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You are here: Home / BLS / March Employment Report for February 2026

March Employment Report for February 2026

March 7, 2026 by Tim McMahon Leave a Comment

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) released its February
employment / unemployment report
on March 6th, 2026.

Employment / Unemployment 

Adj U3 4.4 percent

  • Seasonally Adjusted U-3 was 4.4% up from 4.3%
  • Unadjusted U-3 was 4.7%
  • Unadjusted U-6 was 8.3%
  • Labor Force Participation was 62.0%
  • Unadjusted Employment rose from 156.723 million to 157.286 million
  • 30,000 of the Job losses are temporary due to a strike
  • ADP is reporting 63,000 Jobs added in February, saying “Hiring jumped in February, delivering the best showing for job gains since November 2025″
  • Next Update: April 3rd, 2026

Summary:

The BLS adjusted many of its numbers this month. According to the BLS “January 2026 estimates were revised to incorporate updated population controls.” January’s UnAdjusted U-6 was increased from 8.7% to 8.8%, UnAdjusted U3 was increased from 4.6% to 4.7%, but the Seasonally Adjusted U3 remained the same at 4.3%. The changes were based on the adjustment of the Civilian population from 274.982 million to 274.676 million.

According to the Commissioner of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics:

“Total nonfarm payroll employment edged down by 92,000 in February, and the unemployment rate changed little at 4.4 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Employment in health care decreased, reflecting strike activity. Employment in information and federal government continued to trend down… Both the unemployment rate, at 4.4 percent, and the number of unemployed people, at 7.6 million, changed little in February.”

You can read the full BLS report here.

As usual, they are talking about “Seasonally Adjusted Jobs,” and there was a major strike of Healthcare workers in California and Hawaii that accounted for 30,000 of those lost jobs, which will be back shortly.

Looking at the Unadjusted Establishment Survey report we see…
Originally, the BLS reported employment of 156.714 million for January, which they adjusted slightly to 156.723 million this month.

They are currently reporting 157.286 million jobs for February which is actually an increase of 572,000 jobs based on their original numbers. The LFPR was originally 62.5% in January, but January’s numbers were adjusted down to 62.1% this month. February is said to be 62.0%.

AI Is an Easy Scapegoat for Layoffs

Several major companies across tech, finance, logistics, and consulting have publicly cited AI or “AI-driven efficiencies” as justification for layoffs. The most explicit examples include Block, Amazon, Salesforce, Accenture, and dozens more identified in aggregated reports. Some CEOs and analysts argue many firms are using AI as a scapegoat for deeper business problems.

Block cut ~40% of its workforce (~4,000 jobs). CEO Jack Dorsey said AI “enables a significantly smaller team to do more and do it better.” But they were really inefficient to start with.

Amazon blamed AI for a 14,000-job reduction. Meta cited AI investments while cutting jobs; critics say the real cause was overexpansion. Google said layoffs linked to “AI-driven restructuring,” though OpenAI’s Sam Altman says AI is not the real driver. According to CNBC, many firms “significantly overhired” and are now using AI as a public-facing justification for layoffs.

Bottom line: Although AI is enabling some productivity gains and role consolidation, especially in customer support, basic coding, content production, and back-office workflows. But, announced “AI-related layoffs” are still a small share of total layoffs, and Macro productivity data doesn’t yet show a clear, AI-driven step-change. Many firms appear to be using AI as an excuse to impress investors, signal “modernization,” or cover overhiring and weak demand rather than reporting actual savings.

On Wednesday, the European Central Bank (“ECB”) contradicted the AI job loss narrative by saying:
“Companies that make significant use of AI are about 4% more likely to take on additional staff. In other words, AI-intensive firms tend, on average, to hire rather than fire. Much the same can be said of investment in AI: firms that invest in AI are nearly 2% more likely to hire additional staff than those that don’t.”

Current Unemployment Rate Chart

Unemployment is 1% above the January and April lows of 2023.Seasonally Adj U-3 Unemployment Rate2 for Feb26

At 157.286 million jobs for February, actual employment is above the 156.714 million jobs originally reported in January, on the Unadjusted Establishment Survey report, but still well below October’s originally released numbers.

