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Working time

Working time refers to any period during which a worker is working, at the employer's disposal and carrying out his/her activities or duties, in accordance with national laws and/or practice. Working hours vary for workers in different occupations or at different life stages, and these differences are particularly striking when gender is considered.

Woman records working time

Nieuw en aankomend

Vind hieronder de nieuwste inhoud over dit onderwerp.

Digitaal verhaal

14 April 2026

European Working Conditions Survey 2024 – Hoogtepunten
Dit digitale verhaal presenteert de hoogtepunten uit het overzichtsrapport van de European Working Conditions Survey 2024. Het onderzoekt belangrijke bevindingen uit elk hoofdstuk van het rapport, met de nadruk op de Europese beroepsbevolking, werkplekpraktijken, het meten van de kwaliteit van het werk, trends in de werkkwaliteit in de tijd en de kwaliteit van het werkleven in de EU.
Vlaggenschip rapport

14 April 2026

European Working Conditions Survey 2024: Overzichtsrapport
+3
Agnès Parent-Thirionand 6 other authors
Nu in de achtste editie, brengt de European Working Conditions Survey 2024 veranderingen in het werkleven in kaart over meer dan drie decennia. Deze hoogwaardige, op kansen gebaseerde enquête omvat 35 Europese landen, waaronder de 27 EU-lidstaten, Noorwegen, Zwitserland, Albanië, Bosnië en Herzegovina, Montenegro, Noord-Macedonië, Kosovo en Servië. Meer dan 36.600 face-to-face interviews, elk van ongeveer 45 minuten, vonden plaats als onderdeel van de enquête.
Onderzoeksrapport
Binnenkort

June 2026

Werken op elk moment en overal in de EU na de pandemie: De effecten op de kwaliteit van de werktijd
Oscar Vargas Llave
Dit onderzoeksrapport onderzoekt hoe flexibele werkregelingen in de EU de kwaliteit van de werktijd, autonomie en het welzijn van werknemers beïnvloeden, en vergelijkt recente ontwikkelingen met tien jaar geleden. Het analyseert verschillen tussen vaardigheidsniveaus, sectoren en lidstaten, en beoordeelt de rol van regelgeving en beleid zoals het recht om te ontkoppelen.

Over Working time

Meer informatie over dit onderwerp en de relevantie ervan voor het EU-beleid.

Hoogtepunten voor Working time

Dit is een selectie van de meest relevante resultaten voor dit onderwerp.

24 October 2023

Onderzoeksrapport

Working time in 2021–2022

The most important changes in the regulation of working time in Europe in 2021 and 2022 were related to the transposition of two European directives: the Work–life Balance Directive and the Transparent and Predictable Working Conditions Directive. The reduction of working time and more specifically the four-day working week have been increasingly debated in many EU Member States. In 2022, the average collectively agreed working week in the EU stood at 38.1 hours. Of the sectors analysed, agreed working hours were shortest in public administration, at around 37.7 hours – still longer than the overall average – and longest in the retail sector, at 38.5 hours. The average collectively agreed paid annual leave entitlement stood at 24.3 days in the EU, and was higher in the Member States that were part of the EU prior to its 2004 enlargement (EU14), at 25.3 days, than in the other Member States, at only 20.9 days. If working collectively agreed hours, full-time workers in the EU27 would have worked, on average, 1,726 hours in 2022, with an average of 1,698 hours in the EU14 and 1,822 hours in the other Member States.

8 December 2022

Onderzoeksrapport

The rise in telework: Impact on working conditions and regulations

This report presents Eurofound’s research on telework during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and 2021. It explores changes in the incidence of telework, working conditions experienced by employees working from home and changes to regulations addressing issues related to this working arrangement. The findings reveal a rapid escalation of telework triggered by the pandemic: in 2021, 2 out of 10 European employees were teleworking – a figure that most likely would not have been reached before 2027 had the pandemic not occurred. The health crisis unleashed the social and technological potential for flexibility in terms of working time and place. The impacts of telework on working conditions were initially difficult to determine because it was difficult to disentangle them from pandemic-induced factors, such as lockdowns and school closures. However, both the positive impacts, such as the contribution of telework to improving work–life balance, and the negative impacts, such as reduced social interaction and an increase in overtime worked, have become more evident. The rise in telework and an awareness of its implications for working conditions have prompted a renewed focus on regulatory frameworks, with new telework regulations passed in several EU Member States.

29 November 2022

Onderzoeksrapport

Working conditions in the time of COVID-19: Implications for the future

The strict public health restrictions implemented by governments in 2020 to control the COVID-19 pandemic abruptly changed working life and continued to shape it over the two years that followed. Between March and November 2021, over 70,000 interviews were carried out in 36 countries by the European Working Conditions Telephone Survey (EWCTS), a high-quality probability-based survey. The aim was to provide a detailed picture of the working lives of Europeans in that exceptional time.

