#2093: Remote Work Is Not One Thing

The digital nomad is a myth; the real story is hybrid schedules, domestic super-commutes, and the global talent arbitrage.

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The narrative of remote work has long been dominated by the image of a laptop on a beach in Bali, but the actual data paints a far more corporate and structured picture. As of 2026, while fifteen million people work across borders for foreign employers, this represents less than two percent of the total remote workforce. The real story is not about location independence, but about the taxonomy of distributed labor: domestic remote work, cross-border employment, and the niche phenomenon of digital nomads.

The Global Workplace Analytics report for January 2026 reveals that thirty-eight percent of the global workforce engages in some form of remote work, but only twelve percent are fully remote. This figure is heavily skewed by sector; in IT and professional services, fully remote rates jump to nearly forty-five percent, while manual labor pulls the average down. The dominant model is hybrid, stabilizing at an average of one to one-and-a-half days per week worked from home. However, this average masks significant regional disparities. English-speaking countries like the US, UK, and Australia average one point four to one point six days, while Japan and South Korea average less than zero point seven days.

The cultural drivers behind these disparities are complex. In the US, remote work is driven by a value for autonomy and individualism. In Nordic countries like Finland, high social trust allows managers to focus on output rather than physical presence. In contrast, Japan’s low adoption rate—despite government incentives and excellent infrastructure—stems from a collective culture where physical presence is a visible performance of commitment. This "eyes-on" management style creates friction for remote adoption.

Domestically, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that twenty-two point five percent of workers are hybrid or fully remote, with a three-to-one ratio favoring hybrid models. This "new normal" minimizes friction: shared time zones, legal frameworks, and cultural familiarity make domestic remote work the path of least resistance. The "proximity premium" is less about coffee runs and more about avoiding the complexity of international tax law. This has given rise to the "super-commute," where employees move fifty-five miles on average from their office—far enough to make daily commuting impossible but close enough for monthly visits—keeping them within the same state tax jurisdiction.

Economically, the incentives are staggering. Hybrid models save companies an average of eleven thousand dollars per employee annually through reduced real estate costs and improved retention. For a thousand-person company, that’s an eleven-million-dollar saving. However, this domestic focus is now competing with the cross-border trend. Fifteen million people work for companies in different countries, a segment growing rapidly due to Employer of Record (EOR) services like Deel and Remote.com. These services have turned international compliance into a software API, enabling "nearshoring" primarily from Latin America to North America and Eastern Europe to Western Europe.

This global arbitrage is reshaping the labor market. A 2025 IDC study found that seventy-eight percent of companies plan to hire more than sixty percent of new remote roles from international talent pools. For workers in high-cost cities like San Francisco or London, this means competing with global talent willing to work for lower wages. The response is a "specialization pivot": generalist roles are becoming commoditized, while high-context roles—requiring specific local market knowledge or regulatory expertise—are thriving. The future of remote work is not a uniform global office, but a fragmented landscape defined by cultural trust, economic arbitrage, and the relentless optimization of talent pipelines.

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#2093: Remote Work Is Not One Thing

Corn
In twenty-five, the number of people working from a different country than their employer hit fifteen million, yet the digital nomad lifestyle represents less than two percent of that total. It is wild how much the narrative around remote work focuses on the person with a laptop on a beach in Bali, when the actual data shows a completely different, much more corporate, and much more localized reality. As companies finalize their twenty-six hiring strategies, understanding these distinct segments is basically the difference between a functional talent pipeline and a compliance nightmare.
Herman
Herman Poppleberry here, and you are hitting on the exact friction point of twenty-six. We have moved past the emergency phase of the early twenty-twenties and into what I would call the structural stabilization of distributed labor. The data is finally clean enough that we can stop guessing. By the way, fun fact for the listeners, today’s episode is actually being powered by Google Gemini Three Flash, which is helping us synthesize some of this massive data set Daniel sent over. Interestingly, the computational power required to analyze these global labor shifts has grown by forty percent year-over-year, which mirrors the complexity of the labor market itself. It’s almost as if the sheer processing power needed to track where everyone is working has become its own economic sector.
