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SuccessGen Z

Stop blaming Gen Z for resisting RTO: 71% say they want a hybrid balance—and now they’re quietly leading the office comeback

Sydney Lake
By
Sydney Lake
Sydney Lake
Associate Editor
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Sydney Lake
By
Sydney Lake
Sydney Lake
Associate Editor
Down Arrow Button Icon
June 27, 2026, 6:39 AM ET
young workers talking at their desks
Gen Z workers actually see the value in in-person work.Getty Images—maskot
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Gen Z has been getting a lot of flak for their alleged workplace habits. Older generations assumed these newer entrants to the workforce don’t see the value of in-person exchanges—and that they’d be the loudest holdouts when return-to-office mandates landed.

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Years of data prove them wrong.

Gallup’s most recent generational study found 71% of Gen Z employees prefer a hybrid work environment, the highest share of any generation. On the other end, only 23% of remote-capable Gen Z workers say they’d prefer to work fully remote, compared with 35% among older generations, making Gen Z the least likely generation to want an all-remote setup.

In other words, Gen Z is debunking the idea that they despise in-office work. Or it might just simply be because Gen Z loves to yap (even though it may not be appropriate for traditional in-office etiquette).

That desire for in-person connection isn’t new. A Harris Poll and global events company Freeman survey of 1,824 U.S. adults with white-collar jobs found that 91% of respondents wanted a balance between remote and in-person work to connect with others in their company and industry.

“Gen Z was born into a digital world that connected their lives from the start, so it’s easy to assume they prefer online worlds to the real one,” the Harris Poll/Freeman survey results read. “But did you know there’s more to the story?”

The report says Gen Z believes attending live events and in-person work will benefit their careers, business relationships, and personal growth. 

“Hungry to move quickly in their careers and prove themselves, they recognize the need for face time with leaders and decision makers in their companies,” Lia Garvin, author of The New Manager Playbook, told Fortune.

This is something they lost during the pandemic, when many Gen Zers were still in college or completing internships fully remote without ever having that in-person learning experience. Gallup researchers point to the same gap: fully remote Gen Z employees tend to be less clear on how their work fits into the bigger picture, and mentorship—crucial for early-career workers—is harder to establish over Zoom. 

Why Gen Z workers want to return to the office

In turn, Gen Z workers may also seek those in-person reactions to combat loneliness. About 79% of white-collar employees have felt lonely as a result of their job, according to a July 2024 report from BSG, a research firm, in partnership with TheLi.st and Berlin Cameron. And another MetLife survey from January showed 30% of Gen Zers reported feeling isolated, compared to 22% across other generations.

“There is a backlash on the feeling of isolation and disconnection,” Garvin said. “Data continues to show a decline in employee engagement across all industries, and people are seeking out the human connection we lost when we moved primarily to remote work.”

Still, it’s important to emphasize Gen Z doesn’t want to be in an office eight hours a day, five days a week. They’re more comfortable in a hybrid setting, human resources leaders confirm.

While Andrew Boccio, cofounder and CEO at executive placement and recruiting firm Landing Point said they’re “not seeing as much pushback from Gen Z about returning to the office,” they’re still resistant about going back to full-time, in-person work.

“They are okay with as much as four days in the office, but place real value on the flexibility to have at least one remote day,” Boccio told Fortune. “By contrast, older candidates with kids and families seem to be the most resistant to returning to the office, which is likely due to differing priorities and demands of their time outside of work.” 

But only about one-fourth of employees work a hybrid model, according to hybrid work technology company Owl Labs‘ 2024 State of Hybrid Work report. A three-day, in-person work week is the most popular model, according to the report, with about 41% of hybrid employees working that schedule. Another study from September 2024 shows 82% of Gen Z employees say they want greater flexibility from their employers.

However, HR leaders contend hybrid-work schedules will likely lean in the direction of more in-person work.

“Our fully remote roles have dropped significantly and are almost nonexistent,” Boccio said. “Hybrid roles now average about four days in office and one day remote, compared to two-to-three days in the office just a few years ago.”

A version of this story was originally published on Fortune.com on February 5, 2025.

More on Gen Z:

  • Gen Z’s hiring hell is real: 1 in 3 employers admit they’re replacing entry-level roles with AI—and tech and manufacturing jobs are most at risk
  • Gen Z graduates are blaming AI for their unemployment woes when they should be looking somewhere else
  • With entry-level jobs vanishing, Gen Z grads are ditching corporate America—piecing together careers with entrepreneurship, gig work and freelancing
The Fortune 500 Innovation Forum will convene Fortune 500 executives, U.S. policy officials, top founders, and thought leaders to help define what’s next for the American economy, Nov. 16-17 in Detroit. Apply here.
About the Author
Sydney Lake
By Sydney LakeAssociate Editor
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Sydney Lake is an associate editor at Fortune, where she writes and edits news for the publication's global news desk.

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