We characterize the vortex and dust devil activity at Jezero from pressure and winds obtained with the MEDA instrument on Mars 2020 over 415 sols (Ls=6-213º). Vortices are abundant (4.9 vortices per sol with pressure drops >0.5 Pa when correcting from gaps in coverage) and peak at noon. At least one in every 5 vortices carries dust from RDS-MEDA data, and intense vortices are more likely to carry dust. Seasonal variability was small but dust devils were abundant during a dust storm (Ls=152-156º). Vortices are more frequent and intense over terrains with lower thermal inertia favoring a higher daytime surface-to-air temperature gradient. We fit measurements of wind and pressure during dust devil encounters to models of vortices, and investigate their physical characteristics. Diameters range from 5 to 135 m with a mean of 20 m. Three 100-m size events passed within 30 m of the rover. From the close encounters we estimate a dust devil activity of 2.0-3.0 dust devils km$^{-2}$ sol$^{-1}$. A comparison of MEDA observations with a Large Eddy Simulation of Jezero at Ls=45º produces a similar result. We estimate that large dust devils with diameters $>100$ m have a density of 0.1 dust devils km-2sol-1, implying that dust lifting is dominated by the largest vortices in the region. At least one vortex had a central pressure drop of 9.0 Pa and internal winds of 25 ms-1. The MEDA wind sensors were partially damaged during two dust devil encounters, and we detail these events.