Corn
So Daniel sent us this one. He is asking, what does the data say about the global prevalence of remote work? Also, what is the prevalence of remote work within a single country, and the prevalence between employers and employees who are not in the same country? Finally, he wants to know the prevalence of digital nomads compared to remote workers who stay in a fixed location. There is a lot to unpack here, Herman. It feels like we are looking at three fundamentally different phenomena that all just happen to share the same Zoom background.
Herman
That is the perfect way to frame it. We have to stop treating remote work as a monolith. If we look at the taxonomy, we have domestic remote prevalence, cross-border employer-employee relationships, and then that tiny, loud subset of digital nomads. To answer Daniel’s first point on global prevalence, the January twenty-six Global Workplace Analytics report is the gold standard here. It shows that thirty-eight percent of the global workforce engages in some form of remote work. But—and this is a huge but—only twelve percent are fully remote.
Corn
Twelve percent. That is significantly lower than the vibe you get on LinkedIn. It suggests that the return-to-office mandates of twenty-four and twenty-five actually had some teeth, or at least they forced a compromise. But I have to wonder, is that twelve percent spread evenly? I mean, if you look at the tech sector versus, say, manufacturing, the gap must be cavernous.
Herman
Oh, it’s a canyon. In information technology and professional services, that twelve percent global average jumps to nearly forty-five percent. But when you factor in agriculture, retail, and manual labor—which still make up the lion's share of global employment—the average gets pulled way down. It’s a "knowledge worker" privilege, essentially. But even within knowledge work, the "fully remote" crowd is shrinking in favor of the hybrid model. Think of a mid-sized architectural firm in Chicago. In twenty-two, they might have been one hundred percent remote. By twenty-six, they’ve realized that while the drafting can happen at home, the collaborative red-lining of physical blueprints still benefits from a shared table. That’s the nuance the twelve percent figure hides.
Corn
It is a compromise called hybrid. When we look at the global average for paid full days worked from home, it has stabilized at about one point two to one point three days per week. But that average is deceiving because the regional disparities are massive. If you are in an English-speaking country like the US, the UK, or Australia, you are looking at one point four to one point six days. If you are in Japan or South Korea, it drops to less than zero point seven days per week.
Herman
Think about that for a second. In London or New York, the average office is essentially a ghost town on Fridays. It’s reached a point where commercial real estate in those cities is pivoting to Tuesday-through-Thursday amenity packages. But in Tokyo, the expectation of "physicality" is so high that working from home even one day a week is often seen as a lack of commitment to the team. It’s not just about the work; it’s about the visible performance of the work.
Corn
I saw that Japan data. They had that huge government incentive program in twenty-five to drive remote work, and even with that, they only saw an eighteen percent adoption spike. Why is the gap so wide? Is it just infrastructure, or is there something deeper in the water? I mean, Japan has some of the fastest internet on the planet, so it clearly isn't a bandwidth issue.
Herman
It is actually cultural individualism. Research from late twenty-five suggests that individualism scores are the single strongest predictor of remote work adoption. It accounts for nearly thirty percent of the variation between countries. In a culture that values the collective and the physical presence of the group, like Japan or South Korea, the office serves a social and psychological function that a Slack channel just cannot replicate. In the US, we value the autonomy. We want the "proximity premium" of being in the same country for legal and timezone reasons, but we want the individual freedom to work from our spare bedroom.
Corn
But wait, how does that individualism theory hold up in Europe? You have countries like the Netherlands or Finland where remote work is incredibly high, but they have very different social structures than the US.