The report documents the working conditions of Europeans in 2021. It examines variation in job quality and identifies its positive association with well-being, health, work engagement and the financial sustainability of work. It highlights the divergences in the experiences of workers depending on workers’ own attributes and their place in the workforce. From this analysis, the report aims to derive lessons for the future, particularly in relation to the enduring marks on how we work and the implications for work organisation, the quality of work, and the interaction between work and private life.

1 September 2022

Onderzoeksrapport

Telework in the EU: Regulatory frameworks and recent updates

This report sets out to map and analyse legislation and collective bargaining on telework in the 27 Member States and Norway. It highlights the main cross-country differences and similarities regarding telework legislation and recent changes to these regulations. It also examines the current situation regarding collective bargaining on telework. The analysis highlights many of the drawbacks and challenges of telework, focusing on provisions relating to access to telework, flexible working time, continuous availability/connectivity, isolation, occupational and health risk prevention and the costs incurred by the employee while working remotely. With COVID-19 having been an accelerator for regulating telework both in legislation and through collective bargaining, the report sheds light on how the future of telework could be regulated at national and EU level to improve working conditions and the well-being of workers.

11 March 2021

Onderzoeksrapport

COVID-19: Implications for employment and working life

Disclaimer - Please note that this report was updated with revised data (specifically for Bulgaria) on 23 March 2021.

This report sets out to assess the initial impact of the COVID-19 crisis on employment in Europe (up to Q2 2020), including its effects across sectors and on different categories of workers. It also looks at measures implemented by policymakers in a bid to limit the negative effects of the crisis. It first provides an overview of policy approaches adopted to mitigate the impact of the crisis on businesses, workers and citizens. The main focus is on the development, content and impact of short-time working schemes, income support measures for self-employed people, hardship funds and rent and mortgage deferrals. Finally, it explores the involvement of social partners in the development and implementation of such measures and the role of European funding in supporting these schemes.

26 February 2021

Vlaggenschip rapport

Working conditions and sustainable work: An analysis using the job quality framework

This flagship report summarises the key findings of Eurofound’s research on working conditions conducted over the programming period 2017–2020. It maps the progress achieved since 2000 in improving working conditions and examines whether all workers have benefited equally from positive change. It highlights which groups are the most at risk of experiencing poor working conditions and being left behind. Given the changes in the world of work, emerging challenges for good job quality are identified. The report also provides evidence for measures that could lead to the further improvement of work and the achievement of fair working conditions for all in the EU. The analysis shows that, overall, job quality in the EU is improving, if slowly. Not all workers are benefiting to the same extent, however. Furthermore, gender, age and contractual status have a significant bearing on a person’s working conditions. And while digitalisation helps to address some job quality issues, it also creates new challenges. The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated trends, reinforcing concerns and highlighting the importance of achieving job quality for all.

Experts over Working time

De onderzoekers van Eurofound bieden deskundige inzichten en kunnen worden gecontacteerd voor vragen of mediaverzoeken.

Oscar Vargas Llave

Senior research manager
Working life research

Oscar Vargas Llave is a senior research manager in the Working Life unit at Eurofound and manages projects on changes in the world of work and the impact on working conditions and related policies: organisation of working time, remote work, the right to disconnect, health and well-being and ageing. Before joining Eurofound in December 2009, he worked as project coordinator in the field of health and safety and was responsible for the Professional Card Scheme for the Construction Sector in Spain at the non-profit Fundación Laboral de la Construcción in Madrid. He has a background in industrial sociology (Universidad Pontificia de Salamanca), and also holds a Diploma in Social Science Research Methods from the University of Cardiff and a Master’s degree in Health and Safety from the Autonomous University of Madrid.

Jorge Cabrita

Senior research manager
Working life research

Jorge Cabrita is senior onderzoeksmanager in de Working Life unit. Hij is verantwoordelijk voor het formuleren, coördineren en beheren van Europa-breed onderzoek, en het bevorderen van de verspreiding van bevindingen op het gebied van arbeidsomstandigheden en arbeidsverhoudingen. Zijn belangrijkste onderzoeksgebieden zijn arbeidsomstandigheden en baankwaliteit, werktijd en werk-privébalans, gezondheid en welzijn van werknemers, gendergelijkheid en de sociaaleconomische gevolgen van de overgang naar een klimaatneutrale economie. Momenteel leidt hij onderzoek naar ontwikkelingen in werktijden en naar sociale dialoog en collectieve onderhandelingen tijdens de COVID-19-pandemie. Eerder werkte hij als onderzoeker bij het Centrum voor Studies voor Sociale Interventie en bij het Onderzoekscentrum voor de Portugese Economie van de Economische School van Lissabon, en als trainer en adviseur op het gebied van strategisch management, organisatiecommunicatie, leiderschap en teamopbouw. Hij behaalde een BSc in Economie en een MSc in Sociaal-Organisatorische Systemen van Economische Activiteit van de Lisbon School of Economics.

Alle inhoud voor Working time

Dit gedeelte biedt toegang tot alle inhoud die over het onderwerp is gepubliceerd.

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