UK unemployment hits highest rate for nearly five years

Getty ImagesUnemployment in the UK rose to its highest rate in nearly five years at the end of 2025, official figures show.
The unemployment rate climbed to 5.2% in the three months to December, from 5.1% in the three months to November, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said.
But young people are bearing the brunt, with unemployment for those aged between 16 and 24 rising to 16.1%, its highest in more than 10 years.
For those in work, wages are still rising faster than prices, but the rate at which they're growing continued to slow.
Many businesses have slowed hiring, pointing to measures in Chancellor Rachel Reeves's last two Budgets, including a hike in employer National Insurance contributions and a rise in the minimum wage, as increasing their costs.
Work and Pensions Secretary Pat McFadden said there was "more to do to get people into jobs", with tackling youth unemployment a key government priority.
He added Labour was making it easier for young people to find and secure an apprenticeship.
But the Conservatives said Labour had overseen "an unprecedented series of monthly unemployment increases" which were the "predictable result of bad decisions and economic incompetence".
Shadow work and pensions secretary Helen Whately said: "Young people are taking the hardest hit. Entry-level roles are the first to disappear from Labour's tax hikes. By making hiring more expensive and more risky, Labour are ensuring school leavers and graduates never even get a foot in the door."
Liberal Democrat Treasury Spokesperson Daisy Cooper called for an emergency VAT cut for the hospitality industry, one of the hardest-hit areas seeing job losses.
Meanwhile, former health secretary Alan Milburn told BBC Radio 4's Today programme young people were on a "downward escalator" of poor health, poor education and graduating "into the benefit system" as adults.
'Soul destroying'


Lucy Gabb graduated from Cambridge University in July 2025 with a degree in French and has been looking for a job in publishing since, while working a café job in London.
"Entry level jobs are just so competitive and they're asking for experience that is just impossible to get whilst you're also studying," she told the BBC.
She says she has applied for more than 50 roles but only one has resulted in a face-to-face interview. Mostly, she says, she gets no reply at all or a fairly quick rejection.
"All my friends are talking about is the job search, it can be really soul destroying when you study for so long and you don't get anywhere," she said.
The retail and wholesale sector saw the biggest fall in the number of workers on company payrolls, with 65,000 jobs lost in the sector since January last year, the ONS said.
Health and social work saw the biggest rise in payrolled workers of any sector, adding 39,000 jobs in the year to January.
Danni Hewson, financial analyst at AJ Bell, suggested that those leaving the retail sector were entering healthcare, with both sectors employing large numbers of women. "The crossover is apparent," she told the BBC.
However, she also warned that a recent surge in investment in artificial intelligence could hit young people the hardest as it could result "in a scarcity of entry level posts".
Meanwhile, average annual wage growth slowed to 4.2% in the three months to December, from a revised 4.4% in three months to November.
Some economists believe that easing pay growth could make the Bank of England more likely to cut interest rates at its next meeting in March.
The Bank uses interest rates as a tool to cool inflation, the rate at which prices rise, which is currently at 3.4% - above the 2% target set for it by the government.
Paul Dales, chief UK economist at Capital Economics, said the fall in wage growth "supports the idea that the Bank of England has at least a couple more interest rate cuts in its locker".
The reliability of the ONS's job market data has beenrepeatedly criticised, including by the Bank of England.
Additional reporting by Hannah Mullane and Tommy Lumby




