January 2026: Private sector +172,000 jobs, government -42,000; unemployment 4.3%

True

Evidence from credible sources supports the statement as accurate. Learn more in Methodology.

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Official Bureau of Labor Statistics or comparable government jobs report confirming +172,000 private sector jobs, -42,000 government jobs, and a 4.3% unemployment rate for January 2026.

Source summary
The White House reported that January’s jobs report showed stronger-than-expected private-sector gains and wage growth, with 172,000 private jobs added, 42,000 government jobs lost, and the unemployment rate falling to 4.3%. The administration highlighted construction gains—especially 25,000 nonresidential specialty trade jobs—and said January’s 130,000 new nonfarm jobs was the best month so far. The White House also cited revisions that, it says, overstated job growth during the last two years of the previous administration by about 1.9 million jobs. Officials attributed the improvements to President Trump’s economic agenda and investments in manufacturing and data centers.
Latest fact check

The Bureau of Labor Statistics' Employment Situation release for January 2026 reports that private-sector payrolls increased by 172,000 and government payrolls declined by 42,000 (establishment/CES data, Table B), and the household/CPS data show the unemployment rate at 4.3% (down 0.1 percentage point from December). These are seasonally adjusted, preliminary monthly estimates (subject to routine revision) from the official BLS release. Verdict: True — the numbers in the statement match the official BLS report for January 2026.

Timeline

  1. Update · Feb 12, 2026, 12:36 AMTrue
    The Bureau of Labor Statistics' Employment Situation release for January 2026 reports that private-sector payrolls increased by 172,000 and government payrolls declined by 42,000 (establishment/CES data, Table B), and the household/CPS data show the unemployment rate at 4.3% (down 0.1 percentage point from December). These are seasonally adjusted, preliminary monthly estimates (subject to routine revision) from the official BLS release. Verdict: True — the numbers in the statement match the official BLS report for January 2026.
  2. Original article · Feb 11, 2026

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