Pierce County profile

Learn about Pierce County's unique labor market information including monthly unemployment and nonfarm employment statistics.

 

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March 2026 highlights

Updated May 2026

Compared to February 2026, the unemployment rate decreased from 6.1% to 5.3% (26,362 unemployed individuals). Employers reported 1,000 more jobs on payrolls (for a total of 344,000 jobs).

Pierce County's labor market highlights

A dark blue map of Washington state with Pierce County highlighted in orange.
  • Pierce County is the second most populous county in the state based on the 2020 census. Tacoma is the county seat and largest city. Pierce County’s economy is supported by various industries, including aerospace, health care, logistics and technology. Its government sector is bolstered by Joint Base Lewis-McChord which is the sector’s largest employer. Pierce County is also home to the Port of Tacoma, the sixth busiest container port in North America and one of the 25 busiest in the world.
  • The county is a regional component of the Puget Sound economy. Its proximity to King County gives Pierce County residents access to the labor market in both counties. Today, 25% to 30% of workers residing in Pierce County commute to King County for work.
  • Pierce County is located at the southern basin of Puget Sound, and shares contiguous boundaries with six counties: King, Thurston, Kitsap, Mason, Lewis and Yakima. Formed out of Thurston County in 1852 by the legislature of the Oregon territory, it was named for U.S. President Franklin Pierce. The county is a mix of old and newly incorporated cities, growing unincorporated areas, large-scale federal military installations and rural areas.

Contact Pierce County's labor economist

Paul Turek, Central sound region

Pierce County is part of the Tacoma-Pierce Workforce Development Area. Visit the workforce board’s website for information about Washington’s 12 workforce regions.

Pierce County is known as the Tacoma-Lakewood Metropolitan Division (part of the three-county Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue MSA.)

Employment updates for March 2026

Changes to the labor force and unemployment

The March 2026 unemployment rate was 5.3% in Pierce County, 5.1% in Washington state and 4.3% in the United States.

 Measure  Mar. 2026 Feb. 2026 Mar. 2025
 Participant (labor force)  495,180 500,069 499,024
 Employed persons  468,818 469,443 475,276
 Persons seeking work  26,362 30,626 23,748
 Unemployment rate  5.3% 6.1% 4.8%

Source: Employment Security Department/Labor Market Information and Research (LMIR) Division, Local area unemployment statistics (LAUS)

Pierce County unemployment rate, Jan. 2024 - Mar. 2026

Pierce county has been feeling the effects of a labor market slowdown as less job growth has prompted the area's unemployment to rise gradually over 2025. The November unemployment rate of 5.5% represents a three-year high.

A chart showing the not seasonally adjusted unemployment rate for Pierce County from Jan. 2024 to Mar. 2026
 Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec
Legend - a dashed blue line with a diamond representing year 1 in the graph
2024
4.9% 4.7% 4.5% 4.3% 4.4% 5.1% 5.0% 4.9% 4.7% 4.5% 4.5% 4.1%
Legend - a orange line with a square representing year 2 in the graph
2025
4.7% 4.7% 4.8% 4.5% 4.5% 5.0% 5.1% 5.1% 5.1%   5.9% 5.4%
Legend - a dark blue line with a circle representing year 3 in the graph
2026
6.4% 6.1% 5.3%                  

Source: Employment Security Department/Labor Market Information and Research (LMIR) Division, Local area unemployment statistics (LAUS)

Key changes in payroll employment 

This includes all employees with paid positions tracked in a company’s payroll system. This doesn’t include agriculture jobs or jobs outside of formal payroll such as freelancers, contractors and self-employed individuals. Numbers in this section are estimates generated by a monthly survey.

In March 2026, Pierce County had 344,000 jobs.

One month ago, in Feb. 2026 there were 1,000 fewer jobs on payrolls (for a total of 343,000 jobs).

  • 800 more private jobs.
  • 200 more government jobs.
  • 700 more leisure and hospitality jobs.
  • 100 fewer professional and business services jobs.

One year ago, in Mar. 2025 there were 100 (0.0%) more jobs on payrolls (for a total of 344,100 jobs).

  • 1,000 (0.4%) more private jobs.
  • 1,100 (1.8%) fewer government jobs.
  • 1,700 (2.6%) more private education and health services jobs.
  • 700 (4.9%) fewer financial activities jobs.

Employment estimates for Pierce County

See a snapshot of this month's data below. A detailed spreadsheet titled Current employment estimates, not seasonally adjusted is on the source page of our site.

Total jobs

Industry sector Mar 2026 Feb 2026 Mar 2025 Feb 2026 to
Mar 2026
Mar 2025 to
Mar 2026
Mar 2025 to
Mar 2026 % 
Total nonfarm 344,000 343,000 344,100 1,000 -100 0.0%
- Private 283,500 282,700 282,500 800 1,000 0.4%
- Government 60,500 60,300 61,600 200 -1,100 -1.8%

Goods-producing jobs

Industry sector Mar 2026 Feb 2026 Mar 2025 Feb 2026 to
Mar 2026
Mar 2025 to
Mar 2026
Mar 2025 to
Mar 2026 % 
Goods-producing 40,400 39,900 40,600 500 -200 -0.5%
- Mining, logging and construction 24,400 24,000 24,500 400 -100 -0.4%
- Manufacturing 16,000 15,900 16,100 100 -100 -0.6%

