Press release
ADP National Employment Report: Private Sector Employment Shed 33,000 Jobs in June; Annual Pay was Up 4.4%
ROSELAND, N.J., July 2, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Private sector employment shed 33,000 jobs in June and annual pay was up 4.4 percent year-over-year, according to

About this update from Automatic Data Processing, Inc.
[{"type":"text","content":"ROSELAND, N.J., July 2, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Private sector employment shed 33,000 jobs in June and annual pay was up 4.4 percent year-over-year, according to the June ADP National Employment ReportĀ® produced by ADP Research in collaboration with the Stanford Digital Economy Lab (\"Stanford Lab\"). The ADP National Employment Report is an independent measure and high-frequency view of the private-sector labor market based on actual, anonymized payroll data of more than 25 million U.S. employees.\nThe jobs report and pay insights use ADP's fine-grained anonymized and aggregated payroll data to provide a representative picture of the private-sector labor market. The report details the current month's total private employment change, and weekly job data from the previous month. Because the underlying ADP payroll databases are continuously updated, the report provides a high-frequency, near real-time measure of U.S. employment. This measure reflects the number of employees on ADP client payrolls (Payroll Employment) to provide a richer understanding of the labor market. As of January 2025, ADP's Pay Insights measure captures nearly 14.8 million individual pay change observations each month, up from nearly 10 million when it launched.\n\"Though layoffs continue to be rare, a hesitancy to hire and a reluctance to replace departing workers led to job losses last month,\" said Dr. Nela Richardson, chief economist, ADP. \"Still, the slowdown in hiring has yet to disrupt pay growth.\"\nJune 2025 Report Highlights*\nView the ADP National Employment Report and interactive charts at www.adpemploymentreport.com.\nJOBS REPORT\nPrivate employers shed 33,000 jobs in JuneJob losses in professional and business services, and education and health services led the decline. Leisure and hospitality, and manufacturing showed gains.\nChange in U.S. Private Employment: -33,000\nChange by Industry Sector- Goods-producing: 32,000\nNatural resources/mining 8,000Construction 9,000Manufacturing 15,000- Service-providing: -66,000\nTrade/transportation/utilities 14,000Information 5,000Financial activities -14,000Professional/business services -56,000Education/health services -52,000Leisure/hospitality 32,000Other services 5,000Change by U.S. Regions - Northeast: -3,000\nNew England -10,000Middle Atlantic 7,000- Midwest: -24,000\nEast North Central 4,000West Nor...