
In the pandemic era, remote work shifted from a short-term solution to a long-term societal norm with a palpable impact on residential real estate. In 2026, there are more than three times as many work-from-home jobs as in 2020, despite rising return-to-office (RTO) mandates.
The rise of remote work didn’t just change where people want to work; it changed where people want to live.
The post-pandemic remote work surge decentralized urban centers traditionally occupied by office space. Buyer focus began shifting to outlying areas, often within reasonable driving distance to larger cities, for hybrid employees who spend a few days a week on site. This phenomenon has been dubbed “The Donut Effect." One survey indicates that approximately 58% of remote workers migrated to surrounding suburbs, with only 29% moving to smaller cities, and just 4% retreating to rural areas.
More households may have opted for suburban neighborhoods rather than rural areas due to limited internet access. Most remote work requires a high-speed internet connection—a necessary feature still lacking in many outlying areas farther from more populated towns.
As demand for larger homes outside city limits increased, so did real estate prices. Some reports indicate that remote work accounted for up to 60% of real estate price increases in 2020 and during the first three years of the pandemic. The most recent data available indicates a slight decrease in home prices since 2023, but nowhere near pre-pandemic levels.
If there’s one thing successful real estate agents understand well, it’s how to pivot. Here’s how to translate remote work data into real business scale:
Post-pandemic work-from-home trends are quickly becoming a permanent cultural feature. Dive into the details of your local market and use this information to your advantage as you continue scaling a successful real estate business.
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