Texas · Economy & Workforce

Unemployment Rate in Texas

Share of the civilian labor force actively looking for work but not currently employed, averaged over the year.

4.2% in 2025

#32 of 50 · Middle tier (lower is better)

Texas is worse than the 50-state median (4.0%). That's a gap of 0.2%.

View interactive chart & trend → See full 50-state ranking →

1976 – 2025 · Texas only · interactive chart with US median overlay →

About unemployment rate

What this measures: Share of the civilian labor force actively looking for work but not currently employed, averaged over the year.

Why it matters: The unemployment rate is the most widely-watched real-time read on a state's labor market and a strong predictor of state revenue.

Watch out: Excludes discouraged workers and those who left the labor force. The labor force participation rate fills in that gap.

Recent trend

YearTexasUS median
20164.7%4.7%
20174.4%4.2%
20183.9%3.8%
20193.5%3.5%
20207.7%7.3%
20215.6%4.8%
20223.9%3.2%
20234.0%3.2%
20244.1%3.6%
20254.2%4.0%

Texas vs. neighboring states

Same metric (unemployment rate), latest year with full state coverage. Click any name for that state's full report.

StateUnemployment RateNational rank
New Mexico 4.1% #30 of 50
Oklahoma 3.3% #12 of 50
Arkansas 4.0% #29 of 50
Louisiana 4.3% #33 of 50

How Texas compares (2025)

Top 5 best

#1South Dakota205%
#2Hawaiʻi234%
#3North Dakota260%
#4Vermont262%
#5Alabama287%

Bottom 5

#46Michigan508%
#47Oregon515%
#48Nevada525%
#49New Jersey527%
#50California546%

Source and methodology

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics · Direction: lower is better · Unit: %

Download raw CSV (all 50 states, all years)

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