While some workers return to the office this year, many others continue to work remotely indefinitely. This seismic shift has changed where people live and work and, increasingly, how they travel.
In the first quarter of 2022, nearly 25% of job postings at the 50,000 largest companies in the U.S. and Canada were for permanently remote positions, according to the job listing service Ladders. Thatās up from a mere 4% before the pandemic.
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āIt has enabled us to extend trips, leave early and work different hours,ā says Kirsten Reckman, a credit risk manager based in Tampa, Florida, who works remotely. āMy boss is very accommodating as long as the work gets done.ā
Reckmenās experience reflects a larger trend. One in five travelers this summer plan to do work on the road, according to a report from Deloitte, an international professional services network. Of these so-called ālaptop luggers,ā 4 in 5 plan to extend the length of their trips because of schedule flexibility.
THE RISE OF āBLEISUREā TRAVEL
Remote work has blurred the line between business and personal travel. Rather than leaving home rarely for vacation, remote workers can travel at any time. This has the potential to upend longstanding travel trends.
āMany travelers who have the opportunity are choosing to combine remote working with trips for a change of scene as well as maximizing PTO,ā or paid time off, explains Mark Crossey, traveler expert at Skyscanner, a travel search engine and agency. āWorkations allow people with flexible home and work lives to become āhalf touristsā for a period of time.ā
This kind of freedom appeals to Lisa Wickstrom, a mortgage underwriter based in Arizona who now works from around the world with only a suitcase.
āI got three weeks of vacation before,ā says Wickstrom, āBut I never feel like I have to take vacation time because ⦠Iām always on vacation.ā
For the travel industry, these nomads offer enormous opportunities. Remote workers can spend far more time ā and money ā at far-flung destinations. Yet ābleisureā travelers donāt fit the typical tourist mold.
āYou canāt just go freely everywhere,ā explains Derek Midkiff, a patent attorney who left San Diego during the pandemic and never looked back. āYouāre living somewhere but also working. Someone asks me, āDid you do this and this,ā and I have to say, āNo, Iām working, itās not the same as when youāre on vacation.āā
TRAVEL DAYS ARE CHANGING
Before the pandemic, it was expensive to fly on the weekends and cheaper during the week. That could all be shifting with remote work.
According to data from Hopper, a travel booking app, the cost of domestic flights on Sundays and Mondays has risen 5.90% and 2.97%, respectively, in 2022 compared to 2019, while the cost of flying on Friday and Saturday has dropped by 3.04% and 1.60%. Itās now cheaper to fly on a Saturday than a Monday, on average.
Further, remote workers can take longer trips during busy holidays, flattening the āpeakā of peak travel dates.
āSince 2020, weāve observed a small but noticeable shift toward Thursday departures for Memorial Day weekend itineraries,ā says Craig Ewer, spokesperson for Google Flights, āwhich suggests that location flexibility is indeed having an impact on traveler behaviors.ā
AN INDUSTRY ADAPTS
Many workers fled large cities during the pandemic, filling the suburbs and rural areas. But remote work has changed the calculus more drastically for some, freeing up budgets to allow more travel.
āI save over $2,000 a month after taxes by living in Florida,ā says Reckman. āWeāre traveling a lot more because of that.ā
Lower cost of living and tax incentives means more freedom for some remote workers. And some companies are seeing a potential windfall.
Airbnb, the vacation rental platform, reports that the number of long-term stays (over 28 days) doubled in the first quarter of 2022 compared to 2019. The company has even introduced an āIām Flexibleā search functionality for travelers who donāt need to get back to an office on a specific date.
āIāve found Airbnb to be cheaper, and have better rules,ā says Midkiff, explaining why he chooses vacation rentals over hotels. āAnd I like to stay a month to get the discount.ā
REMOTE WORK IS HERE
No longer constrained by vacation days and getting back from a trip by Monday, remote workers have shifted the travel landscape, maybe for good. While executives continue to hem and haw over return-to-office plans, remote workers are happily sending emails from afar.
āI think about the office politics, the baby showers, all that,ā says Wickstrom with a shudder. āI canāt even imagine doing all that again.ā
This article was provided to The Associated Press by the personal finance website NerdWallet. Sam Kemmis is a writer at NerdWallet. Email: skemmis@nerdwallet.com.
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