 70,600 by December 2025.[1]

This marked the largest percentage drop nationwide out of the 360 largest metro areas analyzed. AGC chief economist Ken Simonson attributed the losses to multiple contributing factors. The decline tied Las Vegas with New York City for the most jobs cut numerically, though New York’s percentage fall was smaller at 6 percent.[2] Earlier snapshots showed ongoing weakness, such as a 7 percent drop in the Las Vegas-Henderson-North Las Vegas metro from September 2024 to September 2025.[3]

Just under half of U.S. metro areas added construction jobs between December 2024 and December 2025, highlighting a patchwork recovery. Employment grew in fewer regions amid stalled demand for various project types. AGC’s analysis pointed to broader challenges like potential tariffs and persistent worker shortages.

Las Vegas stood out as the epicenter of losses. Other hard-hit areas included New York City, but most metros either held steady or expanded modestly. The trade group noted that national construction employment trends diverged sharply across regions during the year.

Underlying Pressures on Vegas Builders

Several dynamics fueled the downturn in Southern Nevada. High interest rates earlier in the year curbed new starts in housing and commercial projects. The post-pandemic boom in Vegas infrastructure tapered off, leaving fewer large-scale opportunities.

Labor availability remained a paradox; reports cited shortages even as jobs vanished statewide. Nevada lost thousands of positions amid these constraints, with the Silver State leading in percentage declines at points during 2025. Local contractors faced intensified competition for skilled workers on shrinking workloads.

  • Stalled demand for nonresidential projects nationwide.
  • Regional slowdown after years of rapid growth in hospitality builds.
  • Ongoing supply chain echoes and rising material costs.
  • Shift toward maintenance over new construction.

Implications for the Local Economy

The job cuts ripple beyond hard hats. Construction supports ancillary sectors like suppliers and real estate in a tourism-dependent hub like Las Vegas. Fewer projects could signal cooling investment in expansions tied to gaming and events.

Officials and industry leaders watch for federal infrastructure funds to stem further erosion. Recovery hinges on interest rate relief and demand pickup. Meanwhile, diversification efforts aim to buffer the valley’s economy.

Metro Area Jobs Lost Percentage Change
Las Vegas-Henderson-North Las Vegas, NV 8,600 -11%
New York City, NY 8,600 -6%

Key Takeaways:

  • Las Vegas led in both percentage and tied numerical job losses among 360 metros.
  • 11% workforce shrink reflects stalled projects and labor issues.
  • National splits show uneven recovery into 2026.

Las Vegas builders now eye policy shifts for a rebound. What impacts have you seen from the slowdown? Share in the comments.

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