21% of People in Tech Now Have Unlimited Vacation Time

With work-life balance a top priority for workers, unlimited paid time off (PTO) is becoming more popular.

About 21% of workers in tech say they now have unlimited paid vacation and sick days, according to the latest reading of an ongoing query by Comparably. That’s just slightly higher than workers outside of tech, 18% of whom say they have unlimited PTO.

20 to 30 days is still the most common arrangement

While unlimited PTO was nearly unheard of just a decade ago, it now appears to be *almost* as popular as the three weeks commonly offered by employers. (Remember that in the U.S. there is no federal mandate that people be paid for time not worked; it’s up to the employer.)

Indeed, when people were asked how much paid vacation and sick days they could take a year, the most common responses were “15 to 20 days” (24%) and “20 to 30 days” (28%). “Unlimited” was the third most popular response (21%), followed by “10 to 15 days” (17%) and “0 to 10 days” (10%).

PTO

People in HR, product, and executive roles report unlimited PTO the most

Workers in HR, product and executive roles at technology companies reported the highest rates of unlimited PTO.

HR (27%)

HRA

Product (27%)

productA

Executive (32%)

EXECA

Workers in administrative roles, finance, communications, IT, and legal reported the lowest rates of unlimited PTO.

Administrative (12%)

adminA

Finance (15%)

financeA

Communications (10%)

commsA

IT (8%)

itA

Legal (15%)

legalA

37% of workers in San Francisco claim to have unlimited PTO

San Francisco, Austin, Salt Lake City and Boston had the highest rates of tech workers who claim to have unlimited PTO.

San Francisco (37%)

SF

Austin (30%)

AUST

Salt Lake City (29%)

SLTLKCITY

Boston (27%)

BOSTON

7% of workers in Houston claim to have unlimited PTO

Houston, Dallas and Seattle had the lowest concentrations of workers who reported having unlimited PTO.

Houston (7%)

HOUSTON

Dallas (9%)

DALLAS

Seattle (9%)

SEATTLE

The results are as of June 14 and include the responses of more than 10,000 workers in the technology industry.

 

 

 

 

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