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Successreturn to office

Returning to the office is costing you $51 per day, study finds

By
Chris Morris
Chris Morris
and
Jane Thier
Jane Thier
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By
Chris Morris
Chris Morris
and
Jane Thier
Jane Thier
Down Arrow Button Icon
October 11, 2023, 1:26 PM ET
Returning to the office carries additional expenses.
Returning to the office carries additional expenses. Getty Images

Returning to the office won’t just cost you more time. It could add another $51 (or more) per day to your expenses, according to a new survey.

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The annual State of Work report from videoconferencing company Owl Labs, first provided to Fortune, finds the average spend of returning workers is $51 per day when they work in person. And workers with pets, the company says, average $71 per day in spending.

The total, says Owl Labs, breaks down as follows:

$16 – Lunch

$14 – Commuting costs

$13 – Breakfast/coffee

$8 – Parking

($20 – pet care)

Employees who work a hybrid schedule, the company says, spend just $36 per day.

Last year’s Owl Labs data looked mostly identical—hybrid workers spent the same additional amount, $51, on in-person days in 2022, showing that a full year of new norms have done little to make an office return more convincing for most workers. “Companies that want to bring workers back to the office this fall might try providing a stipend, free lunch, or pre-tax commuter benefits to help offset these in-office costs,” Frank Weishaupt, Owl Labs’ CEO, told Fortunelast year.

The new data can be shocking, but it might not be a bad idea to take these numbers with a grain of salt. Owl Labs, given its focus, has a likely bias towards workers embracing the hybrid or telecommuting lifestyle. Workers can save a considerable amount off those totals by bringing lunch from home or bypassing Starbucks on the way to work. And many office workers do not have to pay to park at work.

Still, the survey does underscore the additional costs of returning to the office in a time where the economy is uncertain and fears of a recession loom. The survey of 2,000 workers found that 94% of workers are willing to come back to the office if their bosses shore up the financial difference. They’d mainly expect support covering commuting costs and subsidized meals, snacks, and coffee—all of which, clearly, adds up fast.

While return-to-office mandates have been announced by several companies, worker compliance has been mixed. And a growing number of U.S. executives believe remote work and hybrid options will continue to grow over the next five years, according to a separate study from researchers at Stanford University.

That study found executives expect 72.6% of full-time employees will be fully in-person/on-site in 2028, compared to nearly 92% in 2018.

Fortune Brainstorm AI returns to San Francisco Dec. 8–9 to convene the smartest people we know—technologists, entrepreneurs, Fortune Global 500 executives, investors, policymakers, and the brilliant minds in between—to explore and interrogate the most pressing questions about AI at another pivotal moment. Register here.
About the Authors
By Chris MorrisFormer Contributing Writer

Chris Morris is a former contributing writer at Fortune, covering everything from general business news to the video game and theme park industries.

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By Jane Thier
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