Date Latest BLS Numbers
(in Millions)
Original BLS Numbers
(in Millions)
Change from Original
Feb-2026 157.286 157.286 NA
Jan-2026 156.723 156.714 9,000
Dec-2025 159.363 160.448 -1,085
Nov-2025 159.571 160.652 -1,081
Oct-2025 160.397 160.411 -14,000
Sep-2025 159.732 159.732 NA
Aug-2025 159.415 159.410 5,000
Jul-2025 159.219 159.227 -8,000
Jun-2025 160.256 160.475 -219,000
May-2025 159.930 159.964 -34,000
Apr-2025 159.227 159.316 -89,000
Mar-2025 158.402 158.506 -104,000
Feb-2025 157.944 157.983 -39,000
Jan-2025 157.095 157.091 4,000
Dec-2024 159.943 160.458 -515,000
Nov-2024 159.882 160.560 -678,000
Oct-2024 159.352 160.007 -655,000
Sep-2024 158.527 159.177 -650,000
Aug-2024 158.070 158.650 -580,000
Jul-2024 157.771 158.445 -674,000
Jun-2024 158.722 159.392 -670,000
May-2024 158.256 158.918 -662,000
Apr-2024 157.438 158.016 -578,000
Mar-2024 156.612 157.218 -606,000
Feb-2024 156.007 156.555 -548,000
Jan-2024 154.942 155.626 -684,000
Dec-2023 157.828 158.228 -400,000
Nov-2023 157.950 158.461 -511,000
Oct-2023 157.531 157.984 -453,000
Sep-2023 156.563 157.001 -438,000
Aug-2023 156.107 156.302 -195,000
July 2023 155.779 156.126 -347,000
June 2023 156.701 156.963 -262,000
May-2023 156.038 156.306 -268,000
Apr-2023 155.155 155.337 -182,000
Mar-2023 154.253 154.517 -264,000
Feb-2023 153.818 153.955 -137,000
Jan-2023 152.689 152.844 -155,000

Current Employment for Feb 26

See Current Employment  for more information.

BLS: February 2026 Employment by Sector

The BLS employment “bubble chart” based on the Establishment Survey Data gives us a good picture of the Seasonally Adjusted employment numbers.

The Bubble’s Size tells us the total Employment for that industry (i.e., larger bubbles mean more people are employed in that sector).

The bubble’s location on the chart tells us that there has been a change in Employment Levels over the most recent month… A bubble further to the right indicates larger job growth. A bubble’s vertical location on the chart shows the average industry salary.

Remember, these are Seasonally Adjusted Numbers, so they aren’t cumulative!

Bubble Chart Feb 2026Looking at the above chart, we can see that only 5 sectors showed employment growth in February. While last month, only four sectors were below zero (i.e., left of the zero line, i.e., lost workers). But for those who retain their jobs, wages continue to increase. Note: ADP only shows 3 sectors declining.

BLS Average Weekly Wages

Date Average Weekly Wage
February 2026 $1,280.08
January 2026 $1,274.93
December 2025 $1,266.08
November 2025 $1,264.30
October 2025 $1,258.90
September 2025 $1,253.43
August 2025 $1,249.33
July 2025 $1,249.89
June 2025 $1,241.46
May 2025 $1,243.03
April 2025 $1,236.86
March 2025 $1,231.20
February 2025 $1,225.21
January 2025 $1,223.17
December 2024 $1,224.17
November 2024 $1,221.42
October 2024 $1,216.28
September 2024 $1,209.31
August 2024 $1,207.70
July 2024 $1,199.39
June 2024 $1,200.50
May 2024 $1,197.41
April 2024 $1,191.93
March 2024 $1,193.34
February 2024 $1,185.75
January 2024 $1,178.16
December 2023 $1,175.46
November 2023 $1,173.04
October 2023 $1,166.20
September 2023 $1,165.47
August 2023 $1,163.41
July 2023 $1,157.28
June 2023 $1,155.15
May 2023 $1,146.99
April 2023 $1,147.58
March 2023 $1,141.34
February 2023 $1,141.61
January 2023 $1,146.14
December 2022 $1,125.73
November 2022 $1,129.01
October 2022 $1,124.01
September 2022 $1,119.87
August 2022 $1,116.42
July 2022 $1,116.54
June 2022 $1,106.76
May 2022 $1,105.47
April 2022 $1,102.01
December 2021 $1,086.46

BLS Employment Levels by Industry

February 2026, Seasonally Adjusted Employment

Note: The monthly increase is Seasonally Adjusted, so even though February Employment is down from 603,000 to 600,000, for Mining and Logging, the adjusted numbers indicate that employment was down by -2,000.

Industry Monthly Increase Ave. Weekly Earnings February Employment Level January Employment Level
Total Private Employment -86,000 $1,280.08 135,143,000 135,326,000
Mining and Logging -2,000 $1,849.48 600,000 603,000
Construction -11,000 $1,611.72 8,309,000 8,308,000
Manufacturing -12,000 $1,459.24 12,573,000 12,590,000
Wholesale trade 6,000 $1,551.54 6,051,000 6,042,700
Retail trade 2,300 $786.60 15,426,500 15,402,900
Transportation and Warehousing -11,300 $1,235.77 6,531,700 6,548,000
Utilities 1,300 $2,344.91 606,200 606,200
Information -11,000 $2,058.80 2,812,000 2,834,000
Financial Activities 10,000 $1,834.13 9,166,000 9,162,000
Professional and Business Services -5,000 $1,655.42 22,385,000 22,440,000
Private Education and Health -34,000 $1,181.42 27,722,000 27,779,000
Leisure and Hospitality -27,000 $596.96 16,922,000 16,982,000
Other Services 8,000 $1,087.55 6,039,000 6,028,000

Source: BLS

ADP® National Employment Report

ADP provides an independent (non-government) estimate of private-sector employment and pay, based on data derived from ADP client payrolls. According to ADP®, In collaboration with Stanford Digital Economy Lab.

