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Mapped: The Most Common Job in Every U.S. State

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Mapped: The Most Common Job in Every U.S. State

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Key Takeaways

  • Fast food workers are now the most common job in 17 U.S. states, more than any other occupation.
  • White-collar professions rarely rank first. Software developers lead in just one state: Washington.
  • Healthcare support roles dominate several aging and coastal states, reflecting America’s growing care economy.

Fast food workers, cashiers, and home health aides now rank as the most common occupations across much of America.

The map below shows the leading occupation in every U.S. state using the latest data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. While the U.S. economy is often associated with technology and professional services, the workforce is increasingly concentrated in lower-paid service and healthcare roles that depend on in-person labor.

Fast food jobs dominate much of the South and Mountain West, while healthcare roles are more common in coastal and older states. Freight and manufacturing jobs remain concentrated in industrial and energy hubs, including North Dakota and Michigan.

America’s Most Common Jobs by State in 2025

Fast food workers were the most common occupation in 17 states in 2025, up from 15 in 2024.

Retail sales workers and cashiers ranked first in another 11 states, while home health aides dominated in several coastal and aging states, including California and Massachusetts.

The rankings reveal how much of the U.S. workforce is tied to service work and caregiving rather than traditional white-collar industries.

State Most Common Occupation2025 Employment Mean Hourly Wage
Arkansas Fast Food Workers 36K $12.93
Colorado Fast Food Workers 82K $17.74
Georgia Fast Food Workers 145K $13.12
Hawaii Fast Food Workers 24K $17.22
Idaho Fast Food Workers 26K $13.76
Kansas Fast Food Workers 47K $13.07
Montana Fast Food Workers 15K $14.48
Nebraska Fast Food Workers 30K $14.86
Nevada Fast Food Workers 46K $15.78
Ohio Fast Food Workers 164K $13.90
Oklahoma Fast Food Workers 53K $12.04
Oregon Fast Food Workers 60K $17.41
Rhode Island Fast Food Workers 13K $16.37
South Dakota Fast Food Workers 15K $14.86
Texas Fast Food Workers 461K $13.34
Utah Fast Food Workers 52K $13.99
Virginia Fast Food Workers 104K $15.35
Alabama Retail Sales & Cashiers 61K $16.03
Alaska Retail Sales & Cashiers 8K $19.18
Florida Retail Sales & Cashiers 333K $17.31
Iowa Retail Sales & Cashiers 41K $14.52
Louisiana Retail Sales & Cashiers 50K $15.63
Mississippi Retail Sales & Cashiers 38K $14.98
New Hampshire Retail Sales & Cashiers 24K $18.86
North Carolina Retail Sales & Cashiers 128K $16.46
South Carolina Retail Sales & Cashiers 67K $16.25
Vermont Retail Sales & Cashiers 8K $20.41
Wyoming Retail Sales & Cashiers 9K $17.82
California Home Health Aides 970K $17.51
Connecticut Home Health Aides 50K $19.37
Maine Home Health Aides 19K $19.29
Massachusetts Home Health Aides 118K $20.23
Minnesota Home Health Aides 129K $19.13
New Jersey Home Health Aides 117K $19.08
New Mexico Home Health Aides 39K $14.48
New York Home Health Aides 663K $19.78
Pennsylvania Home Health Aides 257K $15.12
Wisconsin Home Health Aides 82K $17.01
Illinois Freight Movers 195K $20.66
Indiana Freight Movers 103K $20.12
Kentucky Freight Movers 58K $20.17
Tennessee Freight Movers 106K $19.24
Arizona Ops Managers & Speciaists 110K $60.19
District of Columbia Ops Managers & Speciaists 38K $56.88
Maryland Ops Managers & Speciaists 97K $65.66
Missouri Ops Managers & Speciaists 109K $49.33
Delaware Nurses 14K $47.82
West Virginia Nurses 23K $41.81
North Dakota Truck Drivers 12K $30.45
Washington Software Developers 107K $82.23
Michigan Assemblers 112K $24.69

Healthcare support jobs continue to grow as America ages. Despite relatively modest pay, home health aides and nursing roles are becoming increasingly central to the labor market.

By 2036, the U.S. population aged 85 and older is forecast to more than double, likely driving even greater demand for healthcare support roles. Nurses already rank as the top occupation in two states.

Washington: America’s Only Software Developer State

Washington is the only state where software developers rank as the largest occupation group, reflecting the outsized influence of Seattle’s tech ecosystem and employers like Microsoft and Amazon.

Among Washington’s 107K software developers, the average hourly wage reached $82.23, the highest of any leading occupation in the dataset.

Michigan and North Dakota: Industry Shapes Workforces

Assemblers remain the most common occupation in Michigan, underscoring the continued importance of auto manufacturing to the state economy. While Michigan’s auto production declined 25% between 2004 and 2024, manufacturing still plays a major role in the state’s labor market.

Meanwhile, truck drivers rank first in North Dakota, reflecting the state’s reliance on energy production, agriculture, and freight transportation.

Oil production in the Bakken region creates strong demand for hauling crude oil and industrial equipment, while the agricultural sector depends heavily on transporting crops and fertilizer. As a result, North Dakota has one of the highest concentrations of heavy truck drivers in the country.

Together, the two states highlight how industrial and resource-based economies continue to shape regional employment patterns across the U.S.

How America’s Most Common Jobs Changed Since 2024

One of the biggest labor market shifts has been the decline of white-collar roles. In 2024, operations managers and specialists ranked as the leading occupation in 10 states, but that number fell to just four in 2025.

In Idaho, operations managers were replaced by fast food workers. Texas saw a similar shift, while New Hampshire moved from operations managers to retail sales and cashier roles.

America’s workforce is increasingly centered around jobs that require physical presence: preparing food, caring for patients, transporting goods, and serving customers. While many of these occupations pay modest wages, they remain difficult to automate or outsource.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on the world’s fastest-growing jobs.