
Kirstie Allsopp launches another scathing attack on working from home and says it 'has to stop' as it's 'destroying young people's mental health'
The London-born Location Location Location host, 53, took to X/Twitter on Monday morning to declare that 'working from home s***' has 'to stop'.
She said that she herself has 'always' needed to travel for work, from commuting to an office, being out and about to view properties, or travelling long distances across the country for filming.
Kirstie has previously made her opinion clear about non-office working, including sharing a picture of an empty Tube carriage on a weekday morning earlier this month, and warning 'it can't be a good thing'.
Today, she reinforced her anti-WFH stance as she took to social media to slam working from home, especially for young people who aren't being given crucial experience of 'real life colleagues, office politics, socialising after work'.
Kirstie said: 'This working from home S*** has to stop, it's destroying mental health for millions of young people, and forcing many others to spend far more on housing just for the extra office space.
'It may suit middle class, middle aged, middle management, it does not suit most young people.
'For every older person who loves working from home there's a younger person who has no experience of real life colleagues, office politics, socialising after work, or having to deal with adverse situations while away from home.'
Kirstie is best known for fronting property shows on Channel 4 such as Location Location Location and Love It Or List It alongside her co-host Phil Spencer.
The property guru's post met with mixed reactions after racking up more than 300,000 views in mere hours.
One person said: 'I think this is a pretty wild claim to make without evidence? Huge numbers of people find WFH beneficial for their mental health'.
But Kirstie simply replied: 'AND huge numbers don't!'
When one person queried: 'Where's your office?', Kirstie responded: 'I have also ALWAYS had to travel for work, either to an office for 6 years, or in and out all day going to see properties or long distances across the country for filming.'
Responding to criticisms, she added: 'I know that many young people are negatively impacted by working from home & that there's a fundamental unfairness in that those who work the hardest, for the lowest wages, rarely have the choice to WFH.
'FFS This is just pathetic, I never said 'get rid' of working from home. The issue is that it is forced on many and that negatively impacts young people. We've have the highest WFH in Europe, why? It's hardly as if we are the biggest country.'
Many agreed with Kirstie's statement, writing: 'Absolutely luckily my two eldest children have London jobs and both go in every day. Would be miserable for them to be at home and where do they learn work social skills if stuck in their rooms!';
The Location Location Location host, 53, took to X/Twitter on Monday morning to declare that 'working from home s***' has 'to stop'
'Caused the downfall of so many cafes, pubs etc too.';
'There's plenty of Middle Agers not enjoying it also Add in having to keep your lights & heating on 24/7 in colder/darker months!';
'Attractive for some but not for all. Those about to embark on their careers age 18 onward. Sitting in their bedrooms of their parents homes. Staring at a screen. I remember being 18. First job in London in the 90s. Drinks after work. They need to socialise';
'Working from home is one of those things that seems attractive at face value, but brings subtle and diverse drawbacks. Aside from its effect on teamwork, it is de-socialising. My pension-age part-time job keeps me sharper. I meet new people. I'm going to a staff event. All good.'
But others were more sceptical, writing: 'I'd rather not spend several hours per day commuting thanks';
'That's nonsense Kirstie and you know it. Working from home is flexibility. A laptop at the kitchen table is far less expensive than a commute.'
Kirstie has previously sparked strong views about working from home - with her tweet sparking a mixed response.
Earlier this month, Kirstie posted a photo of a 'totally empty tube carriage' on a Central Line train on X, formerly known as Twitter, and captioned the post: 'Don't quite know what it says but it can't be a good thing.'
The property guru's post met with mixed reactions after racking up more than 300,000 views in mere hours
In the comments section, she said the photo was taken after Mile End station, with the train heading east.
The presenter's tweet quickly went viral, with more than five million views and 1,300 comments.
Several X users pointed out that Kirstie had missed rush hour and most Londoners were probably already at their desks by the time she boarded the train at 9.20am.
One comment read: 'It's 9.20, most people start work at 9am. Plus you're going the opposite way to the majority going into work.'
Another X user agreed, adding that Central Line trains from Mile End were 'packed like sardines' at 7.30am.
'You clearly have never worked in the City. I would have done two hours of work at my desk by that time.'
Another quipped: '[The photo says] No one was late for work?'
'Kirstie most people have jobs,' one comment read.
However, her tweet backfired as X users pointed out that 'most people were already at work' by the time the Location, Location, Location presenter took the train at 9.20am on a Tuesday morning
Several others suggested lots of people were likely working from home on the hottest day of the year, as temperatures in London rose to 34.7C on July 1.
However, others noted that it showed a marked lack of tourists.
BBC Radio 4 presenter David Aaronovitch replied asking: 'Too hot?'
