It was the lowest jobless rate since the second quarter of 2008, the Office for National Statistics said.
The number of people out of work was 1.77 million between June and August, down 79,000 from the previous quarter.
The number in work rose by 140,000, bringing the employment rate to 73.6% - the highest rate since records began in 1971.
Some
22.77 million people were working full-time in the three months to
August, up 291,000 compared with the same period last year.
The number working part-time rose 68,000 to 8.35 million.
Earnings rise
In
the three months to August, workers' total earnings, including bonuses,
were up 3% from a year earlier - slightly less than expected.
Excluding bonuses, growth in average weekly earnings slowed slightly to 2.8%.
Rising pay is a factor used by the Bank of England in considering when to start raising interest rates.
Wage
growth remains weaker than before the financial crisis, but has
gathered pace faster than the Bank predicted earlier this year.
Ruth Miller, UK economist at Capital Economics, said: "There does not
seem much need for the MPC to panic about wage growth yet. A [rate]
rise before the second quarter of 2016 still seems unlikely in our
view."
The CBI said higher productivity "must go hand in hand" with wages growth.
John
Hawksworth, chief economist at PwC, said the strong employment figures
contrasted with less robust data for retail sales, manufacturing and
construction for July and August.
"We'll probably see some
slowdown in overall GDP growth in the third quarter, reflecting more
uncertain global conditions, but the health of the jobs market continues
to underpin the domestic economic recovery," he said.
There was a
4,600 rise in the number claiming jobless benefits to 796,200 in
September. However the move to universal credit has made this number
more difficult to estimate and, as a result, it has lost is designation
as a national statistic.
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