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Boston's Open for Business

The Business Strategy Team helps companies of all sizes that are seeking to relocate, expand, or stay and grow in Boston. 

Boston is one of the nation’s oldest big cities, settled almost 400 years ago and the birthplace of the American Revolution. It is also one of the most innovative, global, and forward-thinking cities in the world with a robust talent pool, world class institutions, and thriving startup ecosystem.

The Business Strategy Team focuses on attracting and retaining key industries—such as tech, life science, manufacturing, and the creative economy—and helping businesses of all sizes who are working to grow and scale in Boston. In addition to business development work, our team also includes the Cannabis Equity Program and the Office of Global Affairs.

What Companies Are Saying

" Boston [has a] thriving business community, deep academic partnerships and cultural vibrancy."
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Chris Cocks, CEO of Hasbro
" Boston is ranked one of the best cities in the world to attract and retain talent."
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Skip Kodak, President of the LEGO Group in the Americas
" We are committed to being supportive neighbors in this hub of discovery and innovation."
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Daniel Skovronsky, M.D., Ph.D., chief scientific officer and president, Lilly Research Laboratories, president, Lilly Immunology
" It was a pretty easy decision to say: ‘Hey, we’d like to stay.’"
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DAVID FOSS, PWC MANAGING PARTNER OF BOSTON OFFICE

Why Boston?

Boston continues to punch above its weight, remaining competitive when compared to other regions of the nation and world. Mayor Michelle Wu, in collaboration with our business community, is working to make Boston a home for everyone and the talent capital of the world.

Boston is home to approximately 30 colleges and universities—from Harvard to Northeastern to Franklin Cummings Tech. In total, they enrolled approximately 160,000 students in 2024, of whom approximately 94,000 also lived in Boston. This represents a 10% increase from 2019. 

Each year thousands of students graduate from Boston colleges and universities ready to enter the workforce. In 2022, Boston institutions conferred 1,552 Associate’s degrees, 21,337 Bachelor’s degrees, 20,616 Master’s degrees, and 4,988 Doctorate degrees. 

Boston’s workforce has a high level of educational attainment. Among full-time workers working in Suffolk County, nearly 70% have a Bachelor’s degree or higher, and 31% have a graduate degree

Ranking third only to Silicon Valley and New York City, Boston is one of the world’s largest and most successful startup ecosystems. 

Boston has ranked second in VC funding for Artificial Intelligence (AI) companies in the U.S. since 2020, and remains a top five global hub for AI.

Massachusetts-headquartered companies received $7.89 billion in venture capital (VC) funding in 2024, $220 million more than in 2023, accounting for 28.3% of all national VC investments behind only California (41.6%).

The city of Boston’s innovation hubs lead in regional engagement compared to those in Cambridge or Somerville. Those located in the city of Boston, such as MassRobotics, have 90% occupancy by start-ups, whereas those in Cambridge and Somerville are at  approximately 70% occupancy. And in 2024, Boston surpassed the city of Cambridge in VC Funding haul–$2.3 billion versus $2.2 billion. 

Boston Logan International Airport offers direct flights to more than 80 domestic destinations across the United States, as well as over 50 nonstop international destinations on four continents as of 2025. In total, Logan provides nonstop service to over 130 cities worldwide, making it one of the most globally connected airports in North America.

Boston’s Thomas M. Menino Convention & Exhibition Center (MCEC) and Hynes Convention Center host over 700,000 attendees annually for major events such as PAX East, the Yankee Dental Congress, the New England Auto Show, and leading life sciences and technology conferences, fueling business growth and tourism across the city.

Boston is a significant hub for international diplomacy in the United States, hosting the Consular Corps for nearly 60 countries. These diplomatic and commercial representatives operate out of approximately 25 career consular offices and 35 honorary offices across the city and surrounding areas.

Boston is the safest major city in the country.

 

Boston has approximately 217 city parks, playgrounds, and athletic fields, along with 65 squares, 17 fountains, and 75 game courts within its public green spaces. Overall, there are nearly 300 parks and open spaces throughout the city.

Every Boston resident lives within a 10-minute walk of a park, making Boston one of only two U.S. cities where this is true for the entire population. The city also maintains over 60 playgrounds as part of its park and recreation system.

Boston ranks second among major U.S. cities in the number of arts and cultural organizations per capita, following only San Francisco. The city is home to over 1,500 nonprofit arts and culture organizations, amounting to one of the densest concentrations among American metropolitan areas.

Boston is home to seven Fortune 500 headquarters, including State Street, Vertex, Liberty Mutual, Wayfair, Eversource, American Tower, and soon, Hasbro.