In response, Kirstie listed all those who don't have the privilege of working from home, writing: 'Not for me or our crew, or police officers, or nurses, supermarket workers, or cabbies, and all the other people who don't get paid to work from home or don't take days off when it's bloody uncomfortable.'
Another X user listed all the possible reasons the carriage was empty, adding factors like 'annual leave' and the fact that lots of people 'walk/get the bus when it's hot' because the Central Line doesn't have air conditioning.
'What's even the implication here?' one person questioned Kirstie's tweet. 'Can it not just be a coincidence? You've already got several factors that would mean fewer people - the time, the direction, the location - why read anything more into it?'
Her tweet, which has over 1,300 comments at the time of writing, drew mixed reactions
Some, however, appeared to agree with the broadcaster as one X user replied: 'Working from home has killed all the sectors that support city life.
'Serious consequences for the economy.'
After her tweet blew up online, Kirstie reposted some of the nastier messages she'd received in response as the broadcaster noted 'Twitter just isn't fun anymore' while condeming the 'constant abuse' she endured online.
Replying to one X user who questioned whether Kirstie 'ever had a proper job', she said 'I'll take no lectures on not understanding the world of work' after having taken the Tube to work every day for five years.
She also pointed out 'there are many reasons an empty Tube' is a worrying economical sign, questioning why there were no tourists or people who work weekends 'having Tuesday off and going to Stratford'.
When someone suggested Kirstie, who is the eldest daughter of the late Lord Charles Hindlip, 'wouldn't know that' most people get to work before 9am, she replied the debate was 'not worth it anymore'.
Kirstie's post comes after the TV host revealed how she once received a random FaceTime from an ex-househunter she had helped on Location, Location, Location.
The property broadcaster, 53, starred on 25 Years of Location, Location, Location with her co-host and longtime friend, Phil Spencer, 55, in May.
The pair were discussing some of the couples they had helped since the Channel 4 programme first aired in 2000.
In this time, Kirstie and Phil have carried out 469 searches, viewed 1,810 homes and been trusted with more than £176,000,000 of money from house hunters.
Kirstie reflected on the episode where she attempted to find Ruth and Anna a flat the week after the Brexit result. The sisters ended up losing out on the property due to the level of uncertainty that came with leaving the European Union.
However, Kirstie divulged that she actually negotiated the apartment they bought a year after they starred on the show, in 2017.
She said: 'We lost out on the property we ended up bidding on, a year later I negotiated the purchase of the flat that they finally bought. I always remember that because I always say to everyone don't forget, we're always there for you.'
Kirstie then revealed that every home buyer that goes on the show has her and Phil's personal mobile numbers - and she once received an unexpected drunk call from a past Location, Location, Location participant.
She said: 'Our househunters have our telephone number. I always say 'Don't call when drunk!''
But being able to call the hosts at any time appears to get you brownie points in your friendship group - and one intoxicated ex-participant decided to put it to the test.
Kirstie said: 'It doesn't always happen, but someone did call me once from the races, FaceTimed me [and said] 'Look here I am I wanted to prove to everyone that I had your number''.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
8 minutes ago
- The Independent
FTSE 100 climbs as earnings cascade brings cheer
The FTSE 100 made strong progress on Tuesday, boosted by results from AstraZeneca and Barclays, but it was a gloomy day for investors in Novo Nordisk. Russ Mould, of AJ Bell, said: 'It's a busy week for corporate earnings in the UK and US, and investors have plenty of news to digest. The latest set of UK results was generally well-received.' The FTSE 100 index closed up 54.88 points, 0.6%, at 9,136.32. The index had earlier traded as high as 9,163.24. The FTSE 250 closed 158.73 points lower, 0.7%, at 21,793.07, and the AIM All-Share closed down 7.27 points, 0.9%, at 765.75. In London, investors weighed a barrage of earnings with shares of AstraZeneca, Barclays, Games Workshop and Entain moving higher, although Croda International struggled. Games Workshop led the way, up 5.4%, as it said pre-tax profit jumped 29% to £262.8 million in the financial year that ended June 1 from £203 million a year ago. The Nottingham, England-based fantasy game figurine maker and retailer said revenue rose 17% to £617.5 million from £525.7 million. Reflecting the strong earnings, the total dividend was £5.20, up 24% from £4.20 the year before. AstraZeneca, the largest FTSE 100 constituent, rose 3.4%. The Cambridge, England-based pharmaceuticals company said pre-tax profit jumped 30% to 3.13 billion dollars in the second quarter of 2025 from 2.4 billion dollars a year prior, or by 34% at constant currency. Revenue rose 12% to 14.46 billion dollars in the quarter from 12.94 billion dollars a year ago, or by 11% at constant currency, ahead of Visible Alpha's consensus of 14.31 billion dollars. Sales were driven by double-digit growth in Oncology and BioPharmaceuticals, with increases across all major geographic regions. Entain climbed 0.8% as it raised guidance at its BetMGM joint venture, while