America’s job market stumbled through much of 2025, pushing the unemployment rate to 4.6% in November—the highest level since September 2021. While the rate improved slightly to 4.3% by January 2026, the trend marks a clear departure from the record-low 3.4% achieved in April 2023. The job market’s cooling phase has put 7.36 million Americans out of work.
The unemployment rate climbed to 4.6% in November 2025 before easing to 4.3% by January, leaving 7.36 million Americans jobless.
The shift represents a 0.9 percentage point climb since that 50-year low three years ago. Still, the current rate sits below the long-term average of 5.67% measured since 1948. The labor force participation rate held steady at 62.5% in January, suggesting workers haven’t abandoned their job searches despite tougher conditions. Monetary policy and central bank decisions can influence these trends by affecting borrowing costs and economic growth, and changes in policy rates can alter hiring incentives for businesses interest rates.
Different groups face varying challenges. Black workers experienced the highest unemployment at 7.2%, while white workers saw just 3.7%. Teenagers struggled most with a 13.6% jobless rate, though that figure actually improved from previous months. Adult men and women faced relatively similar rates at 3.8% and 4.0% respectively.
Geography plays a major role too. Washington, DC recorded the nation’s highest unemployment at 6.7%, followed by California at 5.5% and New Jersey at 5.4%. These regional differences highlight how economic conditions vary dramatically across the country. Delaware’s unemployment reached 5.2%, joining Oregon and Nevada at the same elevated level.
The slowdown stems more from cautious hiring than mass layoffs. Job openings dropped to 6.5 million while 7.5 million people searched for work—a telling reversal from previous years when openings exceeded job seekers. Employers added just 130,000 positions in January, with healthcare leading gains at 82,000 new jobs. Meanwhile, the federal government cut 34,000 positions in December alone.
There’s a silver lining for workers who kept their jobs. Wages grew 3.3% over the year ending December 2025, though this marked a slowdown from the prior quarter’s 3.6% increase. Benefits rose 3.4% during the same period. These moderate gains suggest inflation pressures are easing without wages completely stalling. The broader U-6 unemployment rate stood at 8.0% in September, capturing discouraged workers and those stuck in part-time jobs for economic reasons.
The job market’s transformation reminds us that economic cycles shift constantly, sometimes catching everyone off guard.




