NEW YORK — The U.S. labor market continues to display a steady, calculated resilience, according to the latest May 2026 data released by real-time job market data firm LinkUp.
Serving as a critical leading indicator ahead of the federal nonfarm payrolls report, LinkUp’s May data highlights a labor market that is neither overheating nor sliding into recession. Instead, corporate America appears to be entering a phase of strategic, highly targeted recruitment.
The Big Picture: Active vs. Created Listings
LinkUp’s core metrics—which track actual job openings directly from corporate websites—show a modest month-over-month increase in overall hiring intent. While employers are keeping a close eye on overhead costs, critical vacancies are being filled and expanded at a healthy clip.
| Metric | Month-over-Month (MoM) Change | Year-over-Year (YoY) Change |
| Active Job Postings | +1.2% | +3.4% |
| Created Job Postings (New) | +2.5% | +4.1% |
| Deleted Job Postings (Closed) | +1.8% | +2.9% |
The outpaced growth of Created Job Postings relative to Deleted Postings suggests that net new demand for labor is expanding, offering a breath of fresh air for job seekers who faced a tighter market earlier this spring.
Sector Breakdown: Where the Jobs Are
The May data underscores a stark divergence between capital-intensive industries and consumer-driven sectors.
- Healthcare & Social Assistance: Continues to be the undisputed engine of job growth, with active listings climbing 3.8% in May. Demand for specialized medical personnel and eldercare remains insatiable.
- Technology & Professional Services: Showed signs of concrete stabilization. Following the volatile restructuring cycles of recent years, software and data engineering roles saw a 1.5% bump in new listings, signaling renewed corporate investment in AI infrastructure and cybersecurity.
- Manufacturing & Logistics: Experienced a slight cooling trend (-0.6%), as companies optimize supply chains and react to shifting global trade dynamics.
- Retail & Hospitality: Showed standard seasonal hiring patterns, though employers are being notably more conservative with headcounts compared to the summer rushes of previous years.
Mid-Year Economic Implications
The steady uptick in job listings provides reassurance to economists monitoring the Federal Reserve’s delicate balancing act. The lack of a sharp drop-off in job creations indicates that consumer spending power is likely to remain supported through the summer months.
“The May data tells us that the corporate world isn’t panicking—they are prioritizing,” says the report’s analytical summary. “We are well past the era of pandemic-induced talent hoarding. Today, every single job listing represents a verified, budgeted need for operational growth.”
Interview Duration and Fill Times
An interesting takeaway from the May recap is the closed-duration metric (the average time a job posting remains active on a company site). The average time-to-fill ticked up slightly to 44 days, indicating that HR departments are taking advantage of a more balanced talent pool to conduct rigorous interview processes rather than rushing to make panic hires.
As the market heads into the second half of 2026, LinkUp’s data suggests that the “soft landing” narrative remains firmly on track, characterized by predictable growth, localized talent shortages, and a welcome return to macroeconomic stability.