Barclays advanced 2.5% after well-received results and despite a lack of a guidance hike. Bank of America said Barclays printed a 'good' set of results, with underlying profit around 11% above consensus, driven primarily by higher income (particularly non-interest income) and lower impairments. But Croda International was down 10%. The speciality chemicals maker posted improved revenue for the first half, though impairments limited its bottom line. Croda's pre-tax profit in the first half of 2025 fell 19% to £85.5 million from £106.1 million, despite revenue improving 4.9% to £855.8 million from £815.9 million. Adjusted pre-tax profit rose 8.4%, however, to £138 million from £127.3 million. Revenue fell slightly short of the company-compiled consensus of £857 million. It beat on profit, however, as the adjusted pre-tax profit consensus stood at £136.6 million. The upbeat mood spread to Europe. The CAC 40 in Paris rose 0.7%, while the DAX 40 in Frankfurt advanced 1%. However, Denmark's Novo Nordisk plunged 23% as it lowered full-year sales and profit guidance, citing weaker-than-expected uptake of key weight-loss and diabetes treatments in the US. Novo Nordisk lowered its 2025 sales growth guidance to between 8% and 14%, down from 13% to 21%. It now expects operating profit growth of 10% to 16%, reduced from a previous range of 16% to 24%. The company blamed slower-than-expected Wegovy uptake in the US obesity market, compounded by ongoing sales of compounded GLP-1s, a more competitive landscape for Ozempic in the US, and lower-than-expected Wegovy penetration in select international markets. Analysts at Jefferies said the 2025 outlook cut suggests high single-digit percentage underlying profit forecast downgrades. In New York on Tuesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.3%, the S&P 500 was 0.1% lower, as was the Nasdaq Composite. A report from the Conference Board showed a slight pickup in consumer confidence, albeit from low levels, while another release showed a larger-than-expected drop in job openings. On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve is widely expected to leave interest rates unchanged. According to the CME FedWatch Tool, it is near-certain that the Fed will maintain rates at the 4.25%-4.5% range this week. The Fed held in each of the first four meetings this year. Its last cut was in December, a 25 basis points trim to the federal funds rate range. A fifth successive hold is in the offing during the final meeting before a summer break. A 'wait and see' approach will likely be the message from chairman Jerome Powell at the subsequent press conference, analysts at Morgan Stanley predict. 'We think chair Powell will remain balanced, acknowledging both upside risks to inflation and the projections for rate cuts later this year,' Morgan Stanley analysts said. Attention will focus on any dissent in the ranks of the Federal Open Market Committee, where Governors Michelle Bowman and Christopher Waller may back a rate cut. Meanwhile, Chinese and US delegations met for their second day of trade negotiations in Stockholm, with both sides said to be aiming to extend a truce due to end in two weeks' time. Neither side has so far made public any information about what has gone on in the talks, which started on Monday. Joshua Mahony at Rostro said: 'There is an expectation that an extension to the tariff deadline with China will open a pathway for Xi Jinping and Donald Trump to meet in person, heightening hopes for an impending trade deal between the world's two largest economies.' The pound eased to 1.3337 dollars late on Tuesday afternoon in London, compared to 1.3403 dollars at the equities close on Monday. The euro traded at 1.1537 dollars, lower against 1.1620 dollars. Against the yen, the dollar was trading slightly lower at 148.38 yen compared to 148.45 yen. The yield on the US 10-year Treasury was at 4.35%, trimmed from 4.42%. The yield on the US 30-year Treasury was at 4.88% narrowed from 4.96%. On Wall Street, Merck was another drugs maker in the news with shares down 4.8% as it announced plans to save 3 billion dollars annually by the end of 2027, and tightened full-year guidance, as second quarter sales fell short of expectations. The Rahway, New Jersey-based pharmaceutical company said GAAP net income fell 19% to 4.43 billion dollars in the second quarter of 2025 from 5.46 billion dollars a year prior. Sales decreased 1.9% to 15.81 billion dollars from 16.11 billion dollars a year ago, missing LSEG consensus of 15.89 billion dollars. Sales of human papillomavirus drug, Gardasil, slumped 55% to 1.13 billion dollars due to lower demand in China. Brent oil was quoted higher at 70.74 dollars a barrel in London on Tuesday, up from 69.65 dollars late on Monday. Gold rose to 3,327.45 dollars an ounce against 3,314.26 dollars. The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were Games Workshop, up 830p at 16,090p; AstraZeneca, up 368p at 11,158p; Endeavour Mining, up 66p at 2,332p; Barclays, up 10p at 371.2p; and Rolls-Royce, up 24.6p at 1,006p. The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were Croda International, down 301p at 2,598p; Rentokil Initial, down 12.9p at 348.1p; Glencore, down 10.8p at 305.9p; Unite Group, down 21.5p at 764.5p; and Whitbread, down 86p at 3,108p. Wednesday's local corporate calendar has half-year results from defence manufacturer BAE Systems, Asia-focused lender HSBC, pharmaceuticals firm GSK, miners Rio Tinto and Glencore and housebuilder Taylor Wimpey. The global economic calendar on Wednesday sees interest rate decisions in the US and Canada, and US economic growth figures.


