News

Whatcom County unemployment rate ticks up with seasonal shift

Whatcom County unemployment rate ticks up with seasonal shift

Photo: Saga Communications


WHATCOM COUNTY, WA (MyBellinghamNow.com) – Whatcom County’s jobless rate saw a moderate, yet expected, rise going into 2026.

That’s according to the state Employment Security Department, which reports that the county’s non-seasonally adjusted unemployment rate sat at 5.2% in December 2025.

It was up from 4.6% in November and higher than the rate from the previous year.

Still, the increase was in line with seasonal trends, as unemployment rates typically rise from November to December.

Whatcom’s seasonally adjusted rate won’t be released until next month.

The county’s jobless rate remained slightly below the state’s, which rose to 5.3%.

The private sector added roughly 7,700 jobs statewide, with big gains in food services, bars and software publishing.

Recent Headlines

16 hours ago in Sports

Duke freshman forward Cameron Boozer named The Associated Press men’s national player of the year

Cameron Boozer was at the center of everything for Duke this season. The 6-foot-9, 250-pound forward proved tough enough to score through...

2 days ago in Local Sports, Northwest Sports, Professional, Sports

Schlittler, Goldschmidt, Rice lead Yankees to 5-3 win over Mariners

Schlittler and Tuesday starter Max Fried have yet to give up a run this season

3 days ago in Entertainment, Sports

Men’s NCAA tournament averaging 10.3 million viewers, its most-watched since 1993

The men's NCAA tournament is averaging 10.3 million viewers through the Elite Eight, according to Nielsen. That is the tournament's best audience since...

3 days ago in Local Sports, Northwest Sports, Professional, Sports

Loss to Oilers leaves Kraken grasping for playoff spot

Seattle limps home after losing 6 of their last 7 games

3 days ago in Local Sports, Northwest Sports, Professional, Sports

Max Fried shines as Yankees shut out Mariners

Josh Naylor snaps his 0-20 hitless streak in a bright spot for Seattle