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The World Cup could make 2026 the 'summer of working from home,' says RTO guru Nicholas Bloom

The World Cup's late-night games, pricier commutes, and a heat wave could force employers to allow more working from home, a Stanford professor says.

The World Cup could make 2026 the 'summer of working from home,' says RTO guru Nicholas Bloom
Business Insider Mkt โ€” 8 July 2026
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The World Cup's late-night games, pricier commutes, and a heat wave could force employers to allow more working from home, a Stanford professor says.

Read Full Story at Business Insider Mkt โ†’
โšก Quickyla Analysis Original editorial context โ€” not sourced from the article above

Why This Matters

The 2026 World Cup isnโ€™t just a sporting spectacleโ€”it could reshape workplace norms by accelerating the acceptance of remote work during major global events. For employers still clinging to rigid office mandates, this moment forces a reckoning: if millions of workers prioritize flexibility when international tournaments coincide with their commutes, the experiment of hybrid work may finally prove its durability beyond white-collar convenience.

Background Context

Remote work adoption surged during the pandemic, but its staying power hinged on balancing productivity with employee expectationsโ€”a tension thatโ€™s only grown fiercer as companies push return-to-office policies. Meanwhile, extreme weather and global events like the World Cup have already disrupted traditional schedules, with studies showing workers prioritize flexibility when external factors disrupt their routines. The convergence of these forces could make 2026 a tipping point for how employers define "essential" attendance.

What Happens Next

Employers may adopt staggered schedules or expanded remote options during the World Cup, but the bigger test will be whether they sustain these policies afterwardโ€”or revert to pre-pandemic norms. Watch for mid-sized firms to lead the change, while legacy industries resist, creating a patchwork of policies that could deepen divides between white-collar and blue-collar workers. The heat wave factor alone could turn this into a PR crisis for companies that ignore worker comfort.

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