By: Becky Little

Presidents Working From Home—in Photos

Working from home is standard when you’re president.

Eric Draper/White House/Getty Images

Published: May 27, 2020

Last Updated: January 27, 2025

One of the benefits of being a U.S. president is you get to work from home. Ever since John Adams moved into the White House in 1800, every subsequent president has gotten the chance to live in his official workplace in Washington, D.C.

Like many other Americans who work from home, this means presidents have gotten the opportunity to spend more time with their families. In recent history, President Barack Obama praised this set-up for helping him balance work and family life as commander-in-chief.

“[P]erhaps the greatest unexpected gift of this job has been living above the store,” he wrote in a 2016 essay for Glamour. “For many years my life was consumed by long commutes­… But for the past seven and a half years, that commute has been reduced to 45 seconds—the time it takes to walk from my living room to the Oval Office. As a result, I’ve been able to spend a lot more time watching my daughters grow up into smart, funny, kind, wonderful young women.”

Photographers have captured cute photos of presidential kids playing in the Oval Office, and also documented social events with presidential children. Richard Nixon’s daughter Tricia married Ed Cox at the White House during her father’s presidency. Gerald Ford also arranged for his daughter Susan’s senior prom to take place at the White House.

Because presidents take their work with them wherever they go, photographers have also captured presidents working at their private residences in their home states. In these settings, presidents have often worn more casual wear, as when President George W. Bush wore jeans during his first meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin at his ranch in Crawford, Texas. There have also been candid images of commanders-in-chief working in their robes and pajamas, either at the White House or elsewhere.

Click through the gallery below to see photos of presidents working from home over the decades, plus one painting of George Washington working from his home in Mount Vernon, Virginia. (He is the only president who never lived in the White House, as it wasn’t built yet.)

President Ronald Reagan, clad in pajamas and bathrobe at the White House, talking on telephone to Robert McFarlane and Secretary of State George Shultz, regarding urgent request from five members of Eastern Carribbean States on a situation in Grenada, 1983.

Bill Fitzpatrick/White House/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

President Gerald Ford eating breakfast he fixed for himself in the small kitchen of the living quarters in the White House while going over papers.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

President Bill Clinton sitting at his desk, on the phone with Russian President Boris Yeltsin, as Buddy the dog rests his head on his shoulder on April 4, 1998.

Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images

President John F. Kennedy meets with advisors in the Oval Office, while his son, John Jr. plays under the desk on October 14, 1963.

Corbis/Getty Image

President Barack Obama’s daughter Sasha hides behind the sofa as she sneaks up on him at the end of the day in the Oval Office, on August 5, 2009.

Pete Souza/The White House/Getty Images

President Reagan and his wife Nancy sitting in arm chairs in the Presidential Study of the White House as they eat from tray tables in November 1981.

Micahel Evans/White House/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images

President George W. Bush and Russian President Vladimir Putin begin their first meeting inside a guest room of the Bush Ranch in Crawford, Texas on November 14, 2001.

Eric Draper/White House/Getty Images

President Franklin D. Roosevelt speaks during a radio broadcast from his Hyde Park, New York home on November 4, 1938.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Upon arriving in Japan in November 1974, President Ford holds a meeting in Tokyo’s Akasaka Palace State Guest House with his staff on November 19, 1974.

David Hume Kennerly/Getty Images

George Washington is the only U.S. president to have never occupied the White House. The Washingtons occupied a series of grand houses in New York and Philadelphia. Leading up to his inauguration in 1789, Washington often operated from his estate in Mount Vernon, Virginia. Washington and Marquis de Lafayette are depicted during a meeting at Mount Vernon, 1784.

Heritage Images/Getty Images

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About the author

Becky Little

Becky Little is a journalist based in Washington, D.C.

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Citation Information

Article title
Presidents Working From Home—in Photos
Website Name
History
Date Accessed
March 21, 2025
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
January 27, 2025
Original Published Date
May 27, 2020

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