Remote work is no longer a temporary shift—it’s a permanent part of the modern labor market. Companies are now balancing hybrid schedules, distributed teams, and evolving expectations around flexibility, productivity, and cost.
At Remote CoWorker, we compiled 25 essential remote work statistics, trends, and projections that show who works remotely, how often, and what it means for hiring, performance, retention, and business expenses.
Together, these statistics provide a clear snapshot of the state of remote work in 2026 and highlight the key patterns employers and job seekers need to understand moving forward.
Key Remote Work Statistics
1. 22.9% of the U.S. workforce works remotely
As of late 2025, nearly 23% of the U.S. workforce teleworked or worked from home, representing over 36.6 million Americans.
This includes 12.3% of U.S. workers who telework some hours and 10.7% of workers who telework all hours.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).
2. About 75 million U.S. jobs are compatible with remote work
An estimated 75 million U.S. employees have jobs that could be done remotely. These workers represent 56% of the non-self-employed workforce.
These roles typically involve knowledge work, digital tools, and limited need for physical presence, making them ideal for remote staffing, outsourcing, and offshore support models.
Source: U.S. Career Institute.
3. Over 50% of workers telework at least 2.5 days per week
This shift toward hybrid and distributed work environments makes it easier for organizations to integrate remote contractors and offshore talent, as remote teams already depend on digital collaboration tools and asynchronous workflows.
Source: AOVUP.
Remote Work Statistics and Future Projections
4. About half of U.S. workers are projected to be remote by 2028
This growth is fueled by freelancers, contractors, and outsourced service roles, as companies increasingly rely on distributed teams in customer support, operations, and other functions. These work trends closely align with broader virtual assistant statistics, which show rising demand for remote support roles across industries.
Source: AOVUP.
5. Full-time remote work is declining even as overall telework rises

While the overall telework rate increased to 22.9% in Q1 2024, the share of teleworkers working all of their hours remotely fell sharply. Only 47.9% of teleworkers were fully remote, down 6.1 percentage points year over year, signaling a shift away from fully remote roles amid growing hybrid work adoption.
Source: BLS.
6. Hybrid and low-hour remote work arrangements are becoming more common
Remote work statistics show a clear move toward part-time telework and hybrid models. In Q1 2024, the share of teleworkers working 40+ hours from home dropped to 36.7%, while short-duration telework increased.
Workers teleworking 8 hours or fewer per week rose to 15.2%, and those working 9-16 hours remotely increased to 18.1%, reflecting broader return-to-office and hybrid scheduling trends.
Source: BLS.
Remote Work Statistics by Job Type and Education
7. Remote work rates quadruple from high school graduates (9.1%) to college graduates (39.7%)
Just 5.4% of workers without a high school diploma work remotely, increasing to 9.1% among high school graduates with no college.
However, the percentage more than doubles to 19.1% among workers with some college or an associate degree, and more than quadruples to 39.7% for workers with a four-year degree or higher.
That includes 38.2% of workers with a bachelor’s degree and 41.9% of workers with an advanced degree.
Source: BLS.
8. Management and professional roles are the most likely to be remote

In Q1 2024, 37.9% of workers in these roles teleworked at least part of the time, reflecting how knowledge-based work is best suited for remote environments.
Meanwhile, 24.9% of workers in sales and office occupations teleworked in the first quarter of 2024, making these the second most prevalent occupations for remote work.
Remote work remains rare in service occupations, which continue to have low levels of remote work despite modest growth year over year. Only 5.4% of service workers teleworked in Q1 2024.
Physical labor jobs have the lowest remote work rates, with just 3.2% workers across production, transportation, and material moving, as well as natural resources, construction, and maintenance occupations working remotely in Q1 2024.
Source: BLS.
9. Remote work growth is concentrated in white-collar occupations
Remote work statistics show that telework growth is overwhelmingly concentrated in management, professional, sales, and office roles, while blue-collar and hands-on occupations remain largely in-person due to the nature of the work.
Workers in management and professional roles are more than 10 times as likely to work remotely as those in construction, production, or transportation jobs, underscoring how access to remote work is shaped by job function rather than preference.
