Latvia (2025)
8.7
% of employed persons
+0.2pp YoY
YoY Change
+0.2pp
percentage points
Trend
up
Series length
24
years of data

Data

Year% of employed personsYoY Change
20258.7+0.2pp
20248.5+0.2pp
20238.3-0.5pp
20228.8-2.4pp
202111.2+6.8pp
20204.4+1.4pp
20193+0.1pp
20182.9+0.8pp
20172.1-0.5pp
20162.6+0.4pp
20152.2-0.4pp
20142.6+0.3pp
20132.3+0.2pp
20122.1-0.1pp
20112.2-0.8pp
20103+0.5pp
20092.5+0.3pp
20082.2-1.3pp
20073.5+0pp
20063.5n/a

About this Dataset

Latvia recorded 8.7% of employed persons usually working from home in 2025, 0.3pp below the EU-27 average of 9%. Before the pandemic, the rate stood at 3% (2019). It peaked at 11.2% in 2021 during COVID-19 remote-work mandates, and has partially normalised since.

Data sourced from Eurostat Labour Force Survey via SDMX REST API (LFSA_EHOMP, frequenc=USU). Values use harmonised LFS methodology ensuring cross-country comparability.

The chart shows the full trend from 2002; the table lists annual values with year-on-year changes.

Frequently Asked Questions

In 2025, **8.7%** of employed persons in Latvia usually worked from home, 0.3pp below the EU-27 average of 9%. The indicator measures persons for whom home is the primary work location on the majority of their working days, as defined by Eurostat's EU Labour Force Survey.
Latvia's usually-from-home rate was 3% in 2019. It peaked at **11.2%** in 2021 as pandemic restrictions prompted widespread shifts to remote work. By 2025 the rate had partially retreated to 8.7%, settling 5.7pp above the pre-COVID baseline — suggesting a lasting structural change in Latvia's working patterns.
At 8.7% in 2025, Latvia ranks around the EU median for home working penetration, 0.3pp below the EU-27 benchmark. For context, the highest EU rate is approximately 21% (Finland) and the lowest around 1.3% (Romania). Latvia's position reflects its mix of knowledge-economy and in-person employment.
The series spans 2002 to 2025. The rate hovered near 2.1% in 2012 — its lowest recorded level — before the pandemic-driven surge to a peak of 11.2% in 2021. Since then, the rate has partially normalised, with the 2025 reading of 8.7% indicating that a meaningful share of the pandemic-era shift has been retained.