European Working Conditions Survey 2024: Overview report
Published: 14 April 2026
Now in its eighth edition, the European Working Conditions Survey maps changes in working life over more than three decades. This high-quality, probability-based survey covers 35 European countries, including the 27 EU Member States, Norway, Switzerland, Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Kosovo and Serbia. Over 36,600 face-to-face interviews, each lasting approximately 45 minutes, took place as part of the survey. This overview report provides a comprehensive description of the workforce, and includes information on digital work practices, social relations at work and inclusive workplaces. It assesses job quality across seven dimensions: earnings, prospects, skills and discretion, working time, work intensity, social environment and physical environment. The report looks at workers’ working lives, considering aspects such as work–life balance, career and employment security, health and well-being and work sustainability. It describes how jobs fare on the basis of job quality and the role of job quality in supporting good working lives.
Digital technologies and climate change are transforming jobs and how work is organised. Their impact on working conditions is reshaping Europe’s labour market in multiple ways.
Better job quality benefits both workers and companies. It is linked to better health and well-being, higher motivation and stronger levels of engagement, and is essential to support competitiveness.
Despite overall improvements in job quality, the benefits are not shared evenly. Significant gaps persist in terms of gender, age, place of origin, health status, occupation and sector.
Men report higher job quality than women across five of the seven job quality dimensions. In some areas the gap is widening – work intensity is worsening for women while improving for men – highlighting the need for targeted policy attention.
Older workers, women, workers with chronic health problems and migrant workers account for an increasingly large share of the workforce. Faced with an ageing and shrinking workforce, good quality jobs will be critical in Europe to attract and retain a larger share of a more diverse population in work for longer.
The European Working Conditions Survey 2024 (EWCS 2024) provides a comprehensive overview of job quality in Europe, examining the characteristics of the workforce, workplaces, job quality and the quality of working life. The EWCS 2024 is a crucial tool for policymakers, as it highlights the importance of job quality in achieving sustainable and inclusive growth in Europe. The survey’s findings are based on 36 644 face-to-face interviews in 35 countries; each interview lasted about 45 minutes. They provide a unique insight into the state of work in Europe.
The EU has had a long-standing commitment to improving working conditions and promoting job quality, an ambition that has been embedded in Europe’s ambitions since the Treaty of Rome. The European Pillar of Social Rights devotes 6 of its 20 principles to fair working conditions, with its action plan highlighting the need to make ‘work standards fit for the future of work’. The European Commission’s publication of the Quality Jobs Roadmap in December 2025 further emphasises the importance of job quality in achieving sustainable and inclusive growth and supporting European workers and companies in the twin transition. The findings of the EWCS 2024 are also relevant to the ongoing debate on enhancing Europe’s competitiveness, with the Competitiveness Compass establishing that quality jobs are a prerequisite for greater labour force participation and increased productivity.
The EU workforce continues to grow despite demographic challenges, with the increasing participation of women, migrant workers and pre-retirement-age workers contributing to the growth of aggregate employment.
Four fifths of the EU workforce is in good or very good health, with 18 % of workers reporting health problems that limit their ability to do normal activities.
Only one in four workers (23 %) in the EU work in a gender-balanced workplace, while roughly half of the workforce is female. Over the past quarter century, there has been limited progress towards gender balance at management level.
Algorithmic management practices, such as computer-based task allocation, work scheduling and performance monitoring, are reported by a minority of workers at the aggregate level. However, the prevalence varies significantly across occupations, sectors and workplace sizes.
One fifth of employees in the EU (21 %) have neither formal representation nor meetings at the workplace where they can express their views.
The EWCS confirms the positive association of some of the job quality indices with engagement, motivation, trust and cooperation, and the negative association with employees’ intention to quit their job. This confirms the importance of job quality for companies’ competitiveness.
The distribution of job quality varies by gender, age, occupation, sector and country.
Workers in occupations characterised by labour shortages experience poorer job quality in many domains.
The wide range of differences in job quality between different groups of workers and work situations confirms the need to develop policies and practices that account for all seven job quality dimensions.
Job quality has been improving in the last 15 years in all dimensions except Social environment and Work intensity. The Social environment index has decreased for women, while the Work intensity index has deteriorated for women but improved for men.
The general improvement in the physical environment is due to a reduction in most physical risks and demands. However, exposure to high temperatures, chemicals and infectious materials has increased.
While skills use, development opportunities and access to training have improved, there has been a decrease in workers’ ability to influence collective work processes and apply their own ideas, which is concerning.
Overskilling is reported by 30 % of workers in the EU, whereas 13 % report that they need more training to do their job well.
Most workers in the EU (56 %) report that they would like to work the same number of hours that they are currently working, but the share of those preferring to work fewer hours increased from 27 % in 2015 to 33 % in 2024.
Among EU workers, 14 % reported being ‘not very well informed’ or ‘not at all well informed’ about health and safety risks at work. An even higher share (29 %) reported being unaware of measures to prevent work-related stress.
For most workers, their job is meaningful. More than 80 % of workers find their work useful and experience the feeling of work being well done. In addition, 85 % of employees feel fairly treated. Two thirds of employees agree that they receive the recognition that they deserve.
It’s not all about the money: a safe working environment for mental and physical health and a trusting working environment are the most important aspects for the largest shares of workers in the EU.
In the EU, around 1 in 5 respondents aged 45 years or over would like to work ‘as long as possible’, while 1 in 10 responded that they would like to retire ‘as early as possible’. For those who specified a concrete age, the average desired retirement age was 63.9 for men and 63.1 for women.
The overall picture confirms that the job quality dimensions and their interplay are strongly related to workers’ well-being, health and engagement, confirming the importance of job quality in supporting a sustainable working life.
Job quality is multidimensional, and groups of workers fare differently in the various dimensions. There is a multitude of ways to improve job quality. All seven dimensions should be considered.
Many actors and channels contribute to the improvement of job quality. The social partners and collective bargaining are among the most important of these.
To make progress in job quality, the gender differences across men’s and women’s working careers need to be considered.
Faced with a shrinking and ageing working-age population, Europe needs to provide good job quality to more people to allow a larger share of a more diverse population to join the labour market and stay in employment for longer.
The twin transition brings challenges but also opportunities for job quality. Progress in job quality should be supported as the twin transition unfolds.
Job quality supports the performance of companies through a motivated and engaged workforce, openness to innovation, less absence from work and providing a better social climate. Improvements in job quality can clearly support policies aiming to achieve sustainable and inclusive work.
This section provides information on the data contained in this publication.
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Eurofound recommends citing this publication in the following way.
Eurofound (2026), European Working Conditions Survey 2024: Overview report, Publications Office of the European Union, Luxembourg.
