Working from home has become a normal part of life for many employees since the pandemic, as it offers greater flexibility and control over where work gets done. However, new research suggests that this shift may also be playing a role in rising mental health challenges.
Researchers writing in the journal Science analyzed data from five large surveys covering more than 580,000 U.S. workers between 2011 and 2024. Their findings suggest that the rise of remote work has significantly increased social isolation and may account for roughly one-third of the increase in mental distress observed since the pandemic.
The study focused on occupations that can be performed remotely, such as software development and office work, and compared them with jobs that require workers to be physically present.
Remote workers are spending more time alone
According to the researchers, workers in remote-friendly occupations spent 58% more hours working alone than those in jobs that cannot be done remotely. The likelihood of spending an entire day without any in-person human contact also increased by 72%.

The impact was even greater among people living alone. These workers were significantly more likely to go through a full day without interacting with another person, and they experienced a much larger increase in mental distress than workers living with family members.
The findings suggest that many conversations about remote work have focused on flexibility, convenience, and productivity while overlooking a more basic question of what happens when millions of people spend much less time around other people every day?
The hidden downside of workplace flexibility
For many adults, work is one of the few places where they regularly interact with people outside their households. Casual conversations, team meetings, lunch breaks, and other everyday interactions may seem unimportant, but they can play a meaningful role in maintaining social connections.

The researchers are not arguing that companies should bring everyone back to the office full time. Instead, the findings suggest that social connection could become a bigger challenge as remote and hybrid work arrangements become more common.
As more companies embrace flexible work policies, the study raises an important question about how workers can maintain meaningful social connections when their workplace is no longer a place they regularly visit.