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
Oil tycoon Shvidler loses appeal over UK's Russian sanctions
LONDON, July 29 (Reuters) - Billionaire oil tycoon Eugene Shvidler on Tuesday lost his appeal against British sanctions imposed on him over Moscow's invasion of Ukraine at the UK's Supreme Court, a ruling lawyers said makes it difficult for similar challenges to succeed. Russian-born Shvidler, who is a British and U.S. citizen, was sanctioned over his association with former Chelsea Football Club owner Roman Abramovich, plus his former position as a director of London-listed Russian steel producer Evraz (EVRE.L), opens new tab. Shvidler – whose net worth is estimated by Forbes magazine at $1.6 billion – appealed to the Supreme Court, with his lawyers arguing that others with greater involvement in business of importance to Russia were not sanctioned, citing BP's (BP.L), opens new tab previous joint venture with Rosneft ( opens new tab. The Supreme Court rejected Shvidler's appeal by a four-to-one majority in a ruling that Shvidler said "brings me back to the USSR". The ruling also maintains Britain's 100% record of defending its Russian sanctions in court. Shvidler said in a statement that no British companies or business people with ties to Russian state-owned companies have been sanctioned, adding that Britain's sanctions were "more about cheap virtue-signalling for purely political purposes". "There may be little public sympathy for me, as a wealthy US/UK businessman, but this judgment applies to all who face state power," he added. Britain's Foreign Office, which has overseen the sanctioning of more than 1,700 individuals or entities since Russia's invasion, welcomed the ruling "and the message it sends about the strength of the UK sanctions regime". Shvidler had said British sanctions have destroyed his business and disrupted his and his family's lives. His lawyers previously said he has no involvement in or influence over Russian politics and had not even been to Russia since attending the late Russian President Boris Yeltsin's funeral in 2007. But the majority of the Supreme Court ruled that the sanctions struck a fair balance between Shvidler's rights and the aims of the sanctions regime. In the majority's judgment, Judges Philip Sales and Vivien Rose said sanctioning Shvidler "sends a clear signal to people in Mr Shvidler's position that they would be wise to distance themselves from Russian business now". But Judge George Leggatt, in a strident dissenting ruling, said Britain's "flimsy reasons" for sanctioning Shvidler did not justify the "serious invasion of liberty" sanctions entailed. He noted BP's profitable joint venture with Rosneft, having two members on its board, and said it was irrational to only sanction Shvidler if "sanctioning an individual for working as a director of a company which had invested in the Russian extractives sector was thought likely to contribute to achieving the purposes" of British sanctions. BP declined to comment. Maia Cohen-Lask, a partner at Corker Binning, said the Supreme Court's ruling was "a huge blow not just for Mr Shvidler but for any person who has been sanctioned despite their lack of any links to the Putin regime". The Supreme Court also dismissed a separate appeal brought by Russian businessman Sergei Naumenko, whose 44 million euro ($51 million) superyacht was detained in London.


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Consortium 'ready' to buy ailing Morecambe
London-based sports investment company Panjab Warriors have released a statement to say they are "ready, willing and able" to buy Shrimps were suspended by the National League until 20 August on Monday over failing to comply with the league's Warriors have been in talks with the club's owner Jason Whittingham for over a year and a deal had looked set to be concluded earlier this have now said in a joint-statement with minority shareholders, the Shrimps Trust and Lizzi Collinge MP that the National League is ready to sanction the deal and "immediately lift the suspension and embargo should it be agreed". As it stands, Morecambe's fixture away to Boston United on 9 August, their first home game against Brackley Town on 16 August, and the trip to Scunthorpe United on 19 August, will no longer take place as who has been looking to sell the club since 2022, announced a new buyer, named as a consortium led by Jonny Cato, had been found earlier in July, but it remains unclear where that bid also said on Sunday he had "not heard from" Panjab Warriors in the past week and talks with Cato were Lancashire side, who were promoted to League One in 2021, were relegated from League Two last season - their second relegation in the past three seasons.