Iceland Jobless Rate Falls in March

2026-04-30 12:00 By Joana Ferreira 1 min. read

Iceland’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate fell to 6.3% in March 2026, down from a revised 7.0% in February.

The number of unemployed people dropped by 1,900 to 14,700, while employment decreased by 1,400 to 220,100.

Meanwhile, the employment rate declined to 75.4% from 75.8%, and the activity rate fell to 80.5% from 81.5%.



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Iceland Jobless Rate Falls in March
Iceland’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate fell to 6.3% in March 2026, down from a revised 7.0% in February. The number of unemployed people dropped by 1,900 to 14,700, while employment decreased by 1,400 to 220,100. Meanwhile, the employment rate declined to 75.4% from 75.8%, and the activity rate fell to 80.5% from 81.5%.
2026-04-30
Iceland Jobless Rate Rises to 7.1% in February
Iceland’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate rose to 7.1% in February 2026, the highest level in three months, from a downwardly revised 6.8% in January. The number of unemployed persons increased by 0.9 thousand month-on-month to 17.0 thousand, of which 9.4 thousand were men and 7.6 thousand were women. The youth unemployment rate, which measures job-seekers between 16 to 24 years old, went up to 17.0% from 16.6%, reaching its highest level since April 2021. Meanwhile, the employment rate dropped to an over four-and-a-half-year low of 75.0% from 75.8% in January, with the number of employed individuals falling by 0.6 thousand to 221.1 thousand. The labor force participation rate fell to 80.8% from 81.4%. On a non-seasonally adjusted basis, the unemployment rate inched up to 7.9% in February from 7.5% in the previous month, marking the highest level since May 2021.
2026-03-26
Iceland Jobless Rate Highest in Over 4 Years
Iceland’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate rose by 7.3% in January 2026, following 4.5% in the previous month, marking the highest level since April 2021. The number of unemployed persons increased by 6,900 from a month ago to 17,400. By gender, the unemployment rate for men jumped 7.1% from 4.5%, while the rate for women surged to 7.4% from 4.6%. The youth unemployment rate, which measures job-seekers between 16 to 24 years old, grew sharply to 16.6% from 11.2% in December 2025. Meanwhile, the employment rate dropped to 75.7% from 76.8%, with the number of employed persons decreased by 400 to 222,500. The labor force participation rate rose 81.6%, compared with 80.5% in the prior month. On a non-seasonally adjusted basis, the unemployment rate climbed to 8.3% in January from 4.2% in December 2025.
2026-02-25