Changeflow GovPing Labor & Employment Maine Unemployment 3.2% in February 2026, Jobs ...
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Maine Unemployment 3.2% in February 2026, Jobs Near 660k

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Summary

Maine's seasonally adjusted unemployment rate held at 3.2% in February 2026, remaining essentially unchanged from the 3.3% rate recorded for the prior 13 months. Nonfarm wage and salary jobs remained near 660,000 for the twenty-second consecutive month. The state's not seasonally adjusted unemployment was 3.7% statewide, with rates varying by county and metro area. Private sector workers averaged 33.4 hours per workweek and $33.64 per hour, with hourly earnings increasing 2.7% year-over-year.

“The 3.2 percent unemployment rate for February changed little, a continuation of low and steady unemployment rates.”

Published by Maine DOL on maine.gov . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

About this source

GovPing monitors Maine DOL News for new labor & employment regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 14 changes logged to date.

What changed

Maine's Department of Labor released its monthly employment situation report for February 2026, showing the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate at 3.2%, a rate that has remained essentially flat for over a year. Nonfarm payroll jobs stayed near 660,000 within a 0.5 percentage-point band since April 2024. The not seasonally adjusted statewide rate was 3.7%, with county rates ranging above and below that benchmark. Private sector average hourly earnings were $33.64, up 2.7% from the prior year.

For employers, workforce planners, and economic analysts, the data confirms continued labor market stability in Maine relative to national benchmarks. The report contains no regulatory requirements or compliance obligations; it is purely informational. The next monthly workforce estimates are scheduled for release on May 6, 2026.

Archived snapshot

Apr 22, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

The Employment Situation in Maine - February 2026

April 22, 2026

Released: 10 a.m. Wednesday, April 22, 2026

The Employment Situation in Maine - February 2026

The 3.2 percent unemployment rate was little changed from the 3.3 percent rates of the previous 13 months. Nonfarm wage and salary jobs have been near 660,000 for the last 22 months.

Notes: These estimates are derived from two monthly surveys. The Current Population Survey collects information from households on labor force status, including labor force participation, employment, and unemployment. The Current Employment Statistics survey collects information from nonfarm employers by industry on the number of wage and salary jobs, hours worked, and wages paid to individuals on their payrolls. Both surveys are administered by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Preliminary estimates from the two surveys sometimes diverge in direction or magnitude of change. Over extended periods they tend to be more aligned. The Current Population Survey of households was not conducted during the federal government shutdown that began in October 2025, no labor force estimates are available for that month.

Seasonally Adjusted Statewide Labor Force Estimates

The 3.2 percent unemployment rate for February changed little, a continuation of low and steady unemployment rates. Unemployment has been below four percent for 50 months, exceeding the previous long of 49 consecutive months that ended in the spring of 2020. Maine's unemployment rate has been below the U.S. average for more than 18 years, and below the long-term average of 5.4 percent for the state since 1976.

Labor force participation and employment rates were little changed in February. Unemployment averaged 4.4 percent for New England and 4.4 percent for the U.S. in the month.

Note on Preliminary Unemployment Estimates: They should be considered in the context of whether they are below, near, or above historical or U.S. averages, rather than if they are up or down a few tenths of a point from some other month. The household survey sample they are derived from is large enough for direct estimates for the nation. For states it is much smaller and statistical modeling - https://www.bls.gov/lau/laumthd.htm is used to prevent large single-month changes that may overstate the magnitude or the direction of changes in labor market conditions.

One result of this is that preliminary unemployment rates for Maine tend to follow an undulating pattern, moving in one direction for several months and then the other through the course of a year. Revisions, published annually in March, have consistently smoothed these patterns. Upward or downward changes in preliminary unemployment or labor force participation rates often are not as indicative of improvement or deterioration in conditions as may appear. Though rates for many months will change when revised, unemployment rates for 2025 and to date in 2026 certainly will remain well below the long-term and national averages.

Seasonally Adjusted Statewide Nonfarm Jobs Estimates

Preliminary seasonally adjusted estimates indicate nonfarm wage and salary jobs were little changed in February from one month ago. Small gains over-the-month spread across many sectors were mostly offset by modest decreases that were also spread across several sectors.

In the last year, jobs increased modestly. Job gains in the leisure and hospitality sector and the health care and social assistance sector contributed most to the over-the-year change. Jobs have been near 660,000 (within 0.5 percentage points) since April 2024.

Not Seasonally Adjusted County and Metro Area Labor Force Estimates

On a not seasonally adjusted basis the statewide unemployment rate was 3.7 percent. Rates were at least 0.3 percentage points higher than that in nine counties, at least 0.3 points lower than that in three, and close to the average in four. Rates were lowest in southern and central counties and highest along the northern rim of the state.

Among the three metro areas, unemployment was below the statewide average in Portland-S. Portland, and close to the average in Bangor and Lewiston-Auburn.

(Labor force estimates for substate areas, including unemployment rates, are not seasonally adjusted. Because of this, estimates for a certain month should be compared to the same month in other years and should not be compared to other months in the same or other years.)

Not Seasonally Adjusted Statewide and Metro Area Hours and Earnings Estimates

The private sector workweek averaged 33.4 hours and earnings averaged $33.64 per hour in February. Average hours changed little, and hourly earnings increased 2.7 percent from a year ago. The workweek was longest in the construction and manufacturing sectors and shortest in the leisure and hospitality sector. Earnings were highest in professional and business services and lowest in leisure and hospitality. Hourly earnings were above the statewide average in Portland-S. Portland and below it in the Bangor and Lewiston-Auburn metros.

March 2026 workforce estimates will be published on Wednesday May 6, 2026. The complete 2026 data release schedule is available here - https://www.maine.gov/labor/cwri/news-and-publications/news-release/data-release-schedule

Nonfarm jobs data is available here - https://www.maine.gov/labor/cwri/dashboards/nonfarm-jobs

Unemployment and labor force data is available here - https://www.maine.gov/labor/cwri/dashboards/unemployment-and-labor-force-estimates

NOTES:

  1. Preliminary seasonally adjusted labor force estimates, including rates (labor force participation, employment, and unemployment rates), and levels (labor force, employed, and unemployed), as well as nonfarm wage and salary job estimates are inexact. Annual revisions (published in March each year) add accuracy. A comparison of 2025 and 2024 previously published to revised estimates is available in this article - https://www.maine.gov/labor/cwri/sites/maine.gov.labor.cwri/files/publications/2026-04/2026 Workforce Data_Revisions.pdf
  2. The 90 percent confidence interval for the statewide seasonally adjusted unemployment rate for February was between 2.6 and 3.9 percent.
  3. Nonfarm wage and salary jobs from the payroll survey provide a better indication of changes in employment than resident employment from the household survey. The payroll survey is larger and has smaller margins of error.
  4. Nonfarm payroll jobs estimates tend to be variable from month to month because the representativeness of reporting employers can differ. Seasonal adjustment is imperfect because weather, the beginning and ending of school semesters, and other events do not always occur with the same timing relative to the pay period that includes the 12th day of the month, which is the survey reference period. This sometimes exacerbates monthly changes in jobs estimates. Users should look to trends over multiple months rather than change from one specific month to another. Jobs estimates for the period from April 2025 to September 2026 will be replaced with payroll data in March 2027. Those benchmark revisions usually show less monthly variability than previously published estimates.

Supporting documents

February 2026 Jobs Report Images (PDF)

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
Maine DOL
Published
April 22nd, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Employers Government agencies
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Labor market reporting Employment statistics Payroll data
Geographic scope
US-ME US-ME

Taxonomy

Primary area
Employment & Labor
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Public Health

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