From Pass-a-Grille
to Pinellas Point.
St. Pete hires differently block by block. We sort every role by the neighborhood it actually lives in — so you can work within a bike ride, a bridge, or an ocean of yourself.
Downtown
The Pier, the Dali, and everything in between. Dense with healthcare, professional services, and hospitality — most employers within a short walk or SunRunner ride.
Waterfront energy meets nine-to-five hustle.
Bayboro
USF Marine Science, the charter docks, and the Coast Guard station. Marine biology, maritime trades, and research.
Salt air and lab coats.
EDGE District
Restaurants, galleries, and mid-rise mixed-use. A lot of the city's new construction work starts and ends here.
Hard hats and happy hours.
Grand Central
Central Ave's taprooms, shops, and studios. A kitchen-and-cover-band economy with steady hospitality and small-biz openings.
Craft beer, vinyl, and help-wanted signs.
Kenwood
Historic Kenwood bungalows and a dense cluster of neighborhood retail along 5th Ave N.
Front-porch vibes and bike lanes.
Old Northeast
Bungalow-lined streets and the big hospitals. Clinical roles, schools, and a handful of boutique practices.
Scrubs, stethoscopes, and live oaks.
Snell Isle
Country club, marina, and a few private offices. Service roles dominate and tend to pay well.
Golf carts, dock lines, and tip jars.
Warehouse Arts
Converted warehouses, studio collectives, and small tech shops. Creative, loud, and cheaper than Downtown.
Sawdust, server racks, and screen prints.
Tell us where we should look next.
Gulfport, Pass-a-Grille, Childs Park, Pinellas Point, the Deuces — if there's a pocket of the city you want covered, we'll prioritize it for the next index refresh.