Service-providing jobs

Industry sector Mar 2026 Feb 2026 Mar 2025 Feb 2026 to
Mar 2026
Mar 2025 to
Mar 2026
Mar 2025 to
Mar 2026 % 
Service-providing 303,600 303,100 303,500 500 100 0.0%
- Wholesale trade 13,300 13,200 13,400 100 -100 -0.7%
- Retail trade 35,600 35,600 36,100 0 -500 -1.4%
- Transportation, warehousing, and utilities 72,800 72,900 73,000 -100 -200 -0.3%
- Information 2,500 2,500 2,300 0 200 8.7%
- Financial activities 13,700 13,800 14,400 -100 -700 -4.9%
- Professional and business services 39,000 39,100 39,200 -100 -200 -0.5%
- Private education and health services 67,200 67,300 65,500 -100 1,700 2.6%
- Leisure and hospitality 34,400 33,700 34,100 700 300 0.9%
- Other services 13,500 13,500 13,400 0 100 0.7%
- Government 60,500 60,300 61,600 200 -1,100 -1.8%

Note: Data benchmarked through September 2025, updated April 30, 2026. The current month’s data is preliminary. Analysts continue to refine past months as more related information becomes available. Industry columns use North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) industry titles. Source: Employment Security Department/Labor Market Information and Research Division, Washington employment estimates (WA-QB & CES)

Employment details for industries and sectors

This profile section uses the latest Quarterly Census of Employment and Wage (QCEW) annual averages data.

This quarterly census data includes both agricultural and nonagricultural employment and wages for firms, organizations and individuals with employees covered by the Washington State Employment Security Act. Covered employment refers to the total number of employees with this type of coverage.

Top sectors by employment

2024's annual average was 333,491 total covered employees.

  • Government - 60,202 jobs.
  • Healthcare and social assistance - 56,625 jobs.
  • Retail trade - 36,054 jobs.
  • Accommodation and food services - 29,575 jobs.
  • Administrative and waste services - 24,342 jobs.

Top sectors by wages

2024’s annual average wage was $70,396 for covered employees.

  • Utilities - $127,860.
  • Information - $116,356.
  • Real estate and rental and leasing - $108,579.
  • Finance and insurance - $105,055.
  • Professional, scientific and technical services - $93,619.

2024 annual average employment by industry

A bar graph showing the 2024 annual average industry employment in Pierce County

Source: Employment Security Department/Labor Market Information and Research (LMIR) Division, Covered Employment (QCEW)

Workforce demographics for Pierce County

Age

Demographic characteristic Total Labor force
participation rate
Unemployment
rate
Population 16 years and over  739,219  66.3% 5.2%
16 to 19 years  43,646  42.6% 17.0%
20 to 24 years  59,993  80.9% 9.5%
25 to 29 years  68,749  85.1% 5.2%
30 to 34 years  74,241  83.4% 5.2%
35 to 44 years  135,123  83.6% 4.2%
45 to 54 years  110,034  82.7% 3.6%
55 to 59 years  52,987  76.2% 4.6%
60 to 64 years  56,910  59.1% 3.0%
65 to 74 years  84,273  25.2% 3.1%

Race or Hispanic origin

Demographic characteristic Total Labor force
participation rate
Unemployment
rate
White alone  493,747   64.3%   4.6% 
Black or African American alone  54,800   70.4%   8.4% 
American Indian and Alaska Native alone  7,838   67.8%   5.4% 
Asian alone  54,583   65.8%   3.9% 
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander alone  11,620   68.4%   5.6% 
Some other race alone  26,676   72.8%   4.2% 
Two or more races  89,955   72.5%   6.7% 
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race)  81,158   74.2%   6.4% 
White alone, not Hispanic or Latino  477,279   63.9%   4.6% 
Population 20 to 64 years  558,037   80.1%   4.8% 

Sex

Demographic characteristic Total Labor force
participation rate
Unemployment
rate
Male  284,216  85.2% 5.1%
Female  273,821  74.8% 4.4%

Females with children

Demographic characteristic Total Labor force
participation rate
Unemployment
rate
With own children under 18 years  99,506  73.5% 4.5%
With own children under 6 years only  23,471  71.6% 6.7%
With own children under 6 years and 6 to 17  years  20,558  62.5% 5.9%
With own children 6 to 17 years only  55,477  78.4% 3.3%

Poverty status in the past 12 months

Demographic characteristic Total Labor force
participation rate
Unemployment
rate
Below poverty level  45,010  43.4% 24.2%
At or above the poverty level  500,268  83.7% 3.9%

Disability status

Demographic characteristic Total Labor force
participation rate
Unemployment
rate
With any disability  66,289  52.7% 9.6%

Educational attainment

Demographic characteristic Total Labor force
participation rate
Unemployment
rate
Population 25 to 64 years  498,044  80.0% 4.3%
Less than high school graduate  36,478  65.3% 7.4%
High school graduate (includes equivalency)  131,246  75.7% 4.9%
Some college or associate's degree  176,109  79.7% 4.2%
Bachelor's degree or higher  154,211  87.3% 3.3%

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey, 2024: ACS 5-year estimates, S2301 | Employment Status

Funding

This workforce product was funded by a grant awarded by the U.S. Department of Labor's Employment and Training Administration. The product was created by the recipient and does not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Labor. The Department of Labor makes no guarantees, warranties, or assurances of any kind, expressed or implied, with respect to such information, including any information on linked sites and including, but not limited to, accuracy of the information or its completeness, timeliness, usefulness, adequacy, continued availability, or ownership. This product is copyrighted by the institution that created it. Internal use by an organization and/or personal use by an individual for non-commercial purposes is permissible. All other uses require the prior authorization of the copyright owner.