For years, Hobart's job market has traded on tourism and heritage. But something quietly shifted over the past 18 months. The arrival of three major software development firms to the Salamanca precinct, coupled with a remote-work migration from Melbourne and Sydney, has ignited a talent war that's reshaping employment prospects across Tasmania.
Data from the Tasmanian Chamber of Commerce shows tech and digital services posted a 34% year-on-year hiring surge in the first quarter of 2026—the fastest growth of any sector. Average salaries in these roles now sit at $92,000, substantially above the state median of $68,500. More remarkably, entry-level positions paying $55,000 to $65,000 are going unfilled.
"We're seeing junior developers and UX designers recruited straight from university," says a spokesperson for the Tasmanian Skills Hub, which has fielded 156 job placements in digital roles since January alone. "Companies are training people on the job because they can't find experienced staff."
The beneficiaries are obvious: young professionals who might once have left Hobart for the mainland now have reasons to stay. Co-working spaces like Code Collective on Macquarie Street report 40% membership growth. Local recruitment agencies have doubled their tech divisions. And established IT consultancies operating from offices near Franklin Wharf are expanding faster than they can hire.
But there's a secondary surge worth noting. Hospitality and logistics firms supporting these new workers—from premium accommodation providers to catering companies—are also benefiting. Hotels around Salamanca have reported higher midweek occupancy as visiting tech professionals attend meetings. Commercial landlords have seen office vacancy rates in the CBD drop to 8%, the lowest in a decade.
Yet the opportunity remains unevenly distributed. Remote workers clustering in affluent suburbs like South Hobart and Battery Point have driven rental prices up 18% year-on-year, pricing out service workers—the very sector that might support them. Manufacturing and agriculture, still major employers outside Greater Hobart, have seen wages stagnate.
By late June 2026, the question facing Tasmania's economy is whether this tech influx will broaden prosperity or concentrate it. Early winners—landlords, tech recruiters, and skilled developers—are already visible. Whether the benefit trickles to the broader workforce depends on whether training pipelines can keep up with demand, and whether wages in supporting sectors begin to move.
For now, Hobart's job market is no longer one-dimensional. It's just not evenly distributed.
This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.