Jewish Jobs in New York: Organizations and Career Paths to Explore
New York is the largest Jewish job market in the United States. Here's a local insider's guide to where the jobs actually are.
Andrew Margolin
New York is home to the largest Jewish community in the United States — roughly 1.1 million Jews in the five boroughs alone, and more across the tri-state area. That concentration of community translates directly into density of institutions: more federations, more day schools, more Jewish nonprofits, more community organizations, more Israel-focused entities than anywhere else in the country. For professionals looking for Jewish jobs, New York is the single richest market there is.
But the sheer volume can be disorienting. Here's a practical breakdown of where the jobs actually are — what kinds of organizations are hiring, what career paths are strongest in New York specifically, and how to search effectively.
The NYC Jewish Organizational Landscape
UJA-Federation of New York
UJA-Federation is the largest Jewish philanthropy in the world, and its New York headquarters employs hundreds of professionals across development, communications, program, finance, marketing, and community impact. It's also the anchor funder for dozens of smaller Jewish organizations in the region — many of which hire their own staff. Understanding UJA-Federation and its ecosystem is foundational for anyone pursuing Jewish jobs in New York.
Jewish museums and cultural institutions
New York has more Jewish cultural institutions than any other city. The Jewish Museum on Fifth Avenue, the Museum of Jewish Heritage in Lower Manhattan, the Center for Jewish History, YIVO Institute for Jewish Research — these are real employers with full professional staffs covering curatorial, development, education, public programs, and operations roles.
Day schools and Jewish education
The New York metro area has one of the largest concentrations of Jewish day schools in the world — Orthodox, Conservative, Community, and pluralistic. Administrative, development, and educational leadership roles at these schools represent a significant portion of the NYC Jewish jobs market. This includes everything from admissions directors to CFOs to heads of school.
JCCs and community centers
Multiple JCCs operate in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and the outer boroughs, along with affiliated centers in Westchester, Long Island, and New Jersey. These are full-service organizations with staff in fitness, early childhood education, senior services, programming, and development.
Israel consulate and advocacy organizations
New York is home to a concentration of Israel-focused institutions — the Consulate General of Israel, FIDF, Combined Jewish Philanthropies affiliates, various Israel-US bilateral organizations, and advocacy groups with national headquarters. These orgs hire professionals in communications, development, community affairs, and program management.
Jewish media and publishing
The Forward, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Tablet Magazine, and a range of Jewish podcasts and digital media outlets are based in or connected to New York. Writers, editors, social media managers, and audience development professionals with Jewish sector interest find meaningful work here.
Career Paths That Concentrate in New York
Major gifts and planned giving
The density of high-net-worth Jewish donors in New York makes it the premier market for major gift fundraising in the Jewish sector. Development professionals who specialize in cultivating and closing large gifts will find more opportunity per square mile in New York than anywhere else. Organizations like UJA-Federation, the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC), and large day schools run sophisticated major gifts programs.
Policy, advocacy, and government relations
The American Jewish Committee, ADL, and other advocacy organizations with significant New York operations hire professionals in policy, government relations, and communications. With City Hall, Albany, and proximity to Washington all relevant, advocacy career paths in the Jewish sector are well-supported here.
Jewish education leadership
The pipeline of Jewish educators in New York — from early childhood through adult learning — supports careers in curriculum development, educational administration, and Jewish educational technology. Organizations like the Jewish Education Project are headquartered here and work across the school ecosystem.
Hybrid vs. In-Person: What to Expect at NYC Jewish Orgs
📋 Schedule Expectations
Most Jewish organizations in New York operate on a hybrid schedule — typically 2–3 days in-office per week. Roles with significant donor-facing or community-facing components skew toward more in-person time. It's worth asking directly during the interview process — many organizations will be more flexible than their posting implies.
Smaller nonprofits vary widely — some have moved to fully remote, others never left the office. If location flexibility matters to you, ask early in the process rather than at the offer stage.
Getting Found by NYC Jewish Organizations
If you're based in New York (or open to relocating), putting yourself in front of hiring managers before a role is formally posted is a genuine advantage in a tight professional network. Talent Apply is AllJewishJobs.com's free talent network — create a short profile and let Jewish organizations discover you directly. NYC-based hiring directors browse the talent pool regularly, and a visible profile shortens the path from "we're thinking about this role" to "let's reach out to someone."
For active searching, AllJewishJobs.com aggregates open positions from Jewish organizations across New York and the tri-state area. Filtering by location surfaces a dense set of results — far more relevant than any general-purpose job board.
Making Your Case for a NYC Jewish Role
Competition for Jewish jobs in New York is real. The organizations are desirable employers, the mission alignment is high, and the professional community is relatively small — which means hiring managers frequently know candidates by reputation before the formal process begins.
A few things that matter:
- Your Jewish community involvement. Even informal volunteer work, synagogue affiliation, or participation in Jewish professional networks signals authentic community connection.
- Sector experience. Prior nonprofit experience is valued, but Jewish-sector-specific experience is weighted even more heavily. If you've worked at a Jewish organization before, make it prominent.
- Long-term orientation. Jewish nonprofits in New York have seen turnover challenges. Candidates who communicate genuine investment in the mission — not just the role — stand out.
Browse Jewish jobs in New York on AllJewishJobs.com to see what's currently open. The market is active year-round, with hiring peaks in late spring and early fall as budget cycles align with program calendars.
Browse Jewish Jobs in New York
Explore open positions at UJA-Federation, Jewish museums, day schools, JCCs, advocacy orgs, and more — all in the New York metro area.
See NYC Jobs →
About Andrew Margolin
Founder, AllJewishJobs.com
Andrew Margolin is the founder of AllJewishJobs.com, the modern job board built exclusively for Jewish professionals and the organizations that serve them. Andrew created the platform to make it easier for values-aligned candidates to find careers that match their skills and community connection.
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