More than 40% of Bay Area tech workers would leave the area for somewhere less expensive if they were asked to work from home forever, a new survey found

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Justin Sullivan/Getty Images Twitter’s headquarters in San Francisco.

More than 40% of Bay Area-based tech workers say they’d move to a less expensive city if they were asked to permanently work from home, according to a new study from job-search database Hired.

They survey found that 42% of Bay Area respondents said they’d leave, compared with 40% in New York and 33% in the UK.

San Francisco is the most expensive US city for homebuyers, and only 18% of households are able to afford to purchase a median-priced home in the region.

Some tech companies have said their remote workforce will grow in the next several years. Twitter has offered the option for employees to work from home forever; Facebook has said employees may move outside of the Bay Area, but may take a pay cut.

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Faced with a permanent work-from-home situation, more than 40% of San Francisco Bay Area tech workers would leave the region, a new survey found.

Job-search database Hired surveyed 2,300 tech workers based in New York, the UK, and the Bay Area. When asked what they’d do if they were told by their employer to work from home full-time, 42% of respondents in the Bay Area said they’d move to a less expensive city, and 47% of Bay Area respondents said their primary motivator for relocating to a new city would be a lower cost of living.

The survey found that 40% of tech workers in New York also said they would move somewhere cheaper, while 33% of UK employees said they’d do the same.

A recent survey from Blind, an anonymous work-focused social network, produced similar findings. Blind surveyed 4,400 workers – about 2,800 of whom live in the Bay Area – about working remotely and how it might affect where they decide to live. Two-thirds of the respondents said they would leave the region if asked to work from home permanently.

The Bay Area region is known for its high cost of living. In fact, San Francisco is the most expensive city in the US for homebuyers: only 18% of households are able to afford to purchase a median-priced home in the region, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. San Francisco’s median income is $US112,376, but anyone interested in buying a home in the city would need to make a salary of at least $US172,153 to be able to afford the mortgage.

The move to remote work during the coronavirus crisis has already affected housing within the city. In May, a report from Redfin showed that 72% of its San Francisco-based users were searching for homes outside of the city.

And data from home rental site Zumper showed that rents were plunging across the Bay Area in May, with decreases of as much as 15.9% in Mountain View, where Google is based, and similar drops in Facebook’s home of Menlo Park and YouTube’s home of San Bruno. In San Francisco proper, there’s been a 9.2% drop in rental prices since this time last year, with the city experiencing its lowest rent since early 2017, Zumper found.

While all of the major Bay Area tech companies asked their employees to begin working from home in March, some are considering sending employees back in a few months. Apple has had some employees reporting to its campus in Cupertino since May, while Facebook appears to have opened its offices beginning in July. A recent surge in cases in California led Google, which had planned to start sending employees back July 6, to change its plans. Google now says employees will return in September at the earliest.

But some tech companies are reconsidering whether employees need to return to the office at all. Twitter announced in May that employees can work from home forever if they want, and in Facebook’s case, Mark Zuckerberg recently told employees that eventually, as many as half of the company’s employees would most likely work from home.

A move outside of the Bay Area may have consequences for employees when it comes to their salaries, however. Zuckerberg recently told employees that beginning in January, employee salaries will be adjusted based on where they live, which the company will check by monitoring where employees are when they log in to the company’s internal systems, according to The New York Times.

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itsfuckingpizzatime on July 25th, 2020 at 16:15 UTC »

It’s already happening. My friend works at Apple and he says since quarantine many people have already left but just haven’t told the company yet. They’re back wherever home is, much lower COL, closer to family, slower pace, and loving it. Many said they wouldn’t go back if they had to.

BobbyHillsPurse on July 25th, 2020 at 14:52 UTC »

Family member works in Silicon Valley, has gotten to work from home for months and now the remainder of the year. Complete game changer for his life and being a dad. Lost weight , goes on runs, and has time to be a human. Not having a 3plus hour commute a day is a amazing. I’m 100% sure he’s not the only one. Plus big tech can save so much money on rent one those leases are up if majority of the offices are the employees home.

LiamEBM on July 25th, 2020 at 14:09 UTC »

I would love to live somewhere that isn't a bustling city or suburbia without compromising my ability to get to work or work where I want to. I work in tech and live in a city centre, if working from home can become more commonplace, I could move more freely to picturesque places, or simply be able to afford buying somewhere as the demand for housing nearby workplaces would diminish.