Home office has become established in many companies

Home office has become established in many companies

Many employees have become accustomed to working from home during the Corona pandemic. The results of a study suggest that home offices are here to stay.

Despite the debate about returning to the office, many companies are not turning away from working from home. In 82 percent of companies in the information economy, employees work from home at least once a week, according to a survey by the ZEW economic research institute, which was made available to the German Press Agency. In the manufacturing sector, which is more tied to a specific location, the figure is 48 percent.

According to study director Daniel Erdsiek, the proportion of companies that allow their employees to work from home at least one day a week has remained at a consistently high level since the coronavirus pandemic. There are currently no signs of a move away from such offers, it said. In last year’s study, the figure was 80 percent for companies in the information technology sector and 45 percent in the manufacturing sector.

Home office vs. return to the office – discussion flares up again and again

In recent months, there has been a debate about the return from home office to the office at companies such as the software group SAP or Deutsche Bank. Most recently, Federal Labor Minister Hubertus Heil (SPD) also called for the right to work from home. The coalition agreement of the traffic light coalition stipulates that employees – depending on their profession – should be given the right to work from home. This has not yet been implemented.

Working from home will remain

The study also shows how strongly mobile working has become established in recent years: Before the Corona crisis, the proportion of companies with home office regulations in the information economy – which includes the information and communications technology sector, media service providers and knowledge-intensive service providers – was only 48 percent. In the manufacturing sector, the figure was 24 percent.

“Looking ahead to the next two years, companies do not expect to reduce offers of at least one home office day per week,” Erdsiek said. Quite the opposite: the proportion of companies that want to offer home office in 2026 is expected to continue to rise – to 88 percent in the information industry and 57 percent in the manufacturing sector. Companies also expect the proportion of employees who will use such offers to increase.

Size matters: Companies with more employees offer more home offices

Despite the increase, the study also shows that the prevalence is decreasing with increasing frequency: In the information economy, for example, 22 percent of companies currently allow their employees to work from home five days a week. Before the pandemic, the figure was 12 percent. It also shows that companies with more employees also have a more extensive home office offering.

Around 1,200 German companies in the manufacturing and information industries took part in the representative survey in June. Among other things, questions were asked about the proportion of employees working from home and the expected changes in home office usage by 2026.

Source: Stern

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