OPM data overhaul reveals deeper federal workforce insights
Clearer numbers on the federal workforce are coming into view, after the Office of Personnel Management launched a major update to one of its largest data assets on Thursday.
A new federal workforce data website from OPM aims to deliver information on the federal workforce faster, with more transparency and more frequent updates, than its predecessor, FedScope.
βThis is a major step forward for accountability and data-driven decision-making across government,β OPM Director Scott Kupor said Thursday in a press release.
OPMβs new platform also reaffirms the significant reshaping the federal workforce experienced over the last year. The latest workforce data, now publicly available up to November 2025, shows governmentwide staffing levels at a decade low. According to OPMβs numbers, the government shed well over 300,000 federal employees last year, impacting virtually all executive branch agencies. When accounting for hiring numbers, there has been a net loss of nearly 220,000 federal employees since January 2025.
Data on federal employeesβ bargaining unit status has also shifted significantly under the Trump administration. OPMβs new data platform shows that the share of the federal workforce represented by unions dropped from about 56% to about 38% over the last year, as a result of President Donald Trumpβs orders to end collective bargaining at most agencies.
And agencies reported a 75% decrease in telework hours between January and October 2025, due to Trumpβs on-site requirements for the federal workforce, which the president initiated on his first day in office.
The new website is the result of a major update to OPMβs legacy data asset, FedScope, which had been in need of significant modernization for years. In aΒ reportΒ from 2016, the Government Accountability Office recommended that OPM update the FedScope platform and improve the availability of workforce data.
Users of OPMβs new public-facing website can filter the workforce data by geographic location, agency, age, education level, bargaining unit status β and much more.
Additional data that was not accessible on the legacy FedScope platform is also now readily available, including information on retirement eligibility, telework levels, performance ratings and hiring activities for the federal workforce.
Information on race and ethnicity across the federal workforce, however, is not featured on OPMβs new platform. Thatβs due to Trumpβs executive order last year to eliminate diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility (DEIA) across government.
OPM had been working to update several of its workforce data assets since at least the end of the Biden administration. Federal News NetworkΒ reportedΒ in early January 2025 that the agency was already in the process of building out its data management capabilities for FedScope and the Enterprise Human Resources IntegrationΒ system (EHRI).
OPM, under the Trump administration, then announced plans last July to relaunch FedScope with βimmediate enhancements.β
βOPM will continue releasing new data, visuals and features on the site each month and will iterate on the platform as user feedback is received,β OPM said in its press release Thursday. βThis launch represents just the beginning, with regular updates and new enhancements planned on an ongoing basis.β
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