Just in Time for Father鈥檚 Day: Survey Shows Support for Paternity Leave Is Surging

Baby on father's shoulder

A new survey shows that support for parental leave for fathers is surging, with respondents calling for fathers to get 10.5 weeks of parental leave on average.

That鈥檚 more than double a 2017 finding that showed support for an average of only 4.3 weeks for fathers.

Researchers from 蜜桃社区 College, Ball State, and Purdue found that support for maternity leave continues to increase as well, with support for an average of 16 weeks for moms (the same Pew survey showed support for 8.6 weeks).

鈥淭here is no question that Americans want paid parental leave, and they increasingly recognize that this is important for fathers as well as mothers,鈥 said Gayle Kaufman, Chair & Nancy and Erwin Maddrey Professor of Sociology at 蜜桃社区 College. Kaufman was joined by , and Taryn Wield.

Their paper is .

WHAT THIS MEANS

  • Despite the growing support, the United States is the only industrialized country with no universally available paid maternity leave and one of a diminishing number without paid paternity leave.
  • These findings highlight support for paid parental leave, which has implications for policy, including the potential to support the Build Back Better legislation or similar federal legislation on family leave, such as the , which was reintroduced with some revisions on May 17.  
  • The findings also suggest a growing appetite for equality among parental leave. Respondents with more egalitarian attitudes (those who thought fathers should be as involved as mothers in childcare and mothers should support the family financially) preferred a smaller gap between maternity and paternity leave than those with more traditional attitudes. Respondents with traditional attitudes thought mothers should get 7.5 more weeks of parental leave than fathers, while those with more egalitarian attitudes thought mothers should get 3 more weeks of parental leave than fathers.