12/17/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 12/17/2025 08:43
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U.S. Unemployment Rate |
Transportation Sector Unemployment Rate |
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▲ 0.3 change from same month last year |
↔ 0.0 change from same month last year |
The unemployment rate in the U.S. transportation sector was 4.8% (not seasonally adjusted) in November 2025 according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). These data have been updated on the Bureau of Transportation Statistics' (BTS) Unemployment in Transportation dashboard. In November 2025, the transportation sector unemployment rate remained unchanged from 4.8% in November 2024. Unemployment in the transportation sector reached its highest level during the COVID-19 pandemic (15.7%) in May 2020 and July 2020.
Unemployment in the transportation sector was higher than overall unemployment. BLS reports that the U.S. unemployment rate, not seasonally adjusted, in November 2025 was 4.3% or 0.5 percentage points below the transportation sector rate. Seasonally adjusted, the U.S. unemployment rate in November 2025 was 4.6%.
Seasonally adjusted, employment in the transportation and warehousing sector fell to 6,684,400 in November 2025 - down 0.3% from the previous month and down 0.1% from November 2024. By mode (seasonally adjusted):
NOTES: November 2019 and November 2025 employment (seasonally adjusted) not shown for water (67,700 and 71,400, respectively) or pipeline (51,900 and 61,400, respectively) transportation. All-time highs (seasonally adjusted) with records beginning in 1990: air March 2001 (633,600); pipeline November 2025 (61,400); rail January 1990 (278,100); transit June 2019 (503,900); truck July 2022 (1,587,900); warehousing and storage March 2022 (1,943,100); and water August 2025 (72,400)
Charts updated this month by section include:
Unemployment in the Transportation and Warehousing Sector and in Transportation and Material Moving Occupations
Monthly Employment in the Transportation and Warehousing Sector, Establishment Data
Visit Transportation Economic Trends for more topics.
The unemployment rate is the total number of unemployed persons, expressed as a percentage of the civilian labor force. The civilian labor force includes all persons aged 16 and older who are employed and unemployed; meaning they are either currently working or actively looking for work. Unemployed persons include those who actively sought a job within the last four weeks. People waiting to start a new job who have not actively sought a job in the last four weeks are not counted as employed or unemployed; they are considered to be out of the labor force.
An unemployed person's industry is the industry for the last job they held in the workforce, which may or may not reflect their current job search field or industry.
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