U.S. unexpectedly adds 130,000 jobs in January after a weak 2025
Hiring grew a little warmer last month after a chilly year in 2025.
A report from the Labor Department Wednesday showed U.S. employers added a better-than-expected 130,000 jobs in January — but an annual update shows hiring last year was much weaker than initially reported.
The news comes amid worries that the nation’s jobs engine has been sputtering. Employment gains for November and December were revised down by a total of 17,000 jobs.
Once a year, the Labor Department updates its jobs tally with more accurate but less timely information drawn from unemployment tax records. Wednesday’s revision shows there were nearly 900,000 fewer jobs in the economy last March than originally counted. On average, employers added only 15,000 jobs a month in 2025.
“This does not remotely look like a healthy labor market,” Federal Reserve governor Chris Waller said in a statement anticipating the revision.
Waller urged his central bank colleagues to cut their benchmark interest rate last month in an effort to prop up the sagging job market. But most Fed policymakers voted to hold rates steady in January, after three rate cuts last year.
Health care and construction led way
Health care and construction were among the few industries that saw significant job gains in January. The warehouses and transportation industry lost jobs and the federal government continued to shed workers. Manufacturing added 5,000 jobs while hospitality added just 1000.
The unemployment rate dipped to 4.3% from 4.4% the month before. That’s quite low by historical standards. The unemployment rate among African Americans also fell, but remains elevated at 7.2%.
Some of the weakness in job growth last year may reflect a drop in the number of available workers. The Trump administration has slammed the door on most people trying to enter the country, while aggressively deporting immigrants who have been living in the U.S. illegally. At the same time, many native born baby boomers are reaching retirement age and leaving the workforce.
But Waller says that explains only part of what’s weighing on the job market.
“Employers are reluctant to fire workers, but also very reluctant to hire,” Waller said in is statement. “This indicates to me that there is considerable doubt about future employment growth and suggests that a substantial deterioration in the labor market is a significant risk.”
A few years ago, there were two job openings for every unemployed worker. By December, that had dropped to less than one. That slack in the job market means employers don’t have to pay as much to attract and keep workers. Average wages in January were up 3.7% compared to a 3.8% gain in December.
The monthly jobs tally is usually released on the first Friday of the following month, but the January count was delayed a few days because of last week’s government shutdown.
Paul McCartney’s decade of transformation: From Beatles breakup to John Lennon’s murder
Man on the Run shows McCartney's effort to define himself outside The Beatles' shadow: "Paul making this documentary was a way of coming to terms with that whole period," says director Morgan Neville.
A Biden-era rule sought to stabilize child care. Why Trump wants it gone
The Trump administration has proposed repealing a Biden-era rule that required states to change how they pay out child care subsidies, citing the potential for fraud.
Greetings from Southwest Papua, which has some of the world’s richest marine biodiversity
The Raja Ampat islands in Indonesia's Southwest Papua province are a marine biodiversity hotspot and a divers' paradise.
Families remember U.S. reservists killed in Kuwait, members of an Iowa logistics unit
Four U.S. soldiers were killed in the Iran war on Sunday and IDed Tuesday by the Pentagon; two soldiers haven't yet been publicly identified. Their unit kept troops supplied with food and equipment.
Why supporting a shelter for women is now ‘kind of radioactive’
That's how researcher Beatriz Garcia Nice describes the new U.S. stance under the Trump administration to programs addressing gender-based violence.
Telehealth abortion is in the courts. Share your experience.
Mifepristone is facing another major legal challenge.
