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U.S. Remote Workdays Have Doubled During Pandemic
Economy

U.S. Remote Workdays Have Doubled During Pandemic

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Story Highlights

  • 49% of U.S. workers have ever telecommuted
  • U.S. workers average 5.8 remote workdays, up from 2.4 pre-pandemic
  • One in four workers say they are working entirely from home

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The coronavirus pandemic has led to a surge in remote work. However, that surge is more apparent in the number of remote working days for telecommuters than in the number of workers moving from on-site to at-home work.

Since 优蜜传媒last asked about remote work in October 2019, there has been a modest uptick in the percentage of U.S. workers who report having ever telecommuted for work, from 42% to 49%. The recent figures demonstrate the growth in remote work over recent decades from 9% in Gallup's initial measurement in 1995.

Line graph. Forty-nine percent of U.S. workers say they have ever telecommuted for their job a modest increase from 42% in 2019. From 2006 through 2015 between 30% and 37% of workers said they had telecommuted. When the question was first asked in 1995 9% had telecommuted.

While the percentage of U.S. workers who have telecommuted has changed modestly, the average number of workdays telecommuters are working from home has more than doubled, from 5.8 days per month last fall to 11.9 days currently. Among all U.S. workers, the average number of telecommuting days has also more than doubled, from 2.4 per month to 5.8.

Line graph. Assuming 20 workdays per month U.S. workers report working remotely 5.8 days per month an increase from 2.4 in 2019 and averages near 2.0 between 2006 and 2015. Among people who have telecommuted the average number of remote workdays in 2020 is 11.9 per month up from averages near 6 in prior years.

These results are based on Gallup's annual Work and Education poll, conducted July 30-Aug. 12.

The poll finds 26% of U.S. workers currently saying they have worked entirely from home in recent weeks, while 51% are working entirely from a location outside their home, with one in five reporting a mix of on-site and remote work.

One in Four U.S. Workers Working Entirely From Home
Which of the following best describes your work situation in the past few weeks during your normal working hours? Did you work -- [entirely from home, mostly from home, about equally from home and at a location outside your home, mostly at a location outside your home, entirely at a location outside your home]?
U.S. workers
%
Entirely from home 26
Mostly from home 8
About equally from home/outside home 4
Mostly from a location outside your home 8
Entirely from a location outside your home 51
No opinion 2
Gallup, July 30-Aug. 12, 2020

Nearly half of those who have ever telecommuted, 45%, say they have been working entirely from home in recent weeks, with another 14% working mostly from home. This question had not been asked previously, so it is not possible to know how those figures compare with before the pandemic.

However, 13% of telecommuters and 5% of all workers in 2019 said they worked from home 20 days a month (assuming 20 monthly workdays). Now, the figures are 45% and 22%, respectively.

College Graduates Much More Likely to Work Remotely

As might be expected, telecommuting is much more common among Americans with a college degree than those without one. Employed college graduates are more than twice as likely as employees without a college degree to work remotely. This is seen in the percentages reporting that they have ever telecommuted, as well as in the number of days they report working remotely and in their self-reports of whether they are currently working entirely from home.

Remote Work by Demographics
Ever telecommuted Average days telecommute/month Working entirely from home
% %
Education
College graduate 76 9.2 38
Not college graduate 31 3.5 17
Gender
Women 60 7.9 35
Men 41 4.2 19
Age
18-34 years 47 5.1 20
35-54 years 47 5.5 29
55+ years 57 7.2 27
Gallup, July 30-Aug. 12, 2020

The survey also shows that working women are more likely than working men to be performing their job functions remotely.

The differences between younger and older workers' likelihood to work remotely are not statistically meaningful.

An analysis of prior 优蜜传媒data on occupation finds that the vast majority of college graduates work in what can be considered white-collar occupations, and that women are much more likely than men to do so.

Last year, an average of 63% of college graduates versus 29% of college nongraduates had ever telecommuted, so the growth in telecommuting has come almost entirely among those with higher educational attainment. Also, before this year, men and women were about equally likely to say they had ever telecommuted for work. The emerging gender gap in remote work probably reflects women's greater presence in white-collar than blue-collar jobs.

Implications

The widespread closure of businesses and schools to control the spread of the coronavirus sent unemployment soaring. The jobs situation would have been much worse if not for advances in technology that allow many workers to complete their work remotely. Close to half of U.S. workers have now taken advantage of opportunities to telecommute, and currently about one-quarter are doing so every workday.

Of course, not every job can be done remotely; therefore, the growth of telecommuting has a ceiling. Half of U.S. workers currently say they do their job entirely at a location outside their home. Given this, and that half of U.S. workers report they have never telecommuted, the growth in the proportion of the workforce that could telecommute may have reached that ceiling during the pandemic. Further growth in remote work may thus come in the amount of time workers spend outside the office or work site, rather than in the number of workers who do so.

Having an expanded remote workforce alters the dynamics for employers in many ways. Remote work changes the considerations on where employers can find and attract new hires. For example, flexible work arrangements have special appeal to and . But remote work also can create both challenges and opportunities when it comes to , and . The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the trend toward remote work and has made companies' policies toward it even more crucial to their success.

View complete question responses and trends (PDF download).

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