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America's Job Market Barely Grew Last Year - Here’s The Final Numbers

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Nate Gregory
Published Mar 31, 2026
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A robotic arm processes digital icons of people on a conveyor belt labeled with job figures, surrounded by stacks labeled "debt" and "unemployment," highlighting the final numbers shaping America's job market.
Summary:
  • The U.S. added just 181,000 jobs in all of 2025 - down from 1.46 million the year before - making it the weakest hiring year since the pandemic.
  • January 2026 brought 130,000 new jobs, more than doubling what forecasters expected and offering the first real sign of a turnaround.
  • February wiped the gains with 92,000 job losses, pushing unemployment back to 4.4% and raising fresh doubts about the labor market's direction.

The government just rewrote 2025. The new version is a lot uglier.

Federal data originally showed employers adding 584,000 jobs last year. After revisions, the real number was 181,000 - nearly 70% fewer than first reported.

That makes 2025 the weakest full year for hiring since the pandemic. Outside of a recession, you'd have to go back to 2003 to find a worse stretch.

The Revisions Tell the Real Story

The Bureau of Labor Statistics cut 862,000 jobs from its count covering March 2024 through March 2025. Four separate months last year - January, June, August, and October - actually showed net losses.

Why were the first estimates so far off? Fewer businesses have been responding to government surveys since the pandemic, which makes early numbers less accurate. Fed Chair Jerome Powell flagged the issue in December, saying monthly reports were likely overstating hiring by about 60,000 jobs per month.

For investors, the takeaway is simple - the labor market was cooling faster than the data suggested.

January Brought a Flash of Good News

Heading into 2026, hiring picked up. Employers added 130,000 roles in January, more than double what economists had penciled in.

Healthcare carried the load, adding 137,000 positions on its own. Factory jobs rose by 5,000 - their first gain in a full year.

But leisure and hospitality - a bellwether for how freely consumers are spending - added just 1,000 jobs. That's the kind of number that makes investors pay attention, because it hints that everyday spending is slowing.

Then February Wiped It Out

The bounce didn't hold. Employers cut 92,000 positions in February, with losses hitting nearly every major sector. Manufacturing dropped 12,000. Construction lost 11,000.

Even healthcare - the one industry that had been propping up the entire job market - shed 19,000 roles. A nurses' strike across California and Hawaii involving 31,000 workers played a big role.

Add the first two months together and the economy gained just 34,000 jobs. For context, that's barely a blip for a labor market this large.

What to Watch

The Fed meets March 17-18, and this data gives officials no clear reason to cut rates. Oil prices have jumped almost 30% in a single week, with the Iran conflict sending Brent crude above $92 a barrel. That creates an inflation problem on top of a hiring problem.

Workers who kept their jobs still saw raises - pay climbed 3.8% compared to a year ago. And weekly jobless claims have stayed low, which means companies aren't laying people off in waves. They're just not bringing anyone new on.

The labor market isn't cracking. It's stuck - waiting for a reason to move in either direction.

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