USA Banner

Official US Government Icon

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Secure Site Icon

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

U.S. Department of Transportation U.S. Department of Transportation Icon United States Department of Transportation United States Department of Transportation

April 2026 U.S. Transportation Sector Unemployment (3.9%) Rises Above the April 2025 Level (3.6%)

Friday, May 8, 2026
Figure is an infographic with not seasonally adjusted unemployment values for April 2026 and the percent change from April 2025 to April 2026. Upper left rectangle lists the U.S. rate as 4.0% and lower left rectangle lists the percent change with an up arrow to show it increased 0.1 percentage points. Upper right rectangle lists the rate for transportation workers as 3.9% and lower left rectangle lists the percent change with an up arrow to show it increased 0.3 percentage points.

The unemployment rate in the U.S. transportation sector was 3.9% (not seasonally adjusted) in April 2026 according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). These data have been updated on the Bureau of Transportation Statistics’ (BTS) Unemployment in Transportation dashboard. In April 2026, the transportation sector unemployment rate rose 0.3 percentage points from 3.6% in April 2025. Unemployment in the transportation sector reached its highest level during the COVID-19 pandemic (15.7%) in May 2020 and July 2020.

Unemployment in the transportation sector was lower than overall unemployment. BLS reports that the U.S. unemployment rate, not seasonally adjusted, in April 2026 was 4.0% or 0.1 percentage points above the transportation sector rate. Seasonally adjusted, the U.S. unemployment rate in April 2026 was 4.3%.

Figure is a line graph with a line for U.S. unemployment rate and one for unemployment rate for transportation workers, both unadjusted for seasonality, by month from April 2019 to April 2026. The x-axis shows the month. The y-axis shows the unemployment rate. The U.S. unemployment rate ranges from 3.3% in April 2019 to 4.0% in April 2026. The unemployment rate for transportation workers ranges from 3.7% in April 2019 to 3.9% in April 2026.

NOTE: BLS did not release household survey estimates for October 2025.

Seasonally adjusted, employment in the transportation and warehousing sector rose to 6,584,300 in April 2026 — up 0.5% from the previous month but down 1.1% from April 2025. By mode (seasonally adjusted):
 

  • Air transportation remained virtually unchanged in April 2026 at 576,100 from the previous month but up 0.9% from April 2025.
     
  • Truck transportation rose to 1,469,600 in April 2026 — up 0.3% from the previous month but down 1.4% from April 2025.
     
  • Transit and ground passenger transportation fell to 482,500 in April 2026 — down 1.5% from the previous month and down 1.4% from April 2025.
     
  • Rail transportation fell to 149,300 in April 2026 — down 0.4% from the previous month and down 4.1% from April 2025.
     
  • Water transportation fell to 71,300 in April 2026 — down 0.3% from the previous month but up 2.4% from April 2025.
     
  • Pipeline transportation fell to 55,700 in April 2026 — down 0.4% from the previous month but up 0.2% from April 2025.
     
  • Warehousing and storage remained virtually unchanged in April 2026 at 1,830,700 from the previous month but down 2.7% from April 2025.
The figure is a line graph with a line for multiple transportation modes (truck, warehousing, air, transit, and rail) that shows the number of persons employed by month from April 2019 to April 2026, not adjusted for seasonality. Trucking, warehousing, air, transit, and rail employed 1,532,400; 1,197,700; 500,600; 502,600; and 179,600, respectively, in April 2019 1,490,600; 1,881,300; 571,100; 489,300; and 155,700, respectively, in April 2026.

NOTES: April 2019 and April 2026 employment (seasonally adjusted) not shown for water (65,900 and 71,300, respectively) or pipeline (51,000 and 55,700, respectively) transportation. All-time highs (seasonally adjusted) with records beginning in 1990: air March 2001 (633,600); pipeline July 1991 (61,200); rail January 1990 (278,100); transit June 2019 (503,900); truck October 2022 (1,588,600); warehousing and storage March 2022 (1,939,300); and water January 2026 (72,400)

Charts updated this month by section include:
 

Unemployment in the Transportation and Warehousing Sector and in Transportation and Material Moving Occupations


Monthly Employment in the Transportation and Warehousing Sector, Establishment Data

Visit Transportation Economic Trends for more topics.

The unemployment rate is the total number of unemployed persons, expressed as a percentage of the civilian labor force. The civilian labor force includes all persons aged 16 and older who are employed and unemployed; meaning they are either currently working or actively looking for work. Unemployed persons include those who actively sought a job within the last four weeks. People waiting to start a new job who have not actively sought a job in the last four weeks are not counted as employed or unemployed; they are considered to be out of the labor force.

An unemployed person’s industry is the industry for the last job they held in the workforce, which may or may not reflect their current job search field or industry.

To receive updates from BTS directly to your email please consider subscribing to our GovDelivery service.