Boston features more than 100 million square feet of Class A Office space across the metro, housing firms of all types. Recent headquarters that relocated to Boston include the LEGO Group, Dynatrace, and Hasbro.

Boston is the sneaker capital of America with several shoe headquarters calling the city home, including New Balance, Converse, Clarks, Puma, and Reebok.

Three of the nation's largest Real Estate Investment Trust companies (REITs) – American Tower, BXP, and Stag Industrial – are based in Boston. Boston is the largest city in the region and the center of New England’s economy. Its importance to the region is shown by its role as a generator of jobs and tax revenues.

Boston is the life sciences capital of the world, boasting more than 500 life science companies. The Greater Boston area is a major hub for the industry, housing nearly 1,000 biotechnology companies.

Industry giants such as Vertex and Gingko Bioworks have their headquarters in Boston. Many foreign-based firms such as Servier and CRISPR, as well as companies based in other parts of the US (Eli Lilly, Merck) also have large research operations in Boston.

In addition to the institutional research labs based in Boston’s colleges and hospitals, Boston is home to more than 16 million square feet of commercial life science lab space by the end of 2024, one of the largest concentrations in the country.

Boston is home to 4 of the top 5 NIH-funded research hospitals

Boston’s world-renowned healthcare infrastructure includes Massachusetts General Hospital, one of the world’s best hospitals, and the Longwood Medical and Academic Area, including top cancer centers, medical schools, hospitals, and research and development centers.

Among the thousands of hospitals reviewed, US News and World Report placed three local facilities (Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Boston Children’s Hospital) onto its 2024-25 Honor Roll, due to strong performances in many categories.

In the Longwood Medical and Academic Area (LMA), there are 21 medical, academic, and research institutions that employ 73,000 people. More than 24,000 students attend schools/programs in the district. This area received $1.3 billion in NIH funding in FY 2024, which is higher than NIH funding in 44 individual US States. Notable occupiers in the district include Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Merck Research Laboratories, and the Boston Children’s Hospital.

Anchored by over 250,000 workers, the Boston metro has one of the nation’s largest and most diverse tech-focused economies, filling millions of square feet of office space. The market features companies focused on robotics, AI, cybersecurity, big data, social media, healthtech, fintech, climate tech, ecommerce, and SAAS.

While many west coast companies like Microsoft, Google, Autodesk, Amazon, Oracle, and Facebook have a sizable presence in the region, there are plenty of homegrown companies that are also making an impact in the city. That list includes the likes of CarGurus, Wayfair, Toast, DraftKings, Rapid7, WHOOP, Klaviyo, Analog Devices.

Boston is an emerging leader in the Climate Tech economy, and there are over 340 climate tech companies headquartered in the region, the most per capita nationwide. These include companies like Schneider Electric, USEFULL, ArkeaBio, Innovasea, IndigoAg, and more.

Boston is home to nation leading industry incubators and accelerators supporting emerging tech companies in a range of cutting edge industries including MassRobotics and MassChallenge in the Seaport, Cambridge Innovation Center and Venture Guides in Downtown, and Suffolk Technologies in Newmarket.

Boston is home to a wide range of industrial establishments, from large-scale logistics hubs and advanced manufacturing plants to smaller construction firms and wholesale distributors. Many of these businesses are clustered in key industrial areas such as the Newmarket Square District, the Raymond L. Flynn Marine Park, and along major freight corridors, reflecting the importance of access to transportation infrastructure, industrial zoning, and proximity to regional markets.

Connection to the greater New England region, nation, and beyond via a network of rail terminals, highways, waterways and airports. Freight networks operate well in Boston; I-93 and the South Boston Bypass Road serve regional connections. There is easy movement of goods in and around the Boston region, including Port of Boston's Paul W. Conley Container Terminal.

There are more than 4,000 industrial businesses in Boston that employ more than 65,000 people. Boston’s industrial sector contributed 7.9% of the city’s Real Gross City Product (GCP) spanning mining, utilities, construction, manufacturing, wholesale trade, transportation and warehousing, Boston’s industrial sector is robust and diversified. Today, it continues to evolve—integrating new technologies, adapting to global supply chain dynamics, and contributing critical infrastructure to the region’s growth.

Creative industries support the employment of 70,000 workers in Boston. Of these, 35,905 are jobs that are directly related to the creative industry and 34,095 are indirect. New England has an especially high concentration of artists compared to the U.S., with a 20-percent higher prevalence of artists in its employment base.

Creative industries contribute about $15 billion in GCP to Boston’s economy. Creative industries in Boston provide about $490 million in state income taxes.

Boston hosts over 500 arts and culture events per year. The city is home to 16 major museums and nine historic districts. There are over 500 pieces of public art in Boston.

Economic Indicators & Reports

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