France (2025)
24.3
% of employed persons
+1.6pp YoY
YoY Change
+1.6pp
percentage points
Trend
up
Series length
15
years of data

Data

Year% of employed personsYoY Change
202524.3+1.6pp
202422.7+0.1pp
202322.6+1.3pp
202221.3+4.1pp
202117.2+3.6pp
202013.6-2.2pp
201915.8+1.6pp
201814.2+0.6pp
201713.6+0.1pp
201613.5+1.1pp
201512.4+0.1pp
201412.3+0pp
201312.3+3.5pp
20128.8+0.2pp
20118.6n/a

About this Dataset

France recorded 24.3% of employed persons in the hybrid (sometimes works from home) category in 2025, 10.2pp above the EU-27 average of 14.1%. The series begins in 2011 at 8.6% and has grown as hybrid working has become the dominant flexible-work model across Europe post-pandemic.

Data sourced from Eurostat Labour Force Survey via SDMX REST API (LFSA_EHOMP, frequenc=SMT). Values are harmonised to ensure cross-country comparability.

The chart shows the full trend; the table lists annual values with year-on-year changes.

Frequently Asked Questions

In 2025, **24.3%** of employed persons in France sometimes worked from home — the hybrid category in Eurostat's EU Labour Force Survey, covering those who work remotely on some but not most working days. This puts France 10.2pp above the EU-27 average of 14.1%.
Eurostat's EU LFS separates home workers into two mutually exclusive categories. 'Usually works from home' (frequenc=USU) applies to persons for whom home is the primary work location — the majority of their working days. 'Sometimes works from home' (frequenc=SMT) covers hybrid workers who work remotely on some days but spend most of their time at an employer's premises. Adding both rates gives the share of all employed persons with any home-working arrangement.
At 24.3% in 2025, France's sometimes-from-home rate is 10.2pp above the EU-27 average of 14.1%. Hybrid working penetration across the EU ranges from above 40% in the Netherlands to under 4% in some eastern and southern member states. France's relative position reflects its industrial structure, digital infrastructure quality, and the prevalence of knowledge-economy employment.
France's sometimes-from-home series begins in 2011 with a rate of 8.6%. By 2019 this had grown to 15.8%. The post-COVID period has seen strong growth in hybrid working, reaching 24.3% in 2025. This pattern — gradually rising hybrid work post-pandemic — is broadly consistent with the EU-27 trend.