Herman
That’s a great catch. In the Nordic countries, it’s less about "individualism" in the American sense and more about "high trust." The World Values Survey shows a direct correlation between how much you trust your fellow citizens and how much a manager trusts an employee they can’t see. In the US, it’s "don’t tell me what to do." In Finland, it’s "I trust you to get it done." Both lead to the same result: high remote adoption. But in low-trust or high-hierarchy cultures, the manager feels they aren't "managing" unless they are physically watching the work happen. It’s the "eyes-on" management style versus the "output-based" style.
Corn
Let’s talk about that domestic piece then, because that is where the bulk of the volume is. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics just dropped their Q-four twenty-five data, and it shows twenty-two point five percent of US workers are either hybrid or fully remote. But the ratio is three-to-one in favor of hybrid. So the "fully remote" dream is actually the minority even in the most remote-friendly country on earth.
Herman
And that three-to-one ratio is the "new normal." It is the Goldilocks zone. Companies have realized that the domestic remote model thrives because it minimizes friction. You have timezone alignment, you have a shared legal framework, and you have cultural familiarity. Even if you are working from Austin for a company in New York, the tax forms look the same. The "proximity premium" isn't just about being able to grab a coffee; it is about the fact that your employer doesn't need a team of international tax lawyers to pay you.
Corn
But does "domestic" always mean "nearby"? I’ve seen this trend of "long-distance domestic" where someone lives in rural Montana but works for a firm in Chicago. Does the data track how far these people are moving?
Herman
It does. The "average commute distance" for remote workers has increased from ten miles in twenty-one to about fifty-five miles in twenty-six. People aren't necessarily moving across the country; they are moving just far enough away that a daily commute is impossible, but a twice-a-month office visit is doable. It’s what urban planners are calling the "Exurban Expansion." It keeps the employee within the same state tax jurisdiction, which is the path of least resistance for HR. Think of it as the "Super-Commute." You’re not in the office every day, but when you are, it’s a two-hour train ride or a short flight.
Corn
Right, but even with that domestic focus, the economic incentives for the companies are staggering. I was looking at the Robert Half twenty-six stats, and companies are saving an average of over eleven thousand dollars per employee annually by using hybrid models. That is mostly real estate and retention. If you have a thousand employees, you are looking at an eleven-million-dollar annual bonus just for letting people work from home two days a week. It makes the "everyone back to the office" crowd look economically illiterate.
Herman
It is a massive retention risk too. Forty-six percent of current remote workers say they would quit if forced back five days a week. So for a CEO in twenty-six, the math is: do I want to pay eleven thousand dollars more per person and lose half my talent just to see their faces in a cubicle? Most are concluding the answer is no. But that leads us to the second part of Daniel’s prompt: the cross-border stuff. This is where the friction gets intense.
Corn
This is the fifteen-million-person figure, right? The people working for a company in a completely different country. That is only about two percent of the global workforce, but it is the fastest-growing segment. When we say "cross-border," are we talking about people in Canada working for the US, or is it more about the Global North hiring from the Global South?
Herman
It is exploding. Remote-dot-com’s twenty-five Global Employment Report puts it at exactly fifteen million. And the driver here isn't just "talent is everywhere." It is the rise of the Employer of Record, or EOR, services. Companies like Deel and Remote-dot-com grew three hundred and forty percent in twenty-five. They have basically turned international compliance into a software API. To answer your question, the biggest corridor is actually Latin America to North America, followed by Eastern Europe to Western Europe. It’s about "nearshoring"—keeping the timezones within a four-hour window while slashing the labor cost by thirty to fifty percent.
Corn
So if I am a startup in San Francisco and I want to hire a developer in Lisbon, I don't have to open a Portuguese branch? I just pay the EOR and they handle the local taxes, the labor laws, and the benefits?
Herman
Well, I shouldn't say "exactly," I should say that is the mechanism. But the complexity is still there. Even with an EOR, a small HR team in twenty-six is now managing compliance across an average of three point five different jurisdictions. That is a heavy cognitive load. And it creates this "Global Arbitrage" trend. A twenty-five IDC study found that seventy-eight percent of companies plan to hire more than sixty percent of their new remote roles from international talent pools.
