New and cumulative jobless claims by state: Unemployment insurance (UI) claims filed and number of workers either receiving unemployment benefits or waiting for approval during the week ending May 23

State Initial regular UI claims filed Total receiving or applied for regular UI Total receiving or applied for PUA
Alabama 27,289 237,681 0
Alaska 8,537 63,948 0
Arizona 26,878 271,058 0
Arkansas 10,464 138,007 0
California 212,343 2,579,493 1,493,119
Colorado 15,731 300,255 120,172
Connecticut 16,584 318,048 89,251
Delaware 4,783 69,367 0
Washington D.C. 5,123 79,410 0
Florida 173,731 907,767 0
Georgia 164,350 1,070,809 0
Hawaii 8,683 206,670 0
Idaho 4,472 65,672 10,679
Illinois 58,359 895,333 249,611
Indiana 26,278 316,653 162,895
Iowa 14,586 207,321 27,594
Kansas 11,614 134,435 0
Kentucky 53,738 346,157 0
Louisiana 23,853 372,934 164,957
Maine 4,116 108,810 54,244
Maryland 33,240 318,200 219,449
Massachusetts 37,740 665,872 1,518,802
Michigan 57,714 1,073,356 2,141,518
Minnesota 28,615 490,762 90,406
Mississippi 24,348 246,966 0
Missouri 25,917 307,309 111,251
Montana 3,617 56,196 40,469
Nebraska 5,875 72,010 23,417
Nevada 18,102 375,838 64,966
New Hampshire 6,973 124,702 0
New Jersey 33,290 662,305 546,306
New Mexico 7,347 122,989 60,610
New York 192,193 2,240,818 707,487
North Carolina 43,221 649,112 196,752
North Dakota 3,277 41,509 10,447
Ohio 42,363 706,705 770,767
Oklahoma 32,127 201,071 3,016
Oregon 27,514 538,212 0
Pennsylvania 69,408 1,045,192 914,058
Rhode Island 2,920 95,365 48,649
South Carolina 24,950 295,125 135,457
South Dakota 3,410 29,889 5,361
Tennessee 26,041 376,125 92,537
Texas 128,105 1,563,525 298,353
Utah 5,455 93,688 14,280
Vermont 1,480 53,774 0
Virginia 58,591 481,931 207,133
Washington 53,280 823,876 441,587
West Virginia 4,762 111,900 0
Wisconsin 28,308 352,294 24,243
Wyoming 2,298 23,314 4,993

Notes: Initial claims for the week ending May 23 reflect advance state claims, not seasonally adjusted.

Unless otherwise noted, the numbers in this blog post are the ones reported by the U.S. Department of Labor, which they receive from the state agencies that administer UI. While the DOL is asking states to report regular UI claims and PUA claims separately, many states appear to also be including some or all PUA claimants in their reported regular UI claims. As state agencies work to get these new programs up and running, there will likely continue to be some misreporting. Since the number of UI claims is one of the most up-to-date measures we have of labor market weakness and access to benefits, we will still be analyzing it each week as reported by DOL, but ask that you keep these caveats in mind when interpreting the data.

Source: U.S. Employment and Training Administration, Initial Claims [ICSA], retrieved from Department of Labor (DOL), https://www.dol.gov/ui/data.pdf and https://oui.doleta.gov/unemploy/claims.asp, May 28, 2020

View the underlying data on epi.org.