Google Tells Some Remote Staff to Return to the Office: 'An Important Part of How We Innovate' Remote workers could lose their jobs if they fail to show up at the office in person three days a week.

By Sherin Shibu Edited by Melissa Malamut

Key Takeaways

  • Google is asking remote workers in divisions like People Operations and Technical Services to return to the office on a hybrid schedule.
  • Affected workers could lose their jobs if they fail to comply.

Google is tightening its hybrid work policy and telling remote workers in several divisions to return to the office three days a week or risk losing their jobs, per internal documents seen by CNBC on Wednesday.

Google informed some remote staffers that their only option would be accepting a voluntary buyout and leaving the company if they chose not to return to the office on a hybrid schedule.

Related: Google Says It Won't Follow Amazon's Lead With a Return-to-Office Mandate — Yet

Remote workers on Google's human resources People Operations team who live within 50 miles of an office have to return to the office on a hybrid schedule by June, Courtenay Mencini, a Google spokesperson, told CNBC. If they fail to show up, their roles will be eliminated.

Google began offering buyouts to the People Operations team in February, giving mid-to-senior-level employees the option to receive 14 weeks of salary plus one added week for every full year of service if they chose to leave voluntarily.

Remote employees in Google's Technical Services unit are also affected by the shift to hybrid work. Google has requested that remote staff in the division return to the office three days a week or accept a voluntary exit package. The tech giant is offering to cover relocation costs for remote employees to move within 50 miles of an office.

Mencini told CNBC that the switch to hybrid work only affects remote workers on certain teams and does not impact the whole company. Mencini cited "in-person collaboration" as the reason for the return-to-office push.

Related: Everyone Wants to Buy Google's Chrome Browser — Including OpenAI, According to a Top ChatGPT Executive

In January, Google gave all employees on its Platforms and Devices unit the option to accept a buyout. Earlier this month, Google laid off hundreds of employees in the division, which works on Chromebooks and Pixel devices.

Google co-founder Sergey Brin wrote in a memo last month to employees on Google's AI team that staff should spend "at least every weekday" in the office and work "60 hours a week."

Google's official policy is hybrid work for most employees. Google stated in 2021 that it was adopting a hybrid work policy, intending to have 60% of Googlers in the office three days a week, 20% in the office full-time, and 20% working completely remotely.

By the end of 2024, Google had 183,323 full-time global employees.

Sherin Shibu

Entrepreneur Staff

News Reporter

Sherin Shibu is a business news reporter at Entrepreneur.com. She previously worked for PCMag, Business Insider, The Messenger, and ZDNET as a reporter and copyeditor. Her areas of coverage encompass tech, business, strategy, finance, and even space. She is a Columbia University graduate.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2025.

Leadership

Stop Trying to Outwork AI — Focus on These Soft Skills That Make You Irreplaceable

AI is always going to be faster and smarter than us, but you can become irreplaceable by 'out-humaning' artificial intelligence. Here's how!

Money & Finance

Hidden Fees Cost U.S. Small Businesses $153 Billion Each Year — Here's How to Make Sure You Don't Lose a Dime

Despite the critical role small- and medium-sized businesses play in the U.S. economy, many are fighting to stay afloat as they battle rising costs, uncertainty around tariffs and hidden fees that drain billions from their bottom lines each year.

Fundraising

This Is the Hard Question I Ask Every Founder — And Why Most Can't Answer It

Understanding your startup's financial runway is crucial. Here's why many founders struggle with this question and how to address it.

Growing a Business

How a Spot on 'The Montel Williams Show' Sparked a Restaurant Power Brand for This Miami Chef

Chef Adrianne Calvo discusses building confidence on national TV, turning guests into loyal customers and the power of storytelling in the kitchen.

OSZAR »