America’s small businesses added an estimated 32,900 net new jobs in June, payroll and benefits provider Gusto reported, with the pace of hiring moderating from a stronger spring. The seasonally adjusted figure lands as broader labor data points to a cooling job market across the economy.
For self-employed owners who hire even one or two people, the report is a read on how cautious their peers have turned. A slower hiring pace often signals that small firms are protecting cash and waiting for clearer demand.
What The Report Found
Gusto’s June reading shows small firms still adding workers, but at a softer clip than the spring surge that pushed hiring higher earlier in the year. The moderation aligns with a run of 2026 data showing employers becoming more selective about new roles.
The report draws on payroll data from small businesses across the country, giving a ground-level view that can differ from the headline federal jobs numbers. Small-firm hiring often turns before the broader market, which makes these monthly reads worth watching.
Why This Matters For Self-Employed Owners
When small businesses slow their hiring, it usually means owners are bracing for thinner margins or softer sales. That caution ripples out to the freelancers and contractors those firms would otherwise bring on for extra work.
For a solo owner weighing a first hire, the signal is mixed. A cooler market can mean more available talent and less wage pressure, but it also warns that client budgets may tighten in the months ahead. Our coverage of the QuickBooks Small Business Index showed a similar softening earlier this year.
What Self-Employed Owners Should Do Next
Pressure-test your hiring plan against your real pipeline, not your best month. If a role only pays for itself when revenue is at its peak, a contractor or fractional hire may be the safer first step.
If you do hire, build in a cushion. Set aside enough runway to cover payroll through a slow stretch, and lean on flexible arrangements before committing to a full-time salary and its overhead.
What To Watch Next
The next federal jobs report and the upcoming ADP and Gusto releases will show whether June’s slowdown was a pause or the start of a longer cooling period. Watch small-firm hiring closely, since it tends to move first.
Also track wages and quit rates. If both keep easing, owners may find hiring cheaper later in 2026, even as overall demand stays uncertain.
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