KEY POINTS
  • Long-term unemployment is generally considered a period of joblessness lasting more than six months. 
  • People out of work for a longer period are more likely to have depleted savings and turned to debt to cover living expenses. They typically have a tougher time finding a job, and often get a pay cut if they find one.
  •  Data indicate millions of people are approaching this threshold. Hundreds of thousands are already there.
Vehicles line up on streets around Boulder Station Hotel & Casino as they wait to get into a drive-through Three Square Food Bank emergency food distribution site on April 29 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Millions of Americans are hurtling into a period of unemployment that often carries more financial risk.  

Economists generally consider long-term unemployment as a period of joblessness that lasts longer than 26 weeks, or six months.