Already a Future Women? Sign in Culture Working Two Jobs: Why Women Are Still Bearing The Brunt Of Unpaid Work Australian women shoulder around three quarters of unpaid domestic work. Now, let's put a dollar value on that. By Cassandra Scott Published 31 January, 2026 Culture Working Two Jobs: Why Women Are Still Bearing The Brunt Of Unpaid Work Australian women shoulder around three quarters of unpaid domestic work. Now, let's put a dollar value on that. By Cassandra Scott Published 31 January, 2026 Previous article He Named Her Malala Next article Claire Kimball: ‘Work hard. There’s no replacement for hard work’. It’s considered the “most wonderful time of the year”, but for many women, the Christmas period is the biggest harbinger of stress and tears. From gift buying, to house cleaning, to managing delicate family relations, to preparing the Christmas meal, women bear the brunt of the unpaid workload during the holiday season.But it’s not just Christmas causing women to bear the majority of domestic chores. Unpaid women’s work is a year-round issue. According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, the average Australian woman spends up to 14 hours a week on domestic work, compared to less than five hours a week for men. This leaves Australian women accounting for almost three quarters of all unpaid work. If we assume the average hourly wage is $30, this is the equivalent of women missing out on up to $425 a week for the time they’re spending grocery shopping and cleaning the house. Join the club Already a member? Sign in Culture 30% of women go into prison homeless. 50% are homeless when they leave. By Sally Spicer Career Giaan Rooney didn’t stay in her lane By Melanie Dimmitt Culture Child psychologist warns parents and experts are avoiding this one DV question – at a cost By Sally Spicer Culture 5 moments that prove women won the Winter Olympics By Jesse Kitzler Career She didn’t pivot. She survived. Then she built an empire. By Melanie Dimmitt The Latest 3 Australian Women On Marriage Equality By FW Leadership 5 career lessons from the Australian Open By Odessa Blain Family The weirdest part of my pregnancy has nothing to do with me By Sally Spicer Your inbox just got smarter If you’re not a member, sign up to our newsletter to get the best of Future Women in your inbox.