Public Assets Institute Before the Covid pandemic, the numbers of Vermont men and women working remotely were roughly the same. This is according to the U.S. Census, which asked how workers usually got to work the week prior to answering the survey. During the pandemic, the number of both men and women working from home tripled. But after Covid’s peak, as telework declined a gender disparity emerged.
From 2021 to 2024, more men than women returned to the office—6,700 compared with 3,100. Still, many more workers continued to work from home than did so before the pandemic.
Overall, about 18 percent of women and 14 percent of men in the Vermont workforce telecommuted in 2024.
In March, the labor force saw the biggest monthly drop since the pandemic. Over 1,500 people exited the labor force—the fifth-largest decline in Vermont’s history. The unemployment rate was unchanged, as total employment and total unemployed also fell.
5.14.2026. Public Assets Institute. Montpelier. https://publicassets.org/

