Economic calendar June 2026: jobs report, CPI, FOMC, GDP, and PCE dates
See the June 2026 economic calendar with official jobs report, CPI, FOMC, GDP, and PCE release dates and times, plus the quarter-end macro setup traders are tracking.
Dates and times below come from the linked official Federal Reserve, BLS, and BEA calendars attached to each event page.
- BLS Employment Situation release calendar1 release this month
- BLS Consumer Price Index release calendar1 release this month
- Federal Reserve FOMC meeting calendar and 2026 statement release pages1 release this month
- BEA release schedule for GDP estimates and corporate profits1 release this month
- BEA release schedule for Personal Income and Outlays1 release this month
monthly economic calendar
Friday, Jun 5
1 releaseEmployment Situation for May 2026
See the next jobs report date and time from the official BLS schedule, plus upcoming nonfarm payrolls dates and the market setup into the May 8 release.
Wednesday, Jun 10
1 releaseConsumer Price Index for May 2026
See the next CPI release date and time from the official BLS schedule, plus upcoming inflation report dates and the market setup into the May 12 print.
Wednesday, Jun 17
1 releaseFOMC statement for the June 16-17 meeting
See the next FOMC meeting date and statement time from the official Fed calendar, plus the upcoming 2026 meeting schedule and the market setup into the April 29 decision.
Meeting window: June 16-17, 2026.
Thursday, Jun 25
2 releasesGDP third estimate, industries and corporate profits for Q1 2026
See the next U.S. GDP release date and time from the official BEA schedule, plus upcoming GDP estimate dates and the key market context into the April 30 print.
Personal Income and Outlays for May 2026
See the next PCE release date and time from the official BEA schedule, plus upcoming PCE report dates and the market context that matters into the April 30 print.
Why June is a full macro regime month
June carries nearly every major macro catalyst traders care about: payrolls on June 5, CPI on June 10, the June 16-17 FOMC meeting, then the June 25 BEA release block.
That makes the month useful not because any single date dominates, but because the market keeps getting refreshed information on labor, inflation, policy and growth in sequence.
Quarter-end interpretation gets harder, not easier
By late June the market is no longer reacting to one fresh surprise. It is trying to reconcile the whole quarter's macro pattern. That is why the June 25 GDP third estimate and May Personal Income and Outlays can still matter, even though they are technically revisions or lagged data.
In practice, quarter-end macro months reward traders who think in regime chains rather than single headlines.