The ability to work from home is quietly nudging birth rates up. Remote work will not reverse decades of demographic decline on its own. But in a world where conventional pro-natalist policies are expensive and often disappoint, flexibility over where we work is emerging as one of the most promising and cheapest ways to help people have the families they say they want
Dr Cevat Giray Aksoy, King’s College London
03 March 2026
Could working from home help reverse declining birth rates?
Couples who work from home at least one day a week are having more children and planning larger families, according to a comprehensive new study spanning almost 40 countries.

The research, co-authored by King’s College London academic Dr Cevat Giray Aksoy, reveals a strong link between remote work and birth rates, with researchers estimating lifetime fertility increases by an average of 0.32 children per woman when both partners work remotely for at least a day per week compared to the case where neither does.
The data also suggests that in the US, current remote work levels account for a meaningful share of births. Dr Aksoy’s accounting implies work-from-home arrangements explain about 8.1 per cent of US births in 2024, roughly 291,000 babies. In England, findings imply that current work-from-home arrangements explain about 6.2 per cent of births in 2024, roughly 35,400.
Compared with a world where remote work never expanded after the pandemic, the UK would have had far fewer babies. The implied difference is about 41,000 additional births in 2024 due to today’s elevated work-from-home rates.
The UK has one of the highest remote-working rates in the world. Researchers say that 54 per cent of university-educated adult workers work from home at least one day a week.
The study calculates that this high adoption of remote working is having a material impact on British demographics. The researchers attribute this to the flexibility that remote jobs offer, easing the time and co-ordination costs of combining paid employment with child-rearing.
The authors suggest that expanding remote work opportunities could offer a vital policy lever for nations currently struggling with shrinking, ageing populations. If countries with traditionally low remote-work adoption, such as Japan and South Korea, were to embrace British levels of flexible working, they could potentially boost their national fertility rates by more than four per cent.
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You can read the research in full here.