Corn
Seventy-eight percent? That is a terrifying number if you are a mid-level developer in a high-cost city. You aren't just competing with the guy in the next state anymore; you are competing with the entire world, and the world is often willing to work for a lot less. How are workers in places like San Francisco or London reacting to this? Are we seeing a "brain drain" or just a massive salary stagnation?
Herman
We’re seeing a "Specialization Pivot." If your job can be done by anyone with a stable internet connection and a decent GitHub profile, your salary is being commoditized. The workers who are surviving—and thriving—are those who lean into roles that require "high-context" knowledge. That is, knowledge that is specific to the company’s local market, its physical stakeholders, or its specific regulatory environment. If you are a "generalist" coder, you are in a price war with a genius in Vietnam who has a lower cost of living. But if you are a coder who understands the specific legacy architecture of a mid-west utility company, you have leverage.
Corn
That is the "downward pressure" we are seeing on remote salaries in high-cost regions. We are seeing a shift toward "nearshoring." US companies are looking at Latin America because the timezones align, even if the country doesn't. European companies are looking at Southeast Asia or Eastern Europe. It is a total restructuring of the labor market. But we have to distinguish this from the digital nomad. This fifteen million doesn't include the people jumping from hostel to hostel, does it?
Herman
No, those fifteen million are "tethered" international workers. They are usually residents of the country they are in. They pay local taxes, they have local healthcare, they just happen to receive a paycheck from a foreign entity. The digital nomad is a different beast entirely. They are the "stateless" workers, at least temporarily. To put it in perspective, a tethered worker in Poland is contributing to the Polish pension system. A digital nomad in Poland is likely on a tourist visa or a special nomad visa and is essentially a long-term tourist who happens to have a laptop.
Corn
Right, the nomads. Daniel asked about the prevalence of nomads versus fixed-location remote workers. The MBO Partners twenty-five State of Independence report says there are about four point eight million American digital nomads. That is only one point eight percent of the US workforce. Globally, the estimate is forty million nomads. So even though forty million sounds like a lot, it is only about ten to fifteen percent of the total remote workforce. The other eighty-five to ninety percent are "fixed-location."
Herman
And that is the biggest misconception in the media. Most remote workers are just people at home. They have a mortgage, a dog, and a favorite coffee shop three blocks away. They aren't traveling. The "typical" nomad has actually changed too. It is no longer the twenty-two-year-old backpacker. In twenty-five, the largest cohort is aged thirty to thirty-nine. These are mid-career professionals. We are seeing "family nomads" now—parents who take their kids on a "world schooling" tour while working for a Fortune 500 company.
Corn
Wait, family nomads? How does that even work with school schedules and health insurance? That sounds like an administrative nightmare. Is there a case study on this?
Herman
There’s a fascinating look at the "Boundless Life" community model. They basically set up hubs in places like Portugal, Greece, and Italy where they provide the housing, the co-working space, and a specialized school for the kids. It’s "Nomadism-as-a-Service." But even with these services, the average duration of a nomad stint has actually decreased. In twenty-three, people were staying out for two years. In twenty-five, the average is only nine months before they return to a fixed base. The "burnout" is real. Imagine trying to explain long-division to your eight-year-old while your 5G hotspot is failing in a rural village in the Algarve. It loses its charm quickly.
Corn
I love the idea of "administrative stress" being the primary deterrent for nomads. They report eighty-two percent job satisfaction, which is huge, but they are constantly battling visas and tax residency. It is like they traded the stress of a commute for the stress of a border crossing. I mean, imagine having to explain to the Italian tax authorities why you’ve been working from a villa in Tuscany for six months while your employer is in Delaware.
