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  • Private Sector Adds 63,000 Jobs in February 2026, Pay Growth Steady at 4.5% for Job-Stayers: ADP Report
  • Employee Wellness

Private Sector Adds 63,000 Jobs in February 2026, Pay Growth Steady at 4.5% for Job-Stayers: ADP Report


Private Sector Adds 63,000 Jobs in February 2026, Pay Growth Steady at 4.5% for Job-Stayers: ADP Report
  • by: Source Logo
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  • March 5, 2026

The February 2026 ADP National Employment Report, produced by ADP Research in collaboration with the Stanford Digital Economy Lab, reveals that private sector employment increased by 63,000 jobs. Pay for job-stayers rose 4.5 percent year-over-year, while the premium for switching employers reached a record low.

Quick Intel

  • U.S. private employers added 63,000 jobs in February, the strongest gain since July 2025, with construction and education/health services driving growth.
  • Job-stayer pay growth held steady at 4.5% year-over-year, while job-changer annualized pay slowed to 6.3%.
  • Hiring concentrated in select sectors, limiting widespread pay benefits from job changes and marking a record low pay premium for switchers.
  • Small establishments (1-19 employees) led job gains with 58,000 additions; medium-sized firms saw declines.
  • Regional growth strongest in the South (37,000) and West (19,000), with Midwest showing a net loss.
  • The report, based on anonymized payroll data from over 26 million employees, provides a high-frequency view of private-sector labor market trends.

Solid but Concentrated Job Gains in February Private sector hiring rebounded in February with 63,000 net new jobs, marking the best monthly performance since July 2025. Growth was led by construction (+19,000) and education and health services (+58,000), while professional and business services (-30,000) and manufacturing (-5,000) experienced declines. Goods-producing sectors added 16,000 jobs overall, and service-providing sectors contributed 47,000. Small establishments drove most gains, particularly those with 1-19 employees (+58,000), while medium-sized firms saw losses.

Regionally, the South led with 37,000 jobs added, followed by the West (+19,000) and Northeast (+11,000). The Midwest posted a net loss of 4,000. These patterns reflect uneven recovery and sector-specific demand across the U.S. labor market.

Pay Trends Favor Job-Stayers Amid Low Switching Premium Pay growth for employees who remained in their roles held firm at 4.5 percent year-over-year in February, unchanged from the prior month. In contrast, annualized pay growth for job-changers decelerated to 6.3 percent, resulting in the smallest premium for switching employers on record. This suggests limited wage upside from job mobility despite ongoing hiring activity.

Among job-stayers, pay increases varied by industry: manufacturing (4.9%), financial activities (5.2%), and construction (4.7%) showed relatively stronger gains, while information (4.0%) and other services (4.1%) lagged. By firm size, larger establishments (500+ employees) offered the highest median pay growth at 4.9%, compared to 2.6% at the smallest firms (1-19 employees).

Labor Market Insights from High-Frequency Data The ADP National Employment Report draws from anonymized weekly payroll data covering more than 26 million U.S. private-sector employees, supplemented by Pay Insights from over 15 million pay change observations monthly. This provides a timely, representative snapshot of private employment and wage dynamics. The January figure was revised downward from 22,000 to 11,000 jobs added.

These findings indicate resilient but selective hiring and steady pay growth for incumbent workers, even as job-switching incentives weaken. The data underscores the importance of sector-specific and regional factors in shaping current labor market conditions.

 

About ADP Research 

The mission of ADP Research is to make the future of work more productive through data-driven discovery. Companies, workers, and policy makers rely on our finely tuned data and unique perspective to make informed decisions that impact workplaces around the world.

 

About ADP (NASDAQ: ADP) 

ADP has been shaping the world of work with innovation and expertise for more than 75 years. As a global leader in HR and payroll solutions, ADP continuously works to solve business challenges for our clients and their workers, from simple, easy-to-use tools for small businesses to fully integrated platforms for global enterprises – and everything in between. Always Designing for People means we're focused on just that – people. We use our unmatched AI-driven insights and proven expertise to design innovative solutions that help people achieve greater success at work. More than 1.1 million clients across 140+ countries rely on ADP's exceptional service to support their people and drive their business forward. HR, Talent, Time Management, Benefits, Compliance, and Payroll.

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