How Much Do You Save Working Remotely — Real Numbers

A data-driven look at how much money Polish remote workers actually save compared to office commuters, with real cost breakdowns.

4 min czytania

Remote Work Saves Money — But How Much Exactly?

Everyone says working from home saves money. Fewer people can tell you exactly how much. The answer for Polish remote workers is surprisingly large when you add up all the small daily expenses that disappear — and account for the few new costs that appear.

Let us break it down with real numbers from Polish cities in 2026.

Commuting Costs — The Biggest Win

For someone commuting by car in Warsaw, the monthly cost breakdown looks like this:

  • Fuel: 40 km round trip × 22 working days × 0.40 PLN/km = approximately 350 PLN
  • Parking: 300–600 PLN in the city centre, less in outer districts
  • Car wear and depreciation: estimated 200–400 PLN per month in additional maintenance
  • Total by car: 850–1,350 PLN per month

Public transport is cheaper but still adds up:

  • Monthly ZTM pass in Warsaw: 110 PLN (standard) or 56 PLN (reduced)
  • For Kraków, Wrocław, Poznań: 80–110 PLN for a monthly pass
  • Total by public transport: 80–110 PLN per month

Car commuters save 10,000–16,000 PLN per year by switching to remote work. Public transport commuters save 1,000–1,300 PLN — less dramatic, but still meaningful.

Food and Coffee — The Daily Drain

Office workers in Poland spend significantly more on food during work hours than remote workers:

  • Lunch out: 25–40 PLN per meal in major cities. Over 22 days, that is 550–880 PLN per month.
  • Coffee: 12–18 PLN for a café latte. Daily habit = 260–400 PLN per month.
  • Snacks and drinks: another 100–200 PLN per month for many workers.
  • Total office food spending: 900–1,480 PLN per month

At home, the same meals cost a fraction:

  • Home-cooked lunch: 8–15 PLN in ingredients
  • Coffee from a home machine: 1–3 PLN per cup
  • Total home food spending: 200–400 PLN per month

Monthly savings on food: 500–1,080 PLN. Annually, that is 6,000–13,000 PLN.

Clothing and Appearance

This one surprises people. Office dress codes — even casual ones — drive spending:

  • Work wardrobe refreshes: 200–500 PLN per month averaged over the year
  • Dry cleaning: 50–150 PLN per month for business attire
  • Grooming (more frequent haircuts, etc.): an additional 50–100 PLN

Remote workers report spending 50–70% less on clothing annually. For a mid-career professional, that is 2,000–4,000 PLN per year.

The Costs That Increase at Home

Working from home is not free. Some expenses go up:

  • Electricity: running a computer, monitor, and lights for 8+ hours adds 50–100 PLN per month
  • Heating: being home all day in a Polish winter increases gas or district heating bills by 100–200 PLN per month during October–March
  • Internet: you may upgrade your plan — an extra 20–40 PLN per month
  • Coffee and tea supplies: 50–80 PLN per month if you drink a lot
  • Home office equipment (amortised): desk, chair, monitor — roughly 100–200 PLN per month if spread over three years

Total increased home costs: 320–620 PLN per month, or 3,800–7,400 PLN per year.

The Net Savings — Adding It All Up

For a car commuter in a major Polish city:

Category Annual Savings
Commuting 10,000–16,000 PLN
Food and coffee 6,000–13,000 PLN
Clothing 2,000–4,000 PLN
Minus: increased home costs −3,800 to −7,400 PLN
Net annual savings 14,200–25,600 PLN

For a public transport commuter:

Category Annual Savings
Commuting 1,000–1,300 PLN
Food and coffee 6,000–13,000 PLN
Clothing 2,000–4,000 PLN
Minus: increased home costs −3,800 to −7,400 PLN
Net annual savings 5,200–10,900 PLN

Even in the most conservative scenario, a remote worker in Poland saves over 5,000 PLN per year. For car commuters, the savings approach or exceed 20,000 PLN — equivalent to one or two extra monthly salaries.

What to Do With the Savings

The worst thing you can do with these savings is let them disappear into lifestyle inflation. The best thing is to redirect them deliberately: into an emergency fund, investments, or accelerating your path to financial independence.

Freenance helps you visualise exactly how these savings extend your financial freedom runway — turning abstract monthly numbers into a concrete timeline of independence.

Time Savings — The Unquantified Bonus

Beyond money, the average Polish commuter spends 50–70 minutes per day travelling to and from work. Over a year, that is 200–280 hours — the equivalent of five to seven full work weeks. That time can go toward side projects, family, exercise, or simply better rest.

The Bottom Line

Remote work in Poland saves between 5,000 and 25,000 PLN per year depending on your commuting method and spending habits. The savings are real, measurable, and large enough to meaningfully impact your financial trajectory. The key is to notice them and put them to work.

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