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Latvia Hit Shortage Of Men :- Women resort to Booking ‘Hourly Husbands’

 

When life gives you lemons, Latvia makes… hourly husbands.

Yes, you heard that right. The country is facing such a serious shortage of men that a whole new industry has been born — rent-a-husband services, where women simply book a man for an hour to fix things around the house. No romance, no lobola, just tools and invoices.

Why is this happening?

Latvia has 15.5% more women than men, one of the largest gender gaps in Europe. Men there don’t live as long — mostly due to health issues linked to drinking, smoking, and other lifestyle risks. So the older the population gets, the fewer men remain, and the more the gender gap widens.

In short: eligible men are scarce, and those that remain are either taken, uninterested, or simply not volunteering to climb ladders and fix leaky sinks.

Enter the “Hourly Husband”

Companies like Komanda24 and Remontdarbi.lv are now offering “rent-a-husband” services. The concept is simple:

  • You pay per hour
  • A man shows up at your house
  • He fixes whatever needs fixing
  • He leaves — no arguments, no emotional baggage, no asking “what’s for dinner?”

Their marketing is even funnier: one company calls their workers “Men with Golden Hands.” Not for romance — for drilling, hammering, wiring, plumbing, and every household headache women are tired of trying to do alone.

It’s not about relationships — it’s about survival

This isn’t some dating trend. This is gig-economy meets gender imbalance. Latvia’s women simply need things done in the house, and the men available are too few to meet demand, so the private sector stepped in.

It also shows how traditional “husband duties” have now become bookable services — just like ordering a taxi or food delivery.

What does this teach the rest of us?

  • Societies change when demographics change.
  • Gender roles are no longer guaranteed — they are becoming services, not obligations.
  • And if the gender ratio keeps shifting globally, we might see more of these industries pop up elsewhere.

Who knows — one day in Africa, instead of saying “my husband will fix it”, people might start saying:

“Let me book a husband real quick.”