%0 Report %A Binder, Ariel J. %T Gender Convergence in Couples' Time Use Following the COVID-19 Pandemic %D 2026 %8 2026 May %I Institute of Labor Economics (IZA) %C Bonn %7 IZA Discussion Paper %N 18657 %U https://www.iza.org/index.php/publications/dp18657 %X This paper uses American Time Use Survey data to show that prime-age men's and women's average weekly work hours followed parallel trends from 2011-19, but then abruptly converged in the years following the COVID-19 pandemic. This convergence was driven by the changing behavior of couples, for whom the gender gap in weekly hours of paid work closed by 4.3 on a base of 14.7 (29.3%). While historical gender convergence has been driven by wives, husbands accounted for three-quarters (all) of the recent convergence in paid work (unpaid housework). I find that two labor market factors associated with the pandemic - sectoral reallocation and remote work-exposure - explain little of observed time-use changes in samples of husbands and fathers, although they explain 44% of the shrinking college-noncollege gap in paid work observed among fathers. These results suggest an ongoing shift in labor supply factors associated with fatherhood that may be stronger among the college-educated. %K time use %K employment %K labor supply %K housework %K remote work %K leisure %K fatherhood %K gender norms %K COVID-19