Major industries in southeast Alaska include
commercial fishing and
tourism (primarily the cruise ship industry). The regional economic development organization Southeast Conference publishes an annual
Southeast Alaska By the Numbers which summarizes the region's economy, and in 2024 included data on total jobs, wages, tourism jobs, seafood sales, regional population, and healthcare jobs.
Logging Logging has been an important industry in the past, but has been steadily declining with competition from other areas and the closure of the region's major pulp mills; the Alaska Forest Association described the situation as "desperate" in 2011. Its members include Alcan Forest Products (owned by Canadian Transpac Group, one of the top 5 log exporters in North America) and Viking Lumber, which is based in
Craig, Alaska. Debates over whether to expand logging in the federally owned Tongass are not uncommon.
Mining Mining remains important in the northern area with the
Juneau mining district containing the
Kensington mine owned by
Coeur Mining and
Admiralty mining district, primarily Greens Creek operated by
Hecla Mining, hosting active mines as of 2025. Gold was discovered in 1880 and played an important part in the early history of the region, although as of 2025 Greens Creek is notably focused on silver. In the 2010s, mines increasingly began to be explored and eventually completed in neighboring
British Columbia, upstream of important rivers such as the
Unuk and the
Stikine, which became known as the transboundary mining issue. In 2014, the dam breach at the
Mount Polley mine focused attention on the issue, and an agreement between Canada and Alaska was drafted in 2015. The proposed
Kerr Sulphurets Mitchell exploration is upstream of the Unuk. Mines upstream of the Stikine include the Red Chris, which is owned by the same company (Imperial Metals) as the Mount Polley mine.
Healthcare Major hospitals include
Bartlett Regional Hospital in Juneau and PeaceHealth Ketchikan Medical Center in Ketchikan.
Southeast Alaska Regional Health Consortium runs healthcare facilities across 27 communities as of 2022, including hospitals in Sitka and Wrangell; although it originally served Native Americans only, it has expanded access and combined with other local facilities over time.
Shipbuilding Due to the fishing and ferries in the region, ship building and maintenance are economically significant. Ketchikan hosts a shipbuilding yard owned by
Vigor Industrial.
Tourism Tourists visit southeast Alaska primarily in the summer, and most visit via
cruise ships, which run from April 15 to October 30. In 2019, around 1.3 million people visited Alaska by cruise ship. The northbound Inside Passage cruise commonly starts from either Seattle or Vancouver, Canada and stops in various ports including Ketchikan, Juneau, and Skagway. One-way trips will end in Whittier or Seward. The cruise ship industry became prominent in the 1960s after cruise ship entrepreneur
Stanley B. McDonald repurposed a transport ship named Princess Pat, founding
Princess Cruises to do leisure cruises which expanded into southeast Alaska by 1969. The TV series
The Love Boat was set on a Princess cruise and featured episodes in Alaska; it also helped to popularize cruising generally which helped it grow rapidly between 1977 and 1987. == History ==