Herman
It is a trade-off. Over sixty-six countries now offer specific Digital Nomad Visas—Italy, Brazil, and South Korea just joined the list—but the complexity of staying compliant while moving three point two countries per year, which is the current nomad average, is a full-time job in itself. Compare that to the fixed-location remote worker who just wants stability and local community integration. The nomad is essentially an arbitrageur of lifestyle, but they pay for it in paperwork. There was a case last year where a nomad accidentally triggered residency in three different EU countries simultaneously due to overlapping stay rules. It took eighteen months to untangle.
Corn
So we have three distinct worlds. We have the domestic hybrid worker who is the vast majority, trying to balance office culture with home life. We have the cross-border remote worker who is part of this global talent arbitrage, often working for a foreign company through an EOR. And then we have the digital nomad, the small but loud minority living the high-mobility lifestyle. What about the "stealth nomad"? The person who tells their boss they are in Ohio but they are actually in Mexico City?
Herman
That is the "compliance ticking time bomb." A survey from late twenty-five found that an estimated ten percent of remote workers have "omitted" their true location from their employer at least once. For a company, this is a nightmare. If an employee works from Mexico for more than 183 days, the company might accidentally create a "Permanent Establishment" there, making the company liable for Mexican corporate taxes. This is why we are seeing companies install "geo-fencing" software on work laptops. It sounds Orwellian, but it’s a tax defense mechanism.
Corn
That feels so invasive, but I guess from a corporate liability standpoint, they don't have a choice. If the "proximity premium" is about legal safety, then a stealth nomad is a huge liability. Does the data show how often these people actually get caught?
Herman
More often than you’d think. It’s usually the little things—a LinkedIn login from a foreign IP, or the background noise of a tropical storm during a meeting when it’s supposed to be snowing in Ohio. The fallout is usually immediate termination because it’s not just a policy violation; it’s a legal risk to the entire firm. And for an employer, the strategy for each has to be different. You cannot have a single "remote work policy" that covers all three. Domestic remote needs a real estate strategy—do we keep the office or downsize? Cross-border remote needs a compliance and EOR strategy—how do we pay someone in Manila without getting audited? And nomad-friendly policies need a visa and tax-risk strategy. If you try to lump them together, you end up with the "Remote Paradox" that Gallup found in twenty-five.
Corn
The one where remote workers have higher engagement but lower "thriving" scores? Can you explain that distinction? It sounds like a contradiction.
Herman
It’s the difference between "I like my tasks" and "I like my life." They are engaged in the work because they have fewer interruptions and can focus deeply. But they feel more isolated and stressed because the boundaries between "home" and "work" have dissolved. Hybrid seems to be the "Goldilocks" zone because it provides the social anchor of the office without the five-day grind. It is the only segment of the three that actually addresses the loneliness factor that spiked in twenty-four and twenty-five. Think about it: if you're domestic hybrid, you still have "work friends" you see on Tuesdays. If you're a cross-border worker in a different timezone, you might never have a real-time conversation with a colleague that isn't about a specific ticket or task.
Corn
It is interesting that the "Global Arbitrage" piece is effectively a war tax on high-cost talent. If seventy-eight percent of companies are looking abroad, then the "local" salary is effectively dead for remote-capable roles. You are either a specialist who is so good the company doesn't care about the cost, or you are competing on a global price floor. But does this create a "race to the bottom" for wages globally, or a "race to the top" for workers in developing nations?
Herman
It’s both. For a developer in Lagos, Nigeria, working for a New York firm, it’s a massive "race to the top." They might be making five times the local average salary. But for the developer in New York, it’s a "race to the bottom" because their employer is looking at that Lagos salary and wondering why they are paying New York rates for the same lines of code. This is why "location-based pay" is such a heated debate in twenty-six. Some companies are moving to a "global flat rate" based on the role, but that usually means the rate is pinned to a mid-tier market like Warsaw or Mexico City, which is a massive pay cut for someone in San Francisco.