Source: BLS.
Remote Work Demographic Statistics - Age, Gender, Race, Family Status
10. Workers age 35 to 44 are most likely to work remotely, while the youngest workers are least likely
About 27.3% of U.S. workers between the ages of 35 and 44 work remotely at least part of the time—a higher percentage than any other age group. Nearly half of these, representing 12.8% of workers in that age group, work all hours remotely.
Meanwhile, only 7.1% of workers aged 16 to 24 do the same, with less than half of them, at 3.2% of all American workers, teleworking all hours.
Here’s the percentage of the American workforce that works remotely at least part of the time, broken down by age group:
- Ages 16 to 24: 7.1%
- 16 to 19: 2.5%
- 20 to 24: 8.7%
- Ages 25 to 54: 25.4%
- 25 to 34: 22.3%
- 35 to 44: 27.3%
- 45 to 54: 26.7%
- Age 55+: 24.3%
- 55 to 64: 24.5%
- 65+: 23.9%
American workers aged 65 and older are the most likely age group to work fully remotely, with 13.3% of workers in the age group teleworking all hours.
Source: BLS.
11. Women Are More Likely Than Men to Work Remotely Across Age and Race
Across all workers aged 16 and older, 25.1% of women work remotely, compared to 21.1% of men—a gap of roughly four percentage points that holds steady across age brackets.
The difference is most pronounced during prime working years. Among workers aged 25 to 54, 27.9% of women work remotely, versus 23.2% of men, reinforcing the idea that remote work may disproportionately support women’s participation in the labor force during peak career and caregiving years.
The same pattern appears across racial and ethnic groups. Women consistently have higher remote work rates than men, except among Asian workers, where men lead by more than five points:
- Asian women: 29.4% vs Asian men: 35%
- White women: 25.6% vs. White men: 21.0%
- Black women: 19.4% vs. Black men: 13.3%
- Hispanic women: 16.3% vs. Hispanic men: 10.6%
Source: BLS.
12. Workers with children under 18 are significantly more likely to work remotely
About 27% of workers with children under 18 work remotely, with 14.6% of the workforce in this segment teleworking some hours and 12.4% teleworking all hours.
In contrast, 21.2% of workers without children work remotely, and only 10% of childless workers telework all hours.
The six-point gap indicates that remote work plays an important role in supporting caregiving responsibilities and work-life balance for parents.
Source: BLS.
13. Married workers are far more likely to work remotely than unmarried workers
About 28% of married workers work remotely at least part of the time, compared to 21.1% of widowed, divorced, or separated workers and 16.3% of never-married workers.
Never-married workers are also the least likely to be fully remote, with only 7.6% teleworking all of their working hours.
This gap suggests that remote work is more accessible to workers with established household and family responsibilities.
Source: BLS.
14. 32.3% of Asian workers in the U.S. work remotely, more than any other race
Asian workers stand out as the most remote-friendly demographic in the labor force, with nearly one-third teleworking or working from home for pay.
This percentage is significantly higher than White workers (23.1%), Black or African American workers (16.4%), and Hispanic or Latino workers (13.1%).
Source: BLS.
Remote Work Productivity Statistics
15. Remote workers are about 13% more productive than in-office workers
Fewer workplace distractions, reduced meetings, and flexible scheduling contribute to higher efficiency, reinforcing why businesses increasingly turn to remote staffing models and virtual assistant outsourcing to scale productivity.
Source: AOVUP.
16. Each 1% increase in remote work was associated with a 0.08% increase in productivity
The BLS found a statistically significant relationship between remote work and productivity. For each percentage-point increase in remote workers, they observed a 0.08 percentage-point increase in total factor productivity (TFP) across industries.
Source: BLS.
Remote Work Statistics - Employee Engagement, Retention, and Wellbeing
17. Fully remote workers have the highest engagement rate at 31%
Globally, more than three in 10 fully remote workers are engaged at work, making them the most engaged group in the workforce. This compares to 23% engagement among hybrid workers, 23% among on-site remote-capable workers, and 19% among on-site non-remote-capable workers.
Source: Gallup.
