Press Release

New Report Finds Detroit Could Add Over 20,000 Tech Jobs and Generate $6.8B in New Wages in Five Years

March 4, 2026

Detroit Future City’s (DFC) new report “Tech for Tomorrow: A Detroit Vision,” finds Detroit has a strong foundation to expand its tech economy, but must align capital, workforce pathways and start up supports to ensure Black and Hispanic/Latino Detroiters can fully participate in and benefit from the city’s next wave of technology growth.

Produced by DFC’s Center for Equity, Engagement and Research with support from Song Foundation and Kapor Foundation, the report examines the current state of Detroit’s tech economy by combining labor market and capital data, ecosystem analysis, and insights from interviews and focus groups with founders, workforce leaders, venture capitalists, and policymakers to assess how tech jobs and tech entrepreneurship are shaping Detroit today and how they can better serve Detroiters tomorrow.

“Detroit’s tech economy already has talent and momentum,” said Anika Goss, DFC CEO. “The opportunity now is to strengthen the systems around it so that growth expands access, builds wealth, and benefits Detroiters across the city.”

A Tech Economy with Both Strength and Structural Gaps

The report finds that Detroit’s tech economy is already a major driver of wages and regional stability, while also revealing barriers that threaten long-term competitiveness, economic diversification, and equitable participation:

  • Detroit’s tech job growth is not keeping pace with national tech hubs, particularly in Core High-Tech and Early AI-Intensive industries.
  • Black and Hispanic/Latino Detroiters are well represented in STEM-intensive manufacturing, but remain underrepresented in faster-growing, higher-paying tech segments.
  • Venture capital and philanthropic support funding flow into metro Detroit, but at levels far below major tech hubs, and access to much of that capital is highly uneven.
  • Workforce systems struggle to keep up with rapidly changing tech skill demands and limited entry-level pathways.
  • Detroit has many business support organizations, but far fewer tech-specific innovation support systems tailored to startups’ needs.

“Growing our tech ecosystem without intentionally connecting that growth to the people who need it most will only widen the gap between opportunity and access,” shared Khalilah Burt Gaston, President and Executive Director of the Song Foundation. “The barriers have never been about talent or ambition. They’re about capital, access, and pathways that haven’t existed. Song Foundation is proud to partner with Detroit Future City and Kapor Foundation to identify how we can build a tech economy that creates family-sustaining careers and generates real wealth-building opportunities for Detroiters.”

The Cost of Inaction and the Scale of Opportunity

With coordinated policy, talent, and capital investments, the report estimates the region could add approximately 20,300 tech jobs held by Detroiters over the next five years, generating up to $6.8 billion in new wages and strengthening household and regional economic stability.

Beyond jobs, the report emphasizes that tech entrepreneurship can be a powerful pathway to long-term wealth creation for both founders and employees- if start-ups are nurtured and incentivized to d stay in Detroit.

“Detroit has a defining opportunity to model what responsible, inclusive technology growth looks like when it is purpose-driven and accountable to the communities it serves,” said Dr. Allison Scott, CEO of the Kapor Foundation. “Innovation is only meaningful when it expands opportunity. By investing in founders who have been systematically overlooked, and aligning systems around equitable access, economic mobility, and shared ownership, we can build a tech economy in Detroit that strengthens communities and advances racial and economic justice for Detroiters.”

A Roadmap for Action

The report outlines practical steps to accelerate growth and widen participation, including:

  • Increase access to capital, particularly for Black and Hispanic/Latino founders
  • Strengthen workforce-industry partnerships, including expanding tech apprenticeships and paid, work-based learning models
  • Embed tech exposure and career pathways throughout K-12 education
  • Match business support services to the specific needs of tech startups
  • Designate a single anchor organization to align the regional tech ecosystem
  • Grow emerging industries where Detroit has expertise, such as beauty-tech and urban-tech

A Call to Lead

The report is intended to be a shared foundation for alignment and coordinated action. Leaders across sectors can take concrete steps now:

  • Founders can commit to cultivating and sourcing local talent through apprenticeships, internships, and entry-level pathways tied to real hiring demand
  • Investors and funders can expand equitable access to early and growth capital and back tech-specific scale supports
  • Education and workforce leaders can align training to employer needs and widen access to quality on-ramps
  • Civic and regional leaders can coordinate policy and resources for system-wide needs and set measurable goals for inclusive growth.

 

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