Advertisements
Your Brand Deserves The Spotlight - Advertise With Us - Allwork.Space
  • Marketplace
  • Resources
  • Business Directory
  • Events
  • Advertise
  • Publish a Press Release
  • Submit Your Story | Get Featured
  • Get the Newsletter
  • Contact
  • About Us
The FUTURE OF WORK® since 2003
Allwork.Space
No Result
View All Result
Subscribe
  • Submit Your StoryNew
  • More
    • Columnists
      • Dr. Gleb Tsipursky – The Office Whisperer
      • Nirit Cohen – WorkFutures
      • Angela Howard – Culture Expert
      • Drew Jones – Design & Innovation
      • Jonathan Price – CRE & Flex Expert
    • Get the Newsletter
    • Events
    • Advertise With Us
    • Publish a Press Release
    • Brand PulseNew
    • Partner Portal
  • Latest News
  • Business
  • Leadership
  • Work-life
  • Career Growth
  • Tech
  • Design
  • Workforce
  • Coworking
  • CRE
  • Podcast
  • Submit Your StoryNew
  • More
    • Columnists
      • Dr. Gleb Tsipursky – The Office Whisperer
      • Nirit Cohen – WorkFutures
      • Angela Howard – Culture Expert
      • Drew Jones – Design & Innovation
      • Jonathan Price – CRE & Flex Expert
    • Get the Newsletter
    • Events
    • Advertise With Us
    • Publish a Press Release
    • Brand PulseNew
    • Partner Portal
  • Latest News
  • Business
  • Leadership
  • Work-life
  • Career Growth
  • Tech
  • Design
  • Workforce
  • Coworking
  • CRE
  • Podcast
No Result
View All Result
Subscribe
Allwork.Space
No Result
View All Result
Advertisements
Nexudus - Waste of Space? (Orange)
Home News

Childcare Crisis, Office Mandates Drive Exodus Of Young Mothers From U.S. Workforce

KPMG’s ‘The Great Exit’ report finds labor force participation among mothers with young children is plummeting as childcare costs soar and in-office requirements tighten.

Featured InsightsbyFeatured Insights
October 6, 2025
in News
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
Childcare Crisis, Office Mandates Drive Exodus Of Young Mothers From U.S. Workforce

College-educated mothers face steepest labor force drop since 2023, KPMG finds.; Credit: Halfpoint Images via Getty Images; Source: Fortune via Reuters Connect

More stories for you

New N.Y. Class Action Lawsuit Accuses Amazon Of Punishing Workers With Disabilities

New N.Y. Class Action Lawsuit Accuses Amazon Of Punishing Workers With Disabilities

5 hours ago
Global Firms Double Down On India’s Talent Infrastructure With 2,400 Global Capability Centers Expected By 2030

Global Firms Double Down On India’s Talent Infrastructure With 2,400 Global Capability Centers Expected By 2030

5 hours ago
Gallup Data Shows Purpose Drives Engagement More Than Pay Or Perks

Gallup Data Shows Purpose Drives Engagement More Than Pay Or Perks

5 hours ago
Glassdoor Data Exposes Rising Worker Frustration Across U.S. Companies

Glassdoor Data Exposes Rising Worker Frustration Across U.S. Companies

5 hours ago

For U.S. mothers, 2025 is emerging as a workplace inflection point where stricter return‑to‑office mandates and rising childcare costs together combined to spark an exodus of working mothers, according to a new KPMG report titled “The Great Exit.”

Labor force participation among mothers with children under five dropped nearly three percentage points between January and June 2025, coinciding with a near doubling of full‑time office mandates among Fortune 500 companies. This aligns with KPMG’s finding that mothers — especially college‑educated mothers of very young children — are being pushed out by inflexible schedules atop a constrained childcare market.

Advertisements
Nexudus - Waste of Space? (Green)

As KPMG puts it, simply: “Since late 2023, women with young children have been leaving the labor force.”

What the report says

  • Childcare labor shortages have collided with elevated demand, keeping prices high and options scarce; as a result, mothers are exiting or reducing hours more than fathers, with the steepest declines among college‑educated mothers of very young children since 2023 highs.
  • Childcare employment flatlined after federal stabilization funds ended in 2023, leaving the sector roughly 100,000 workers below where it would be had support continued, which contributes to higher prices and waitlists that destabilize work for parents.
    • KPMG says the so-called “childcare cliff” has become “more of a plateau. But that plateau shows a sector in crisis.”
  • Return‑to‑office policies amplify these pressures: when care arrangements can’t flex to added commute time or in‑office days, one parent — disproportionately the mother — cuts hours or leaves the labor force entirely, eroding household income and firms’ retention of experienced talent.

