U.S. Initial Unemployment Claims dropped in the Week of April 25
Summary
- New claims dropped by 26,000 to 189,000.
- Continuing claims declined by 23,000 to 1.785 million.
- The insured unemployment rate remained at 1.2%.


Initial claims for unemployment insurance dropped by 26,000 to 189,000 in the week ending April 25, from 215,000 in the week ending April 18, revised from 214,000. The four-week average declined by 3,500 to 207,500 in the week ending April 25, from 211,000 the April 18 week, revised from 210,750. The Action Economics/Haver Analytics Survey looked for 214,000 claims to have been filed.
The total number of unemployment insurance beneficiaries—also known as “continuing claims”—dropped by 23,000 to 1.785 million in the week ending April 18, from 1.808 million in the week ending April 11, revised from 1.821 million. The four-week moving average declined to 1.797 million in the latest week from 1.809 million in the April 11 week. The insured unemployment rate remained at 1.2% in the week of April 11. It has remained at that level since the week of November 29, 2025.
The insured unemployment rate varied greatly across individual states and territories. In the week ending April 11, the highest unemployment rates were in New Jersey (2.51%), Washington (2.25%), Massachusetts (2.21%), Rhode Island (2.10%), and California (2.06%). The lowest rates were in Florida (0.31%), Louisiana (0.32%), Arkansas, North Carolina and Mississippi (all 0.35%), Alabama (0.36%), South Dakota (0.41%) and Tennessee (0.43%). Rates in other notable states include New York (1.96%), Illinois (1.77%), Pennsylvania (1.40%), and Texas (1.04%). These state data are not seasonally adjusted.
Data on weekly unemployment claims are from the Department of Labor itself, not the Bureau of Labor Statistics. They begin in 1967 and are contained in Haver’s WEEKLY database and summarized monthly in USECON. Data for individual states are in REGIONW back to December 1986.


Kathleen Stephansen, CBE
AuthorMore in Author Profile »Kathleen Stephansen is a Senior Economist for Haver Analytics and an Independent Trustee for the EQAT/VIP/1290 Trust Funds, encompassing the US mutual funds sponsored by the Equitable Life Insurance Company. She is a former Chief Economist of Huawei Technologies USA, Senior Economic Advisor to the Boston Consulting Group, Chief Economist of the American International Group (AIG) and AIG Asset Management’s Senior Strategist and Global Head of Sovereign Research. Prior to joining AIG in 2010, Kathleen held various positions as Chief Economist or Head of Global Research at Aladdin Capital Holdings, Credit Suisse and Donaldson, Lufkin and Jenrette Securities Corporation.
Kathleen serves on the boards of the Global Interdependence Center (GIC), as Vice-Chair of the GIC College of Central Bankers, is the Treasurer for Economists for Peace and Security (EPS) and is a former board member of the National Association of Business Economics (NABE). She is a member of Chatham House and the Economic Club of New York. She holds an undergraduate degree in economics from the Universite Catholique de Louvain and graduate degrees in economics from the University of New Hampshire (MA) and the London School of Economics (PhD abd).




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