Finance

Most Europeans unwilling to take pay cut to work from home, ECB finds

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on September 22, 2025

2 min read

· Last updated: January 21, 2026

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Most Europeans unwilling to take pay cut to work from home, ECB finds
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FRANKFURT (Reuters) -Most euro zone workers would not be willing to accept a pay cut to retain remote working opportunities, a European Central Bank survey found, confounding other studies which

Survey Reveals Most Europeans Reluctant to Accept Pay Cuts for Remote Work

Employee Preferences on Remote Work and Pay

FRANKFURT (Reuters) -Most euro zone workers would not be willing to accept a pay cut to retain remote working opportunities, a European Central Bank survey found, confounding other studies which concluded that workers would forgo bigger chunks of their income.

Survey Findings

The portion of Europeans working at least sometimes from home has doubled to 22% since 2019, even as firms are still debating and tweaking remote working policies.

Willingness to Accept Pay Cuts

"The average pay cut that employees would accept to work two or three days per week from home is 2.6%," the ECB said in an Economic Bulletin article. "This is significantly lower than other estimates in the empirical literature."

Frequency of Remote Work

The ECB, which surveys ordinary consumers regularly, found that around 70% of employees would not be willing to accept any pay cut to work from home, 13% would accept a pay cut of between 1% and 5%, and 8% would accept a reduction of between 6% and 10%.

Its survey found that employees who work from home more frequently tend to be willing to accept a higher pay cut to preserve their current arrangement.

But even then, people who work fully remotely are only willing to accept a pay cut of 4.6%, the bank said.

(Reporting by Balazs Koranyi; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)

Key Takeaways

  • Most euro zone workers won't accept pay cuts for remote work.
  • Remote work frequency has doubled since 2019.
  • 70% of employees refuse any pay cut for remote work.
  • Only 8% would accept a 6-10% pay cut for remote work.
  • Fully remote workers would accept a 4.6% pay cut.

Frequently Asked Questions

What percentage of euro zone workers are willing to accept a pay cut for remote work?
Around 70% of employees would not be willing to accept any pay cut to work from home.
How much of a pay cut would employees accept on average for remote work?
The average pay cut that employees would accept to work two or three days per week from home is 2.6%.
What did the ECB survey reveal about employees working from home?
The survey found that employees who work from home more frequently tend to be willing to accept a higher pay cut to preserve their current arrangement.
What is the maximum pay cut that fully remote workers would accept?
People who work fully remotely are only willing to accept a pay cut of 4.6%, according to the ECB.
How has the percentage of Europeans working from home changed since 2019?
The portion of Europeans working at least sometimes from home has doubled to 22% since 2019.

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