United States

United States Continuing Jobless Claims

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Continuing Jobless Claims (Claims) / 2026-03-14 / Weekly

North America USA Claims
Latest
1,819,000
2026-03-14
Data Period
1967 – 2026
3089 Data Points
All-time High
23,130,000
All-time Low
988,000

Details

Continuing Jobless Claims

Continuing Jobless Claims

Continuing jobless claims is an economic indicator that shows the number of people continuing to receive unemployment insurance benefits. This is compiled weekly and represents the total number of unemployed persons whose previous unemployment benefit period has not ended and who continue to receive benefits. In the United States, this figure is released every Thursday and serves as important data for understanding the current state of the labor market.

This indicator is important because it functions as a leading indicator of labor market health. When continuing claims increase, it indicates that unemployment duration is lengthening and suggests deteriorating employment conditions. Conversely, when claims decrease, it indicates that unemployed workers are returning to employment and that the labor market is improving. This indicator is often treated as more stable than initial claims because it fluctuates less.

As a general trend, continuing jobless claims remain at low levels during periods of strong economic performance. Conversely, during periods of economic contraction, they increase sharply and gradually decline as the economy recovers. Key focus points for this indicator are the week-over-week changes and long-term trends. It is believed that trends spanning weeks to months, rather than short-term fluctuations, better demonstrate the true strength of the labor market. Policymakers and investors monitor this indicator to obtain important information for making appropriate economic policy decisions and investment judgments.

Last updated: 2026-03-14