Australia's seasonally adjusted unemployment rate fell to 4.4% in May from 4.5% in April, data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics showed Thursday.
The consensus forecast was also for 4.4%, according to Trading Economics.
The total number of employed people increased by 40,300, bringing the total to 14.7 million.
"Over the past few months, we have recorded higher proportions of unemployed people waiting to start jobs who then remained unemployed in the following month," said Sean Crick, the bureau's head of labor statistics.
The participation rate remained flat at nearly 67% compared with the previous month. The underemployment rate, which refers to the share of workers who want and are available to work additional hours, inched up to 5.9% in May from 5.8% in April.
The employment-to-population ratio rose 0.1 percentage points to nearly 64%, the report said. Monthly hours worked across all jobs decreased by 22 million hours to 2.01 billion hours in May.
