Getting to know the Federal Workforce, part 2 

The opposite is true for Hispanic Americans. They represented 18.9% of the US population but were 9.5% of the federal workforce. 

As of 2021, veterans comprised 30.0% of the federal workforce but 5.6% of the total labor force.

Overall, 16.6% of the federal workforce has a disability, higher than the 12.0% of the total US population that is disabled.

Of all federal government employees, 55.6% are men. That percentage increases to 62.2% of senior level federal government employees.

There are, unsurprisingly, larger percentages of federal workers in the states around Washington, DC. As of March 2025, federal jobs comprised 5.6% of all jobs in Maryland, 4.5% in Virginia, and 3.7% in West Virginia. In Washington, DC, 24.9% of all workers were in government.

However, if you leave the contiguous US, you’ll also find higher proportions of government employees. The federal government employed 5.4% of workers in Hawaii and 4.6% in Alaska.

Most federal jobs are within the executive branch. Last fall, 17 cabinet departments or independent agencies employed more than 10,000 people each; these departments accounted for 96.5% of federal employment.

The Defense Department has the highest employment rate at 33.4%, or 772,500 of all federal civilian workers.

That’s all for now. We’ll see you next week.

In the meantime, learn more about the number of federal jobs in your state. Start here and select a state from the dropdown in the title.