Note: The numbers are released a few days before the BLS numbers and are often quite different. BLS says -90,000 jobs, ADP says +63,000 jobs.

ADP: Private employers added 63,000 jobs in February

  • Hiring jumped in February, delivering the best showing for job gains since November 2025. Construction, education, and health services led the growth.

Nela Richardson March 2026

 

 

Source: ADP®

ADP Private Employment by Establishment Size

Change by Est Size for Feb 2026

 

ADP Job Gainers / Losers

ADP Gainers & Decliners-for Feb 2026

Seasonally Adjusted Unemployment Rate Chart 1948-Present

Adjusted U3 Zone Chart

Less Than Full Employment

This chart compares employment levels with the (inverted) unemployment rate.

Full Employment is when everyone who wants a job has one. It is generally considered to be around 3%. After the unemployment rate almost touched the magic full employment line in April 2023, it began moving away (i.e., higher unemployment).

Note: The Unemployment rate is inverted to track the employment rate. Neither is Seasonally Adjusted. For more information see Employment vs. Unemployment.

Emp vs unemp2 for Feb 2026

Note: Full employment is not considered to be at zero percent because even when employers are having difficulty finding employees, some people are still unemployed due to either:

  1. Structural unemployment (mismatch between worker skills and job requirements, i.e., not enough training) or
  2. Frictional unemployment. There will always be people who have quit or have lost a seasonal job and are in the process of getting a new job. Or simply because they quit their job, knowing it would be easy to find another (hopefully better) job.

Seasonally Adjusted U1 through U6 Unemployment Rates

U1 thru U6 for Feb 2026

 

Labor Force Participation Rate

The LFPRwas adjusted from 62.5% in January to 62.1%. February was 62.0%.

Note: A rising LFPR means that a greater portion of the Non-Institutional population is in the Labor Force.

Labor Force Participation Rate Feb 26

 

 

The Labor Force Participation Rate is the percentage of the Non-Institutional Population that makes up the Labor Force.

And the Employment – Population Ratio is the percentage of the Total Population that is Employed.  We created a chart to help explain the difference. The Employment–Population Ratio is the percentage of the largest circle to the smallest circle in this diagram. In contrast, the LFPR is the relationship of the 2nd largest circle to the 3rd largest circle (entire green circle).

Labor Force Diagram

Employment-Population Ratio

By Gender and Age

This chart shows the Employment-Population Ratio by Gender. Men make up a much larger portion of the workforce, i.e., 66.8% of men are employed, and only 56.1% of women are employed. But…

As you can see, 20 years ago, back in 2006, over 72% of men were working and 57.4% of women were working. In 2008, the Great Recession caused a massive decline in employment for both men and women. By December of 2009, only 66.4% of men were working and 55.4% of women. Over the next decade and a half, women workers rebounded back to 56.4%, but men only rebounded to 67.4%.

Emp-Pop Ratio by Age and Gender for Feb 26

Employment-Population Ratio by Race

This chart shows the Employment-Population Ratio by Race (including both Men and Women). As we can see, Hispanics and Asians have the highest percentage of their population employed.

Emp-Pop Ratio by Race for Feb 26.

Percent Unemployed 27 weeks or Longer

27 Week Unemployed Feb 2026

Roughly a quarter (25.3%) of those unemployed have been unemployed for 27 weeks or longer.

Unemployment by Education

Unemployment by Education for Feb 26

Surprisingly, the unemployment rate for those with no High School is at the low end of the normal range, while unemployment for those with a College degree have been gradually increasing since 2022.

 

Read more on UnemploymentData.com.

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Filed Under: BLS Tagged With: 2026, ADP, BLS, February

About Tim McMahon

Work by editor and author, Tim McMahon, has been featured in Bloomberg, CBS News, Wall Street Journal, Christian Science Monitor, Forbes, Washington Post, Drudge Report, The Atlantic, Business Insider, American Thinker, Lew Rockwell, Huffington Post, Rolling Stone, Oakland Press, Free Republic, Education World, Realty Trac, Reason, Coin News, and Council for Economic Education. Connect with Tim on Google+

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