Participation, Job Search and Mobility, Australia

Latest release

Labour participation potential, underemployment and job attachment, job search experience, labour mobility, hours worked, industry and occupation.

Reference period
February 2025
Release date and time
29/07/2025 11:30am AEST

Key statistics

In February 2025:

  • 1.7 million people were not working but wanted to work
  • the job mobility rate was 7.7%, a decrease from February 2024 (8.0%)
  • the annual retrenchment rate was 1.9%, an increase from 1.7% in February 2024
  • of the 14.7 million employed people (May 2025), 1.3 million preferred to work more hours

Statistics from the Participation, Job Search and Mobility (PJSM) survey are published in three topic-based releases:

North Queensland Floods

Flooding in Northern Queensland in February 2025, particularly in Townsville, resulted in some disruptions to the collection of the Labour Force Survey (LFS). 

The ABS reviewed the data for Townsville SA4 and revised the February LFS estimates with imputed sample responses for that area, consistent with the approach used to address impacts from previous natural disasters. 

Estimates for PJSM were benchmarked to align with these revised LFS estimates, using the standard weighting and estimation approach. For more information, refer to the March 2025 release of Labour Force, Australia

Microdata and Tablebuilder

Microdata from the PJSM survey for 2015 to 2025 will be released in TableBuilder and DataLab (as a supplementary file to the Longitudinal Labour Force) on 7 August 2025. For more information, refer to Microdata and TableBuilder: Participation, Job Search and Mobility.

Data downloads

How to use tables

Potential workers

Data files
Data files

Underemployed workers

Data files

Microdata and TableBuilder

Data files

Previous catalogue number

This release previously used catalogue number 6226.0 (6226.0.55.001 in 2014).

Post release changes

29 July 2025 - 1pm: 

  • Corrections were made to 'Changed jobs in last 12 months' in Job mobility Tables 1, 2 and 3.
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