Skip Navigation

Employees are spending the equivalent of a month's grocery bill on the return to the office–and growing more resentful than ever, new survey finds

fortune.com Employees are spending the equivalent of a month's grocery bill on the return to the office–and growing more resentful than ever, new survey finds

The average employee returning to the office spends $561 per month–that's the average two-person household’s grocery bill in the U.S. for the entire month.

Employees are spending the equivalent of a month's grocery bill on the return to the office–and growing more resentful than ever, new survey finds
144

You're viewing a single thread.

144 comments
  • When I was going to the office, parking downtown was $21 a day.

    So $105 a week just to park to go to work.

    Now, I COULD have taken a bus/train for $5.60 a day... But that would mean adding an extra hour to my commute in the morning and an extra hour and a half at night.

    $21 - $5.60 = Saving $15.40 a day, but losing 2.5 hours.

    My time is worth more than $6.16 an hour.

    WFH I save ALL $21, plus gas money, plus not eating out for lunch or dinner.

    After doing that for 3 years, I had $30,000 in the bank and bought a house.

    • Same here brother. I went from almost a decade of 1.5 hour or more commutes to feeling healthier and happier than I had ever been. It was sad when we were kicked out of our apartment at the end of 2021, but we moved in with my parents temporarily and ended up buying a house in the spring using all the money we saved as a down payment. Thinking back, we saved far more than we had ever anticipated without even trying. We saved on gas, train fare, car maintenance, a dog walker, coffee or eating lunch at work. And then we also saved on just not going anywhere due to the pandemic like not vacationing or going out with friends. Even with all that, we definitely spent more money at the time on delivery orders, alcohol, and investing in home entertainment. But we still saved a shit ton and I wish every day that we could all just work from home if possible. Even aside from all the savings, think of how much less wasteful people were and how much less pollution we put into the air. Think of the extra sleep and the time spent with family instead of commuting. Having kids seemed so much more possible for the future working from home. But naw you gotta have that in-person interaction there isn't any other way except over the last 2-3 years but just forget that ever happened.

    • Demand better of your trasit system. they can do it but if people don't demand it they won't. Don't forget the proplem is often those elected not the tranit agency

    • There are other benefits aside from money that you enjoy when riding a train/bus compared to driving.

      Buses/trains have drivers themselves, so you don't have to engage with traffic to and from work - and during rush hour when the most people are on the road during the day.

      Then, when you ride a bus/train, you lower the impacts and demands on the natural world, like reducing GHG potential per capital, reducing the vehicle waste from oil leaks, tire dust, smog, etc. per capita, and reducing the fuel demand per capita needed to get you where you need to go.

      Downside with public transit is that people don't like to be around other people in that kind of setting (for reasons like increased social contact for illness transmission, people might smell bad, might be loud, might pose a threat to others, etc.).

      This being said, remote work is a wonderful alternative to even public transit. Agree with you there for jobs that don't need to commute. Some jobs still do, and public transit would be my next best choice. Still, some jobs need to travel more than a fixed route, so hybrids or EVs would be better than ICE cars for that. Etc etc

You've viewed 144 comments.