18. Only 38% of engaged, thriving fully remote workers are job hunting
This is the lowest job-seeking rate among fully remote employees and underscores a critical insight: sustainable performance comes from pairing engagement with wellbeing.
Source: Gallup.
19. 14% of remote employees say they would quit rather than return to the office
Additionally, 56% of survey respondents knew someone who has already quit—or plans to quit—due to an order to return to the office, highlighting the retention risks of inflexible work policies.
Source: U.S. Career Institute.
20. Fully remote workers report higher levels of loneliness and emotional strain
Fully remote employees are more likely to experience feelings of loneliness, sadness, and anger than both hybrid and on-site workers. This may be partially attributed to the loss of informal social interactions such as casual conversations, team meals, and spontaneous collaboration.
Source: Gallup.
Remote Work Statistics - Productivity and Cost Efficiency
21. Remote workers in the U.S. save an average of 55 minutes per day by not commuting
Globally, that number rises to 72 minutes per day, highlighting the substantial time savings remote work provides.
Notably, 40% of remote workers use the time they save to work a primary or secondary job, suggesting that remote work can increase labor availability and productivity—particularly relevant for flexible, outsourced roles.
Source: U.S. Career Institute.
22. Employees can save up to $12,000 per year by working remotely
Additionally, hybrid employees may save around $6,000 annually by working remotely. The largest savings come from reduced spending on transportation, office attire, lunches, and other work-related costs—making remote work financially appealing across income levels.
Source: U.S. Career Institute.
23. Companies can save up to $10,600 per employee by going remote
These per-year savings come from reduced expenses related to office rent, utilities, furniture, supplies, and on-site perks. For example, a company with 50 employees could save roughly $500,000 annually by operating remotely.
Source: U.S. Career Institute.
24. Remote work reduced office and nonlabor costs by up to 0.4% per 1% increase
One of the strongest findings was cost reduction. As remote work increased, unit nonlabor costs such as office space, utilities, materials, and services declined significantly.
Most notably, each percentage-point increase in remote workers was associated with a 0.4 percentage-point decrease in unit office building cost growth. Some industries reduced office-related costs by more than 20%, demonstrating why remote and outsourced staffing models are financially attractive for growing businesses.
Source: BLS.
25. Over 52% of remote-first businesses hire outsourced or contract talent, compared to 31% of non-remote businesses
This highlights how remote work enables flexible staffing models—such as contractors, virtual assistants, and outsourced teams—that help companies reduce fixed costs and scale more efficiently.
Source: U.S. Career Institute.
What These Remote Work Statistics Reveal
These remote work statistics paint a clear picture of how work is continuing to evolve beyond the pandemic—and what that means for employers, job seekers, and policymakers heading into 2026.
Key takeaways from the data:
- Remote work is now a permanent part of the U.S. work model. With 22.9% of workers participating in telework and 75 million jobs compatible with remote jobs, the state of remote work reflects structural change, not a temporary trend.
- Flexible work is replacing fully remote extremes. While full-time work from home (WFH) is declining, hybrid arrangement models and low-hour telework are rising, showing how companies are adapting mandates without fully reverting to pre-pandemic norms.
- Access to remote work is unequal. Remote work options are heavily concentrated among white-collar, highly educated workers, shaping who benefits most from the impact of remote work on income, flexibility, and job opportunities.
- Family status and gender matter. Married workers, parents, and women are more likely to work remotely, reinforcing how flexible work supports caregiving and labor force participation.
- Productivity gains coexist with higher stress levels. Remote workers are more productive and engaged, but also report greater loneliness and emotional strain, highlighting the need for better remote workforce support systems.
- Businesses are redesigning how they hire and scale. Cost savings, reduced real estate needs, and a broader talent pool are driving companies toward contractors, outsourced roles, and automation-friendly workflows.
- The future of work is hybrid, distributed, and competitive. As job postings increasingly reflect remote and hybrid roles, job seekers—especially Gen Z entering the workforce—will evaluate new job and work opportunities based on flexibility as much as pay.
Overall, the benefits of remote work are clear, but so are the trade-offs, making intentional design, not blanket policies, the defining challenge ahead.
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