FRANKFORT,
Ky. (May 14, 2026) — Unemployment rates fell in all 120 counties between
March 2025 and March 2026, according to the Kentucky Center for Statistics
(KYSTATS), an agency within the Kentucky Education and Labor
Cabinet.
Woodford
County recorded the lowest jobless rate in the commonwealth at 3.5%. It
was followed by Todd County, 3.6%; Fayette and Scott counties, 3.7% each;
Campbell, Franklin, Jessamine and Oldham counties, 3.8% each; and Boone,
Caldwell, Carroll, Graves and Kenton counties, 3.9% each.
Lewis
County recorded the state’s highest unemployment rate at 8.4%. It was followed
by Wolfe County, 8.3%; Magoffin and Martin counties, 7.8% each; Elliott County,
7.1%; Menifee County, 7%; Jackson County, 6.9%; Lawrence County, 6.7%; Carter
County, 6.6%; and Wayne County, 6.5%.
Kentucky’s
county unemployment rates and employment levels are not seasonally
adjusted because of small sample sizes. Employment statistics undergo sharp
fluctuations due to seasonal events such as weather changes, harvests,
holidays, and school openings and closings. Seasonal adjustments eliminate
these influences and make it easier to observe statistical trends.
Kentucky’s
seasonally adjusted March 2026 state unemployment
rate was released on May 7, 2026, and can be viewed here.
In that
release, Kentucky’s statewide unemployment rate and employment levels are
adjusted to observe statistical trends by removing seasonal influences
such as weather changes, harvests, holidays, and school openings and
closings. For more information regarding seasonal fluctuations, visit the
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics here.
Unemployment
statistics are based on estimates and are compiled to measure trends rather
than actually to count people working. Civilian labor force statistics include
non-military workers and unemployed Kentuckians who are actively seeking work.
They do not include unemployed Kentuckians who have not looked for employment
within the past four weeks. The data should only be compared to the same month
in previous years.