Key numbers

  • Labor force participation for college‑educated mothers with very young children fell to about 77% in August 2025 from near 80% in 2023, while fathers in comparable groups edged up, widening gender gaps in work attachment among parents of young kids.
  • Childcare prices have increased at roughly twice the pace of overall inflation, reflecting supply constraints and higher operating costs that providers pass on to families, which in turn raises exit pressure for mothers.
    • “The childcare crisis is not new,” KPMG writes, “but it has increased in intensity. Once parents returned to work and sought more childcare services, prices started to surge again.”
  • One striking conclusion: Women with a bachelors or higher and young children have represented the largest decline in labor force participation since 2023.

Why it matters

  • Household impact: Reduced maternal labor force participation lowers earnings and career progression, with long‑run effects on wealth accumulation and gender wage gaps, while forcing difficult trade‑offs in family budgeting under rising care costs.
  • Macro impact: Employers lose productive, experienced workers; hiring and training costs rise; and aggregate growth slows as labor supply retreats in segments critical to productivity and leadership pipelines.
  • Policy risk: The report’s trends are unfolding alongside a weaker jobs market and policy shifts that disproportionately affect women-heavy sectors, which can compound the exit dynamics if childcare access and affordability do not improve.

Broader context

  • Return‑to‑office mandates: Fortune reports that full‑time in‑office requirements among Fortune 500 firms rose to about 24% in 2Q25 from 13% at end‑2024, eroding the flexibility that had kept many mothers attached to work during and after the pandemic; as mandates tightened, participation for mothers of young kids fell from roughly 69.7% to 66.9% by mid‑2025, echoing KPMG’s documented declines among college‑educated mothers of very young children into 2025.
  • The push‑pull mechanism: loss of flexibility collides with soaring childcare costs and limited availability, forcing mothers into hours cuts or exits.

What to watch for next

  • Immigration and workforce supply: With about one in five childcare workers being immigrants nationally, tighter immigration policies could further constrain staffing, exacerbating shortages and price pressures in high‑cost states.
  • Employer responses: Expanded flexibility, backup care, and on‑site options can reduce parental disruptions; absent such supports, stricter in‑office mandates tend to trigger disproportionate maternal exits or hours cuts.
  • Policy experimentation: State actions (funding expansions, tax credits, wage supports) and federal choices on childcare, labor, and immigration will shape whether the current plateau shifts toward recovery or deepens into a prolonged capacity gap.

Written by Ashley Lutz for Fortune as “The Great Exit: Return-to-office demands and skyrocketing childcare push young mothers out of the workforce, KPMG research finds” and republished with permission.

Advertisements
Nexudus - Tech Stack Lovers
Advertisements
Your Brand Deserves The Spotlight - Advertise With Us - Allwork.Space
Source: Fortune
Tags: North AmericaWorkforce
Share6Tweet4Share1
Featured Insights

Featured Insights

Articles under Featured Insights are sourced from leading publications such as Fortune, offered through our collaboration with Reuters. Each piece is hand-selected to provide valuable perspectives and exceptional journalism to keep you informed on the trends shaping the future of work. If you would also like to be considered for syndication on Allwork.Space, please contact us.

Other Stories Recommended For You

New N.Y. Class Action Lawsuit Accuses Amazon Of Punishing Workers With Disabilities
News

New N.Y. Class Action Lawsuit Accuses Amazon Of Punishing Workers With Disabilities

byAllwork.Space News Team
5 hours ago

Amazon.com was sued on Wednesday in a proposed class action saying the retailer subjects thousands of warehouse employees with disabilities...

Read more
Global Firms Double Down On India’s Talent Infrastructure With 2,400 Global Capability Centers Expected By 2030

Global Firms Double Down On India’s Talent Infrastructure With 2,400 Global Capability Centers Expected By 2030

5 hours ago
Gallup Data Shows Purpose Drives Engagement More Than Pay Or Perks

Gallup Data Shows Purpose Drives Engagement More Than Pay Or Perks

5 hours ago
Glassdoor Data Exposes Rising Worker Frustration Across U.S. Companies

Glassdoor Data Exposes Rising Worker Frustration Across U.S. Companies

5 hours ago
Advertisements
Yardi Kube automates flex & coworking operations
Advertisements
UltraSoftBIS Work Smarter, Not Harder

Unlock your competitive edge in tomorrow's workplace.

Join a community of forward-thinking professionals who get exclusive access to the latest news, trends, and innovations that are shaping the future of work.

2025 Allwork.Space News Corporation. Exploring the Future Of Work® since 2003. All Rights Reserved

Advertise  Submit Your Story   Newsletters   Privacy Policy   Terms Of Use   About Us   Contact   Submit a Press Release   Brand Pulse   Podcast   Events   

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Topics
    • Business
    • Leadership
    • Work-life
    • Workforce
    • Career Growth
    • Design
    • Tech
    • Coworking
    • Marketing
    • CRE
  • Podcast
  • Events
  • About Us
  • Advertise | Media Kit
  • Submit Your Story
Subscribe

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
-
00:00
00:00

Queue

Update Required Flash plugin
-
00:00
00:00