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Take this example.

Does it mean they'll let one work from anywhere they want?

Or, looked at from the other side, what inputs do company provide when creating these job entries in order to show "No office location" and "Remote"?

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Apparently not. Always read the full description:

...this role could either be based working from home, with a requirement for travel to our sites or based within our offices in Chippenham or Oakdale depending upon your preference.

I've also seen companies that will only hire from within their county even though the role is completely remote, without an office location. (Not sure why exactly, maybe because it's easier when everyone's working under the same laws.) See also: Stack Overflow Jobs - Remote but "Country X only please"

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    I expect it's just a hassle to pay wages out of the country. Unless you're paying a bill, but then it's not an employee, it's a contractor.
    – Scratte
    Oct 4, 2021 at 23:19
  • Different labor laws, different privacy laws, different regulations, different tax obligations, etc. There's a recent letter to Ask A Manager where a manager would have to pay $20K a year to incorporate in order to let their employees work outside of a headquarter city. There are companies that won't let you work remotely from Colorado because that state requires job postings to include salary info.
    – BSMP
    Oct 5, 2021 at 16:55
  • Laurel, even the part you quoted doesn't say anything about where the home is allowed to be, though.
    – Enlico
    Oct 9, 2021 at 5:44

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