This publication is categorised as a CSO Frontier Series Output. Particular care must be taken when interpreting the statistics in this release as it may use new methods which are under development and/or data sources which may be incomplete, for example new administrative data sources.
The monthly employee index for males decreased by 1.1%, while the index for females decreased by 0.5% in November 2025.
Taking age into account, all groups observed a fall in the monthly index. The largest monthly decrease was observed in the 15-19 years age category (-1.8%).
The monthly indices for all NACE sectors fell in November 2025. The largest decreases were in Information & Communication and Human Health & Social Work (both -2.1%).
The annual employee index rose by 0.6% to November 2025.
The Monthly Estimates of Payroll Employees using Administrative Data release is a very short time series (just over five years of monthly data) and is thus at the lower limit of acceptable length for the seasonal adjustment process. In the short term, care should be taken in interpreting the seasonally adjusted output. Users should be aware that there is increased uncertainty around the seasonally adjusted figures during the COVID-19 period due to the volatility of the data. Non-seasonally adjusted data are available on PxStat. The seasonal models were revised in September 2025. The models are being updated as part of the annual review process in accordance with the CSO and ESS (European Statistical System/Eurostat) guidelines.
The Monthly Estimates of Payroll Employees using Administrative Data is published as a 'Frontier' release, therefore the methodology and data are subject to revision. As more data become available, due to later transmissions from employers, the series may change from month to month. As this particularly affects the most recent months, figures should be considered provisional for the two most recent months for the non-seasonally adjusted data. Estimates for 2024 were revised in September 2025 as part of an annual review with the latest data available. All figures for monthly percentage change and annual percentage change are calculated prior to the input data being rounded.
It is anticipated that an update including new weighting will be introduced in forthcoming months. This will result in a break in series.
| Number of Employees and Employee Index, Monthly and Annual Changes, Seasonally Adjusted | ||||
| Period | Number of Employees | Employee Index (Base year: 2019=100) | Monthly % Change | Annual % Change |
| November 2024 | 2,521,600 | 117.1 | 0.9 | 2.8 |
| October 2025 | 2,559,400 | 118.8 | 0.2 | 2.4 |
| November 2025 | 2,537,900 | 117.8 | -0.8 | 0.6 |
The annual index increased by 0.6% in November 2025 when compared with November 2024. March 2021 was the last month to show an annual decrease in the employee index (-11.0%).
On an annual basis, the index for females increased by 0.8%, and for males was up by 0.6%. The monthly index decreased by 0.5% for females and 1.1% for males in November 2025.
Two age categories, the 15-19 years (-3.1%) and 35-44 years (-1.3%), saw a decrease in the annual index. All other groups saw annual increases in the employee index. The age groups with the largest annual rise in employees were the 65 years and over age group (+5.9%), followed by those aged 60-64 years (+3.1%).
The sector showing the largest annual increase was Construction (+3.8%). The largest annual decrease was in Services (T, U) (-2.6%), it should be noted that this is the smallest sector, with 4,300 employees in November 2025.
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Statistician's Comment
The Central Statistics Office (CSO) has today (16 January 2025) published Monthly Estimates of Payroll Employees using Administrative Data, November 2025.
Commenting on the release, Kevin Healy, Statistician in the Labour Market & Earnings Division, said: “All NACE sectors saw a monthly decrease in the numbers employed in November 2025. The largest monthly falls were in Information & Communication and Human Health & Social Work (both -2.1%).
The 15-19 years age category saw the largest monthly fall in employees in November 2025 (-1.8%).
The annual index increased by 0.6% between November 2024 and November 2025.”
Data from this release supplements data published in the Labour Force Survey (LFS) quarterly series, which is the official measure of both employment and unemployment for the State. Monthly Estimates of Payroll Employees using Administrative Data are of relevance to LFS Seasonally Adjusted Estimates and Employment outputs.