About the Labour Force Survey (LFS)

What is it?

The Labour Force Survey is a survey of households living at private addresses in the UK. Its purpose is to provide information on the UK labour market which can then be used to develop, manage, evaluate and report on labour market policies. The survey is managed by the Office for National Statistics in Great Britain and by the Central Survey Unit of the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA) in Northern Ireland on behalf of the Economic Labour Market Statistics Branch (ELMSB) of the Department of Finance and Personnel.

Since 1992, the LFS in Great Britain has run as a quarterly survey (1994/95 for Northern Ireland). The quarterly surveys have until spring 2006 operated on a seasonal quarter basis. However, mostly due to an EU requirement under regulation, in May 2006 the LFS moved to calendar quarters. The 2006/07 data is the first set of HSE data based on the LFS to be affected by this change. For more details about this change see 'Comparability of LFS data over time'.

How is it structured?

The LFS is intended to be representative of the whole population of the UK, and the sample design currently consists of around 31,000 responding households in every quarter. The quarterly survey has a panel design whereby households stay in the sample for five consecutive quarters (or waves), with a fifth of the sample replaced each quarter. Thus, there is an 80% overlap in the samples for each successive survey.

What are the participation levels?

In line with other countries conducting household surveys, the LFS response rates have been falling. The LFS household specific response rates fell from around 50% at the start of 2010 to below 40% during the onset  of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic (April-June 2020, including information for earlier waves rolled forward for refusals). Following the pandemic, rates continued to decline, dropping to less than 25%. However, recent LFS quarters have shown signs of improvement with response rates rising above 25%. More details about LFS response rates and other quality-related issues are available in the LFS Performance and Quality Monitoring Reports.

To address the falling response rates and increase the sample base, ONS introduced an improvement plan in late 2023, covering both data collection and methodological enhancements. This included reintroducing face-to-face wave 1 interviews (which were moved to telephone interviews at the onset of the coronavirus pandemic), boosting the sample size and increasing incentives for people who take part in the survey. In December 2024, the ONS also reweighted the LFS (from the period January-March 2019 onwards) using improved methods and more up-to-date population projection estimates. Recruitment of additional interviewers is ongoing, particularly for wave 2 to wave 5 interviews.

These interventions have fed through all five waves of the LFS in the latest data periods,  with recent quarters showing signs of improvement. Notably, response rates for wave 1 are now approaching  pre-pandemic levels. For more details see Labour market transformation – update on progress and plans - Office for National Statistics  and Impact of reweighting on Labour Force Survey key indicators - Office for National Statistics.

ONS continues to explore additional ways to improve the LFS response rates. However, the longer-term solution is moving to a transformed online-first version of the LFS which is being developed by the ONS. The ambition of the Transformed Labour Force Survey (TLFS) is to allow a more adaptive and responsive survey to meet user needs, enhance respondent experience and improve the quality of the labour market statistics. For more details see Labour market transformation – update on progress and plans - Office for National Statistics.

The LFS allows interviewers to take answers to questions by proxy if a respondent is unavailable. This is usually from another related adult who is a member of the same household. About a third of the LFS responses are collected by proxy, with variation in this proportion by age, sex, ethnicity and economic activity.

Dawe and Knight (1997)1showed that for many key variables the agreement between proxy informants and the same information given by the subjects themselves to be high - above 80%. However, for those variables requiring very detailed numerical information such as hours worked, agreement was found to be less satisfactory.

Based on 1993/94-2003/04 data, R.Davies et al2 showed that proxy respondents are 24% less likely than first person respondents to report the occurrence of a workplace injury. In terms of work-related illness, J R Jones et al3 reported that in 2004/05 proxies reported rather less work-related illness (3.6% of interviews) than first person respondents (5.3% of interviews). Likewise, based on 2001/02, 2003/04-2008/09 data restricted to individuals in work, R.Davies et al4 showed that spouses or partners acting as proxy respondents are 26% less likely than first person respondent to report suffering from a work-related illness. This increased where the proxy respondent was not a spouse or partner.  Whilst these differences may reflect the difficulty that a proxy respondent has in correctly providing this personal information, it may reflect a 'healthy worker' effect whereby the respondent is more likely to be away from home and their response correctly given by a proxy respondent. Because of this and other uncertainties (see Reliability of self-reported work-related illness), no adjustment is made in the data for proxy responses.

For more detailed background information on the LFS than is given here see 'The LFS User Guide Volume 1: Background and Methodology'.

How is the LFS being improved?

The Labour Force Survey is being transformed. ONS are working on radical plans to both streamline and improve the Labour Force Survey, to significantly increase the sample size and approach people in different ways, notably changing it to become an online-first survey, followed up by teams phoning households and knocking on doors in areas of low response, vastly increasing response rates. The transformed survey will allow for more robust estimates, as well as more granular breakdowns of the data. Updates on progress and plans can be found at Labour market transformation - updates on progress and plans - Office for National Statistics.

Notes and references

  1. Dawe, F and Knight, I (1997): A Study of proxy response in the Labour Force Survey. Survey Methodology Bulletin (No. 40). Back to reference of footnote 1
  2. Rhys Davies and Paul Jones (2005): Trends and context to rates of workplace injury. Back to reference of footnote 2
  3. J R Jones MSc, C S Huxtable BSc and J T Hodgson MSc: Self-reported work-related illness in 2004/05: Results from the Labour Force Survey. Back to reference of footnote 3
  4. Rhys Davies, Huw Lloyd-Williams and Emma Wadsworth: Analysis of the Correlates of Self-reported Work-related Illness in the Labour Force Survey . Back to reference of footnote 4

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Updated 2025-11-21