For years, Miami has been cast as Silicon Valley’s pandemic-era escape hatch — a sunny refuge for tech billionaires and crypto founders fleeing California.
New data, however, suggests the story is more complicated. Rather than a one-way exodus, the relationship between the two hubs has settled into a steady, two-way exchange of talent and capital.
The pipeline between them first began to gain traction during the pandemic, and the number of tech workers in Miami overall has continued to grow through 2025.
Palantir, which was based in Palo Alto before moving to Denver in 2020, relocated its headquarters to Miami in February. Citadel relocated its global headquarters to Miami in 2022, calling the city “a destination of choice for the global financial industry.” Tech leaders like Mark Zuckerberg, Larry Page, and Sergey Brin are also snapping up real estate there.
Business Insider gathered data from Revelio, PitchBook, and LinkedIn to analyze the links between Silicon Valley (including the San Francisco and San Jose metropolitan areas) and Miami. Here’s what we found.
Over the years, Silicon Valley and Miami have established a tech network that goes both ways. While the number of workers moving from Miami to Silicon Valley is smaller, it has remained consistent. So, rather than a one-way migration, it is an ongoing exchange between the two regions.
Revelio’s findings are based on aggregated publicly available profiles and postings, which allow it to track individual employment histories and job postings over time.
Major companies began expanding their footprint in Miami during the height of the tech boom between 2021 and 2022. Small and midsize firms also account for a meaningful portion of overall tech employment, however, suggesting Miami’s tech ecosystem isn’t driven solely by a handful of headline-grabbing corporate relocations, but by a wider range of companies operating in the region.
Even as layoffs mounted and hiring cooled between 2023 and 2024, the overall head count continued to grow. This stability suggests that firms of all sizes are holding onto their Miami operations rather than pulling back when things slow down.
According to LinkedIn hiring data, the overall labor market took a turn for the worse in 2023, and Miami was no exception. Hiring in the area was down 20% from the prior year. In 2024, however, that decrease in hiring slowed to about 10%.
Hiring in the Miami-Fort Lauderdale area began to stabilize in 2025, and it posted a positive year-over-year increase in October of last year. It was the first time since mid-2022, LinkedIn found.
San Francisco remains king in terms of both the number of venture capital deals over the last six years and their values, according to PitchBook data. Miami follows a similar pattern to the workforce head count. Seed funding deals in Miami peaked in 2021 before gradually falling.
The findings suggest that Miami and Silicon Valley may not be equals in the tech industry, but both are now hubs in their own right.




