In January 2025, the euro area seasonally-adjusted unemployment rate was 6.2%, stable compared with December 2024 and down from 6.5% in January 2024. The EU unemployment rate was 5.8% in January 2025, also stable compared with December 2024 and down from 6.1% in January 2024. These figures are published by Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union.
Eurostat estimates that 12.824 million persons in the EU, of whom 10.655 million in the euro area, were unemployed in January 2025.
In January 2025, 2.856 million young persons (under 25) were unemployed in the EU, of whom 2.263 million were in the euro area. In January 2025, the youth unemployment rate was 14.6% in the EU, stable compared with December 2024, and 14.1% in the euro area, down from 14.2% in the previous month.
In January 2025, the unemployment rate for women was 6.0% in the EU, stable compared with the previous month, and the unemployment rate for men was 5.6%, also stable compared with December 2024. In the euro area, the unemployment rate for women was 6.4% and the unemployment rate for men was 6.0%, both stable compared with December 2024.
The estimates in this News Release are based on the globally used International Labour Organisation (ILO) standard definition of unemployment, which counts as unemployed people without a job who have been actively seeking work in the last four weeks and are available to start work within the next two weeks.
To capture in full the labour market situation, the data on unemployment have been complemented by additional indicators, e.g. underemployed part-time workers, persons seeking work but not immediately available and persons available to work but not seeking, released together with LFS data for the third quarter of 2024.
LFS data for the fourth quarter of 2024 will be released on 14 March 2025.
Notes for users
Revisions and timetable
The data in this News Release can be subject to revisions, caused by updates to the seasonally adjusted series whenever new monthly data are added; the inclusion of the most recent LFS data in the calculation process; update of seasonal adjustment models with complete annual data.
Compared with the rates published in News Release of 30 January 2025, the December 2024 unemployment rate for the euro area has been revised from 6.3% to 6.2% and the unemployment rate for the EU has been revised from 5.9% to 5.8%. Among EU Member States, the rate has been revised by more than 0.1 percentage points (pp) downwards for Slovenia (by 1.7 pp), France (by 0.5 pp), Poland (by 0.3 pp) and Slovakia (by 0.2 pp). The rate has been revised by more than 0.1 percentage points (pp) upwards for Estonia and Romania (by 0.5 pp each), Cyprus (by 0.4 pp), Ireland, Luxembourg and Sweden (by 0.3 pp each) as well as for Belgium, Bulgaria and Italy (by 0.2 pp each).
Country notes
Germany, the Netherlands, Finland, Sweden as well as Iceland and Norway: the trend component is used instead of the more volatile seasonally adjusted data.
Estonia and Portugal: 3-month moving averages of LFS data are used instead of pure monthly indicators.
France: Estimates are calculated using inputs from the French public employment service. An updated national methodology (in French) is in use since January 2025, affecting the time series consistency of the input data. To ensure the comparability of monthly unemployment figures published in this article, Eurostat compiled the evolution between December 2024 and January 2025 youth unemployment figures using statistical models.
Methods and definitions
Eurostat publishes harmonised unemployment rates for individual EU Member States, the euro area and the EU. These unemployment rates are based on the definition recommended by the International Labour Organisation (ILO). The measurement is based on a harmonised data source, the European Union Labour Force Survey (LFS).
Based on the ILO definition, Eurostat defines unemployed persons as persons aged 15 to 74 who:
The unemployment rate is the number of people unemployed as a percentage of the labour force.
The labour force is the total number of people employed plus unemployed. In this news release unemployment rates are based on employment and unemployment data covering persons aged 15 to 74.
The youth unemployment rate is the number of people aged 15 to 24 unemployed as a percentage of the labour force of the same age. Therefore, the youth unemployment rate should not be interpreted as the share of jobless people in the overall youth population.
When data for the most recent month are not available for a Member State, EU and EA aggregates are calculated using the latest data available for that Member State.
Geographical information
Euro area (EA20): Belgium, Germany, Estonia, Ireland, Greece, Spain, France, Croatia, Italy, Cyprus, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Austria, Portugal, Slovenia, Slovakia and Finland.
European Union (EU27): Belgium, Bulgaria, Czechia, Denmark, Germany, Estonia, Ireland, Greece, Spain, France, Croatia, Italy, Cyprus, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Hungary, Malta, the Netherlands, Austria, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovenia, Slovakia, Finland and Sweden.
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