Hourly earnings growth at small businesses continued to decelerate in December, reflecting a pattern for much of the year, while job growth also moderated, payroll provider Paychex reported Tuesday.
The
The Midwest ranked as the top region for small business employment growth for all of 2025, although it tied with the Northeast with a 99.65 jobs index in December.
Indiana started and ended the year ranked in first place among states for small business employment growth at 101.50, averaging an index level of 100.52 in 2025.
Education and health services, with an index level of 100.49 in December, led industry sectors for small business job growth every month in 2025 and has reported positive growth for nearly five years in a row.
"From an overall standpoint, it's a little bit less employment growth," said Frank Fiorille, vice president of risk management, compliance and data analytics at Paychex. "It's low fire, low hire. You're not seeing a lot of layoffs or firings, but you're also not seeing a lot of new job growth either."
He sees a bifurcated job market, with the Midwest doing better than the East and West Coasts, and education and health services doing well compared to other sectors. The number of hours worked by small-business employees has been volatile in recent months, spiking before declining in the fall months and then rising again in December.
"It could be a precursor to potentially more hiring down the road as small and medium-sized businesses are trying to get as much out of workers as possible," said Fiorille. "It just comes to the point where they need to hire more people."
He advises accountants to keep an eye on the changes from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act for their small business clients, who will be able to write off more expenses. Businesses will also need to keep track of the new
Separately, another payroll provider, Gusto,






