×

UK wages rise at slowest pace in over five years

By Thomson Reuters Mar 19, 2026 | 2:04 AM

LONDON, March 19 (Reuters) – British wages, excluding bonuses, rose at their slowest pace since late 2020 in the three months to January, according ​to official data published on Thursday which also ‌suggested a weakening in employment might have bottomed out.

Regular earnings rose by 3.8% in the November-to-January period, the slowest increase since the three months to November 2020 and down from ‌4.1% ​in the final quarter of 2025, ⁠the Office for National ⁠Statistics said.

Economists polled by Reuters had mostly expected pay growth of 4.0%.

The ONS data also showed Britain’s unemployment rate – which is calculated from a survey ​that the ONS is still overhauling – held at 5.2%, its highest since the COVID-19 pandemic period.

The number ⁠of people in payrolled employment ⁠rose by a provisional estimate of ​20,000 people between February and January.

In January, payrolls rose by ​a revised estimate of 6,000 compared with a ‌provisional estimate of a fall of 11,000.

Until this month, the Bank of England had been trying to gauge whether lingering inflation heat in the labour market ⁠or a weakening of hiring in recent months posed the bigger risk to the economy.

But new inflation pressures have emerged, ⁠caused by ‌the jump in energy prices after the ⁠start of the war in the ​Middle East.

The ‌BoE is expected to keep borrowing ​costs on ⁠hold at 1200 GMT on Thursday at the end of the Monetary Policy Committee’s March meeting which until recently had been expected to result in a quarter-point rate cut.

(Writing by William Schomberg; Editing by Muvija M ​and David Milliken)