Washington · Economy & Workforce

Labor Force Participation Rate in Washington

Share of civilians age 16 and older who are either employed or actively seeking work, averaged over the year.

63% in 2025

#27 of 50 · Middle tier (higher is better)

Washington is worse than the 50-state median (63%). That's a gap of 0.2%.

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

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

About labor force participation rate

What this measures: Share of civilians age 16 and older who are either employed or actively seeking work.

Why it matters: Participation captures how much of a state's working-age population is in the economy at all. Falling participation can mask a low unemployment rate.

Watch out: Aging states have structurally lower participation as more residents retire. Cross-state comparisons benefit from age-adjustment.

Recent trend

YearWashingtonUS median
201664%64%
201764%64%
201864%63%
201966%64%
202064%63%
202163%62%
202264%63%
202364%63%
202463%63%
202563%63%

Washington vs. neighboring states

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

StateLabor Force Participation RateNational rank
Oregon 63% #26 of 50
Idaho 63% #23 of 50

How Washington compares (2025)

Top 5 best

#1Nebraska70%
#2North Dakota70%
#3Minnesota68%
#4South Dakota68%
#5Utah68%

Bottom 5

#46Florida58%
#47New Mexico58%
#48Alabama58%
#49Mississippi56%
#50West Virginia55%

Source and methodology

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

Download raw CSV (all 50 states, all years)

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