Corn
That is the harsh reality of twenty-six. The geography of talent has been mapped, and the borders are porous for money but still stiff for people. Companies are realizing they can gain a massive advantage by navigating that complexity. Look at a company like GitLab. They have been one hundred percent remote across seventy-plus countries for years, using a location-agnostic compensation model—well, not agnostic, but location-based. They have the blueprint that everyone else is now trying to copy-paste.
Herman
But even GitLab has to deal with the "Social Tax." They spend a fortune on annual retreats because they know that without physical proximity at least once a year, the "trust battery" of the team eventually runs dry. Most companies aren't ready for that level of intentionality. They want the cost savings of remote work without the cultural investment required to make it sustainable. They want the fifteen million cross-border workers but they don't want to spend the money to fly them to a central hub once a quarter. That lack of investment is why we see high turnover in that segment.
Corn
But GitLab is the exception, not the rule. Most companies are still stumbling through the "proximity premium" phase. They want the person in the same country because they are scared of the unknown legal variables. I think the takeaway for anyone listening is to audit which segment you actually fall into. Are you a domestic hybrid worker? Then your value is tied to your ability to integrate into that office culture a few days a week. Are you a cross-border worker? Your value is tied to being a high-skill, lower-cost alternative to domestic talent.
Herman
And if you are a nomad, your value is your flexibility, but your risk is the administrative overhead. We are going to see a "race to the top" for quality of life benefits from countries trying to attract these nomads—think high-speed rail, universal 6G, and simplified tax codes—but a "race to the bottom" on tax rates for the companies doing the hiring. The countries that win the next decade will be the ones that make it easiest for companies to hire their citizens remotely. Look at Estonia with their e-Residency program; they were a decade ahead of the curve, and now everyone is trying to build their own version of that digital infrastructure.
Corn
So what is the one-year outlook? Does AI make this easier? I mean, if we’re using Gemini Three to analyze this data, surely there’s an AI that can handle the tax compliance for a worker moving between Croatia and Montenegro?
Herman
I think by twenty-seven, we see AI-powered compliance tools that make cross-border remote work as seamless as domestic. Imagine a "Smart Contract" payroll system that automatically adjusts your tax withholding in real-time based on your GPS location. Once the "legal friction" is automated away, the fifteen-million cross-border figure could double. That is when the real global labor shift hits the fan. We’re moving toward a world where your "employer" is just a set of tasks and your "office" is wherever you happen to be standing, but the infrastructure for that is still being built in real-time. We’re essentially waiting for the legal software to catch up to the Zoom capability.
Corn
It’s like we’re in the "dial-up" phase of global labor. We can see where it’s going, but the connection keeps dropping and the fees are outrageous. I wonder if we’ll look back in ten years and laugh at the idea that we used to have to live in the same state as our boss just to make the taxes easy.
Herman
We absolutely will. It’ll be like explaining a physical filing cabinet to a Gen Alpha kid. The idea of "geographic employment" will feel like a relic of the industrial age. But for now, in twenty-six, the data says the office isn't dead—it’s just become a part-time destination rather than a full-time requirement.
Corn
It is a wild time to be a worker—or a donkey, or a sloth. There is a lot to think about there, especially for those of us trying to navigate these shifts without losing our minds or our health insurance. Thanks as always to our producer Hilbert Flumingtop for keeping the gears turning behind the scenes and making sure our audio doesn't sound like it's coming from a cave in the Andes. And a big thanks to Modal for providing the GPU credits that power this show and our research pipeline; without that compute, we'd still be crunching these twenty-six numbers by hand.
Herman
If you found this dive into the remote work data useful, or if you're currently a "stealth nomad" hiding in a beach hut, check us out at myweirdprompts dot com. You can find our full RSS feed there, detailed charts on the regional disparities we mentioned, and all the ways to subscribe. This has been My Weird Prompts.
Corn
We will catch you in the next one. Stay remote, or don't. Just stay productive.
Herman
Goodbye.

This episode was generated with AI assistance. Hosts Herman and Corn are AI personalities.