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  1. Share of people working remotely, hybrid working, or at work in the UK...

    • tokrwards.com
    • statista.com
    Updated Sep 19, 2025
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    Statista (2025). Share of people working remotely, hybrid working, or at work in the UK 2020-2025 [Dataset]. https://tokrwards.com/?_=%2Fstatistics%2F1207746%2Fcoronavirus-working-location-trends-britain%2F%23D%2FIbH0PhabzN99vNwgDeng71Gw4euCn%2B
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 19, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Time period covered
    May 2020 - Aug 2025
    Area covered
    United Kingdom
    Description

    In August 2025, approximately 14 percent of workers in Great Britain worked from home exclusively, with a further 22 percent working from home and travelling to work, while 41 percent only travelled to work. During this time period, the share of people only travelling to work was highest in March 2022, at 60 percent of respondents, with the peak for only working from home occurring in June 2020. In general, hybrid working has become steadily more popular than fully remote working, with the highest share of people hybrid working in November 2023, when 31 percent of people advising they were hybrid working. What type of workers are most likely to work from home? In 2020, over half of people working in the agriculture sector mainly worked from home, which was the highest share among UK industry sectors at that time. While this industry was one of the most accessible for mainly working at home, just six percent of workers in the accommodation and food services sector mainly did this, the lowest of any sector. In the same year, men were slightly more likely to mainly work from home than women, while the most common age group for mainly working from home was those aged 75 and over, at 45.4 percent. Over a long-term period, the share of people primarily home working has grown from 11.1 percent in 1998, to approximately 17.4 percent in 2020. Growth of Flexible working in the UK According to a survey conducted in 2023, working from home either on a regular, or ad hoc basis was the most common type of flexible working arrangement offered by organizations in the UK, at 62 percent of respondents. Other popular flexible working arrangements include the ability to work flexible hours, work part-time, or take career breaks. Since 2013, for example, the number of employees in the UK that can work flextime has increased from 3.2 million, to around 4.2 million by 2024. When asked why flexible work was important to them, most UK workers said that it supported a better work-life balance, with 41 percent expressing that it made their commute to work more manageable.

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Click to copy link
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Statista (2025). Share of people working remotely, hybrid working, or at work in the UK 2020-2025 [Dataset]. https://tokrwards.com/?_=%2Fstatistics%2F1207746%2Fcoronavirus-working-location-trends-britain%2F%23D%2FIbH0PhabzN99vNwgDeng71Gw4euCn%2B
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Share of people working remotely, hybrid working, or at work in the UK 2020-2025

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Sep 19, 2025
Dataset authored and provided by
Statistahttp://statista.com/
Time period covered
May 2020 - Aug 2025
Area covered
United Kingdom
Description

In August 2025, approximately 14 percent of workers in Great Britain worked from home exclusively, with a further 22 percent working from home and travelling to work, while 41 percent only travelled to work. During this time period, the share of people only travelling to work was highest in March 2022, at 60 percent of respondents, with the peak for only working from home occurring in June 2020. In general, hybrid working has become steadily more popular than fully remote working, with the highest share of people hybrid working in November 2023, when 31 percent of people advising they were hybrid working. What type of workers are most likely to work from home? In 2020, over half of people working in the agriculture sector mainly worked from home, which was the highest share among UK industry sectors at that time. While this industry was one of the most accessible for mainly working at home, just six percent of workers in the accommodation and food services sector mainly did this, the lowest of any sector. In the same year, men were slightly more likely to mainly work from home than women, while the most common age group for mainly working from home was those aged 75 and over, at 45.4 percent. Over a long-term period, the share of people primarily home working has grown from 11.1 percent in 1998, to approximately 17.4 percent in 2020. Growth of Flexible working in the UK According to a survey conducted in 2023, working from home either on a regular, or ad hoc basis was the most common type of flexible working arrangement offered by organizations in the UK, at 62 percent of respondents. Other popular flexible working arrangements include the ability to work flexible hours, work part-time, or take career breaks. Since 2013, for example, the number of employees in the UK that can work flextime has increased from 3.2 million, to around 4.2 million by 2024. When asked why flexible work was important to them, most UK workers said that it supported a better work-life balance, with 41 percent expressing that it made their commute to work more manageable.

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