State
AI Job Risk in Florida
Florida scores 53.7/100 for AI job risk, ranking #18 out of 54 us states. That puts it in the top third for AI exposure β a relatively large share of local jobs are in occupations that AI can automate or significantly change.
Ranked #18 of 54 us states
Rank
#18
more exposed than most
Total Workforce
10 M
jobs analysed
High-Risk Jobs
390 K
4% of workforce
Out of
54
us states
Most at Risk
Jobs in Florida most likely to be automated or transformed by AI
Telemarketer
13 K employed
Data Entry Keyer
13 K employed
Transcriptionist
2.7 K employed
Bookkeeper
110 K employed
Tax Preparer
3.9 K employed
Customer Service Representative
240 K employed
Copywriter
2.7 K employed
Computer Programmer
5.1 K employed
Proofreader
260 employed
Translator
3.2 K employed
Safest from AI
Jobs in Florida least likely to be affected by AI
Tree Trimmer
2.9 K employed
Roofer
25 K employed
Grounds Maintenance Worker
Lifeguard
9 K employed
Landscaper
83 K employed
Zookeeper
17 K employed
Park Ranger
120 employed
Massage Therapist
8.9 K employed
Farm Worker
11 K employed
Concrete Finisher
16 K employed
What this means
The exposure score (53.7/100) measures how much of Florida's workforce is in jobs that AI can automate or significantly change. It's not a prediction that jobs will disappear β it's a measure of how exposed the local economy is to AI-driven change.
How it works: We score 289 occupations from 0 (AI has little impact) to 100 (AI can do most of the job) using 10 research sources. We then match these scores to real employment data for Florida, weighting by how many people actually work in each role.
High-risk jobs (score 60+) include roles like customer service, data entry, and bookkeeping where AI can already handle most tasks. Low-risk jobs (score under 30) include trades, healthcare, and social work where physical presence or human judgement is essential.
Full methodology · Data covers 31% of occupation categories in this area