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Indicators/Topics/Labor/Unemployment rate/United States

United States

Unemployment rate

The unemployment rate measures the share of the labor force actively looking for work but not employed. It is a lagging but essential gauge of labor-market slack.

IndicatorsLabor MarketUnemployment Rate
BLSWorld BankFREDOECD
Frequencymonthly · +2Transformlevel

Source: BLS · LNS14000000

Stored official data

Unemployment Rate in United States was 4.3% on April 1, 2026, unchanged from the prior observation. Charted from monthly observations in % of labor force.

Latest4.30%
MoM0.00%
YoY+2.38%
10Y Avg4.56%
Latest observationApril 1, 2026
Model surprise-0.05%

Timeframe

Value transform

Version overlay

Chart appearance

Overlays & outputNBER bandsAuto Y
Axis & export

Unemployment Rate time series chart. Showing observations from January 2016 to April 2026. Latest value 4.3%.

Min3.40%
Mean4.58%
Max14.80%
Latest observationApril 1, 2026

Source evidence

Tier 1 - criticalOfficial U.S. labor + price stats; release-critical.Action: deepen nowExpected coverage: 50,000 series.
Source noteProvider health
SourceU.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Bureau of Labor Statistics
Native keyProvider-native identifier used to reconcile this country/provider series.
LNS14000000
FreshnessDisplayed as stored official data.The provider-backed series is outside its expected freshness window, so this view should be refreshed before production use.Fetched: May 26, 2026.Latest observation flag: Estimated.
Stored · 2026-04-01
HistoryBLS does not expose a true vintage API. Each observation carries a footnote code that tags it as preliminary (P), revised (R), or final.BLS does not publish historical vintages; revision-status tags are derived from per-observation footnotes.
Provider revision tag
ReuseCommercial use: yes.Redistribution: allowed.Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (LNS14000000). Accessed 2026-05-26.
Public domain

Research notes

88 · Strong
ComparabilityLabor definitions vary by survey and agency: Do not mix levels across definitions; compare rates or changes only after matching population, adjustment, and frequency.Seasonal-adjustment status needs attention: Prefer same-adjustment comparisons, or transform to year-over-year changes before cross-series comparison.Revision evidence is not a full historical vintage archive: Use this as current-value or captured-forward evidence unless the series is explicitly labelled source-native vintage.
3 notes
QualitySource authority: 100/100. Source kind is classified as official national.Methodology completeness: 100/100. 100% of core provider, geography, unit, frequency, citation, and revision fields are populated.Timeliness and freshness: 90/100. 123 observations available; latest observation 2026-04-01; platform fetch 2026-05-26T09:45:39.359Z; release status estimated; data status liveRevision and vintage depth: 78/100. BLS does not expose a true vintage API. Each observation carries a footnote code that tags it as preliminary (P), revised (R), or final.
3/6 strong
CitationUnemployment Rate (BLS: LNS14000000, United States, retrieved May 26, 2026)
Retrieved May 26, 2026

Continue browsing

Browse all Labor Market indicatorsAdjacent concepts across providers and countries.View United States macro coverageEvery curated indicator for this country.View BLS catalogFilter the discovery catalog by this provider.
Series details, provenance, and revision toolsMetadata, release notes, revision history, and related series.

Series details

SourceU.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
CategoryLabor Market
FrequencyMonthly
Unit% of labor force
Latest observationApril 1, 2026
Platform last fetchMay 26, 2026
Transformslevel, mom, yoy
About this series

Civilian unemployment rate from the BLS household survey.

Related measures

Adjacent and similar concepts available for United States.

U-6 underemployment rateLabor force participation rateNonfarm payroll employmentAverage hourly earningsHourly earningsEmployment cost indexInitial jobless claimsContinued jobless claims
Open country pivot

The reading right now

As of April 2026, Unemployment rate for United States stood at 4.3%. That is unchanged from the prior month. Over the trailing five years, the series has averaged 4.09%, ranging from a low of 3.4% in April 2023 to a high of 6.1% in April 2021. The current reading sits 0.27 percentage points below its trailing ten-year mean of 4.57%.

Computed from the observation series on this page. Numbers update when the underlying provider revises the data.

About this indicator

About

The unemployment rate measures the share of the labor force that is jobless and actively looking for work. The Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes the headline U-3 figure on the first Friday of each month, based on the Current Population Survey of about 60,000 households conducted in the week containing the 12th of the prior month. The headline rate anchors most cyclical interpretations of the U.S. economy: a rising rate signals slack, a falling rate signals tightness.

Why it matters

Unemployment is half of the Federal Reserve's dual mandate. The Fed reads the rate alongside wage growth and labor force participation when calibrating policy. Markets price surprises asymmetrically: a higher-than-expected print typically rallies bonds on rate-cut bets and sells equities on earnings worry, while a lower-than-expected print does the reverse. The Sahm rule treats a 0.5 percentage-point jump from the recent low as a recession marker.

How it's computed

BLS computes U-3 as unemployed people divided by the labor force, where 'unemployed' means joblessness plus an active search in the past four weeks. The labor force excludes anyone not searching, including discouraged workers and people out for other reasons. Each January's print is benchmarked against population controls, which can produce small revisions in early prints of a new year.

Pitfalls

The headline rate can fall for reasons that look bad on inspection — for example, people leaving the labor force entirely. The participation rate and the broader U-6 (which includes part-time-for-economic-reasons and marginally attached workers) catch most of these. Seasonal adjustment can be unstable around holidays and pandemic-shocked windows; the not-seasonally-adjusted series is the raw print.

Editorial vintage
Reviewed 2026-05-21
Hand-written by the Macro by Mark editorial team. Source data and methodology links live in the series-details panel above.