2018’s Hardest-Working Cities in America – WalletHub Study
With March 2 being Employee Appreciation Day and Americans outworking many of their foreign peers by hundreds of extra hours per year, the personal-finance website WalletHub today released its report on 2018’s Hardest-Working Cities in America.

In order to determine where Americans work the hardest, WalletHub compared the 116 largest cities across nine key metrics. The data set ranges from employment rate to average hours worked per week to share of workers with multiple jobs.

Top 20 Hardest-Working Cities in America
1 San Francisco, CA 11 San Jose, CA
2 Fremont, CA 12 Los Angeles, CA
3 Jersey City, NJ 13 Garland, TX
4 Washington, DC 14 Philadelphia, PA
5 New York, NY 15 Baltimore, MD
6 Oakland, CA 16 Long Beach, CA
7 Boston, MA 17 Plano, TX
8 Aurora, CO 18 Arlington, TX
9 Newark, NJ 19 Denver, CO
10 Chicago, IL 20 Fort Worth, TX

Key Stats

  • New York has the longest hours worked per week, 40.3, which is 2.8 times longer than in Cheyenne, Wyoming, the city with the shortest at 14.6.
  • Anchorage, Alaska, has the longest average commute time, 41.0 minutes, which is 1.2 times longer than in Burlington, Vermont, the city with the shortest at 33.5 minutes.
  • Salt Lake City contributes the most annual volunteer hours per resident, 65.91, which is 3.7 times more than in Providence, Rhode Island, the city that contributes the fewest at 17.76.
  • Omaha, Nebraska has the lowest share of idle youth 16-24-years-old, 7.1 percent, which is 2.6 times lower than in Bakersfield, California, the city with the highest at 18.7 percent.

To view the full report and your city’s rank, please visit:
https://wallethub.com/edu/hardest-working-cities-in-america/10424/

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