Remote Work Statistics 2026
of analyzed US tech & professional postings are fully remote — a clear majority, not a collapse
15.2%
hybrid
28.4%
onsite
47.1%–63.2%
weekly range (noisy, no decline)
56.5% of 204,223 analyzed US tech postings are remote; 15.2% are hybrid and 28.4% are onsite (as of June 2026). Remote work is not dying — it is concentrating at the senior end.
If you applied to remote roles and heard nothing, it is not because remote jobs vanished — most of them are reserved for people with more years on paper.
Key findings
- 56.5% of analyzed US tech postings are fully remote — a clear majority.
- The weekly remote share swung from 47.1% to 63.2% with no sustained decline — noise, not collapse.
- Senior roles are remote 60% of the time vs only 40.7% for entry-level.
Remote work in 2026, by the numbers
Here is the snapshot you can cite. Every figure is computed from the same 204,223 deduplicated US tech and professional postings.
- 56.5% of analyzed US tech postings are fully remote.
- 15.2% are hybrid.
- 28.4% are onsite / in-person.
- That means 71.7% offer some location flexibility (remote or hybrid).
- Senior-level roles are remote 60% of the time — the most of any tier.
- Entry-level roles are remote just 40.7% of the time — the least of any tier.
- The remote share gap between senior and entry is 19.3% points.
- Weekly remote share ranged 47.1%–63.2% over the 12-week window.
- There is no sustained week-over-week decline — the “return-to-office” wave is not visible in this corpus.
- Remote tech roles pay roughly 11% less than onsite at the same seniority (see the Remote Pay Penalty report).
- The corpus is tech & professional roles, not the whole US labor market.
- Window: 2026-03-20 → 2026-06-09.
How tech work is split: remote, hybrid, onsite
56.5%
Remote
n=204,223
15.2%
Hybrid
n=204,223
28.4%
Onsite
n=204,223
Is remote work dying? The weekly trend says no
The honest answer to the scariest search query: there is no collapse here. The weekly remote share is genuinely noisy — collection volume varied week to week, and two weeks (W15, W20) were small samples — so any single dip or spike is mostly statistical wobble, not a turning point. Across the whole 12-week window the share holds in the mid-50s.
What this means for you: stop reading “RTO is back” headlines as a verdict on your search. Remote roles are still the majority of tech postings. The bottleneck is not supply — it is who employers feel safe hiring remotely.
Remote work is granted with seniority
The single most important pattern in the remote data is that remote work rises with experience. Senior roles are the most remote-friendly; entry roles the least. This is the quiet reason a junior applicant can do everything right and still watch the remote-friendly listings go to someone with more years on paper.
We unpack this gap — and what entry-level candidates can actually do about it — in Who Gets Remote Work.
How this was measured (n=204,223)
Sample: 204,223 postings · Window: 2026-03-20 – 2026-06-09
Method
- Work arrangement (remote / hybrid / onsite) parsed from structured posting metadata.
- Weekly trend reports the remote share within each ISO week, not absolute counts (collection volume varied).
- Remote share by seniority uses single-tier seniority tags only (combo and untagged rows omitted from the bar chart).
Limitations
- Weeks W15 and W20 were small-sample collection dips — treat single-week swings as noise.
- Corpus is tech & professional roles, not all US jobs.
- Arrangement labels come from the posting, which may differ from the day-to-day reality of the role.
Salary figures are platform-estimated posted ranges (posted or estimated), not employer disclosure. Corpus is tech & professional roles.