– Economic Impact
The numbers behind America’s data economy
Data centers are among the most economically productive land uses in the country — generating jobs, tax revenue, and economic output that far outpaces their footprint and community impact.
$1.7B
Average 10-year economic output per facility
1,000+
Construction jobs per campus build
$7M+
Annual new local tax revenue per facility
100 – 150
Permanent full-time positions per facility
– Tax base impact
A tax-positive land use that funds schools, roads, and public services
Modern data centers are among the most tax-positive developments a community can attract. They occupy industrial or commercial land, require minimal school enrollment impact, and generate property tax, sales tax on equipment, and utility revenue that fund essential public services.
In many counties, a single large data center contributes more to the local tax base than the entire downtown retail district — without the traffic, parking, or service demands of denser uses.
- Zero school-age population impact on enrollment
- Minimal road traffic compared to industrial facilities
- No hazardous materials, no significant noise or air impact
- Long-term stable tax revenues for 20–40 year asset life
– Workforce development
High-wage jobs that don’t require a four-year degree
Data centers employ electricians, HVAC technicians, security professionals, network engineers, facilities managers, and operations specialists. Many of these roles start at $55,000–$85,000 per year and require technical certifications, not bachelor’s degrees.
Facilities also partner with community colleges and trade schools to build local pipelines — turning data center development into a long-term workforce investment for the region.
- Construction phase: 1,000+ skilled trade jobs per campus
- Operations phase: 100–150 permanent full-time positions
- Indirect employment: 5–8 jobs supported per direct position
- Community college and apprenticeship partnerships
– By The Numbers
