It was the lowest jobless rate since the second quarter of 2008, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said.
The number of people out of work fell by 103,000 between July and September to 1.75 million.
There
were 31.21 million people in work, 177,000 more than for the
April-to-June quarter and 419,000 more than in the same period a year
earlier.
'Strengthening trend'
ONS
statistician Nick Palmer said: "These figures continue the recent
strengthening trend in the labour market, with a new record high in the
employment rate and the unemployment rate still at its lowest level
since spring 2008."
The ONS also said the total earnings of
workers, including bonuses, in the three months to September were up 3%
from a year earlier, the same rate as in the three months to August.
In September, total wages rose by 2.0%, down from 3.2% the previous month and the weakest increase since February.
Excluding
bonuses, average weekly earnings growth slowed to 2.5% in the third
quarter and 1.9% in September, both the weakest since the first quarter
of 2015.
Chris
Williamson, chief economist at research firm Markit, said: "The UK
labour market continued to tighten in September, as unemployment fell
more than expected and employment rose sharply. Pay growth remained
surprisingly weak, however, despite further evidence of growing skill
shortages, which normally leads to higher salaries.
"Pay growth
remains central to policymaking, and interest rates are likely to stay
on hold for as the official data show pay growth remaining subdued.
Today's data therefore support the Bank's current projections that there
will be no need to raise interest rates until 2017 due to persistent
low inflation."
'Softer pace'
It comes after the latest Bank of England inflation report, released last week, indicated it was unlikely to raise rates soon.
The
Bank voted 8-1 to keep rates on hold, and said inflation was only
expected to pick up slowly, staying below 1% until the second half of
2016.
Following the latest jobs figures, Martin Beck, senior
economic advisor to the EY ITEM Club said: "Looking ahead, with less
room for joblessness to fall, a slower rate of decline in unemployment
seems likely.
"Moreover, a recovery in productivity also points
to a softer pace of job creation as firms extract more output from
existing workforces. That said, the same trend will give firms the
resources to pay more."
Economically inactive
Meanwhile,
the ONS said that the claimant count increased for the third month in a
row, up by 3,300 in October to 795,500. That figure counts people on
Jobseeker's Allowance and those on the out-of-work element of Universal
Credit.
The number of people classed as economically inactive fell
by 22,000, to just under nine million in the latest period, the lowest
for more than a year.
These include students, those on long-term
sick leave, people looking after a relative and those who are no longer
looking for work.
In the same labour market statistics report, the
ONS revealed that the number of EU nationals working in the UK had
increased by 324,000 in the past 12 months.
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