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The Invisible Pay Cut: Commuting Costs U.S. Workers Over $8,000 a Year in Lost Time, New Analysis Finds
PR Newswire
Tue, February 10, 2026 at 9:26 PM GMT+9 5 min read
A MyPerfectResume study reveals how return-to-office mandates are quietly eroding the value of workers’ time and identifies which of the 50 largest U.S. metros face the highest time-value cost of commuting.
GUAYNABO, Puerto Rico, Feb. 10, 2026 /PRNewswire/ – A new analysis from MyPerfectResume®, a premium resume-building service, reveals that American workers lose an average of 223 hours each year to their commute, equivalent to nearly six unpaid 40-hour workweeks. When the value of that time is translated into dollars using federal wage data, the “invisible pay cut” totals $8,158 annually for the average U.S. worker.
The report, The Invisible Pay Cut, reframes commuting as part of the total work experience and highlights the significant, often overlooked burden reintroduced by widespread return-to-office mandates. The report ranks all 50 of the nation’s largest metropolitan areas to determine which cities face the highest dollar equivalent of their daily commute.
Key Findings
**223 hours**: The average U.S. worker spends this much time commuting each year, nearly six unpaid 40-hour workweeks.
**$8,158**: The time value of that commute, based on the national average hourly wage ($36.53).
**Top Invisible Pay Cuts: **Workers in San Jose, San Francisco, and New York lose the most time value, each exceeding $12,000 annually.
**Longest commute:** New York City has an average one-way commute of 36 minutes, corresponding to about 300 hours per year in transit.
**Lowest costs:** Smaller metros, such as Grand Rapids, Memphis, and Oklahoma City, average around $5,000 per year, but often lack efficient transit options.
“While commuting isn’t a literal pay cut, it represents a real loss of time that could be spent working, resting, or living,” said Jasmine Escalera, Career Expert at MyPerfectResume. “By quantifying commute time in terms of value, we expose how returning to the office reshapes the economics of work for millions of people.”
Top 10 Metros with the Highest Invisible Pay Cuts
The metros listed below experience the steepest “time tax,” in which long commutes, combined with higher local wages, result in the largest annual time-value losses for workers.
**San Jose–Sunnyvale–Santa Clara, CA
** • Annual Commute Hours: 227.5
• Mean Hourly Wage: $58.25
• Time-Value Cost: **$13,252**
**San Francisco–Oakland–Fremont, CA
** • Annual Commute Hours: 265.0
• Mean Hourly Wage: $48.15
• Time-Value Cost: **$12,760**
**New York–Newark–Jersey City, NY–NJ
** • Annual Commute Hours: 300.0
• Mean Hourly Wage: $40.65
• Time-Value Cost: **$12,195**
**Atlanta–Sandy Springs–Roswell, GA
** • Annual Commute Hours: 260.0
• Mean Hourly Wage: $33.73
• Time-Value Cost: **$8,770**
繼續閱讀
Why the Invisible Pay Cut Matters
The analysis shows how commuting shapes the true nature of compensation and work-life balance in 2026:
**It reframes time as part of compensation. **Commuting expands the unpaid portion of the workday, reducing the practical value of take-home pay.
**It exposes the hidden cost of return-to-office mandates. **Millions who went remote during the pandemic experienced firsthand how much time they reclaimed. Returning to mandatory commuting can feel like a loss of autonomy and balance.
**It highlights regional inequities. **In high-wage metros, long commutes translate into enormous time-value losses. In other cases, lower wages and limited transportation options still impose a substantial "time tax."
Ultimately, the invisible pay cut reinforces a long-standing truth: time is money, and where we work determines how much of both we lose.
Full Rankings: All 50 Metros by Time-Value Cost
The report includes a ranking of all 50 major U.S. metro areas based on commute duration and local wages. The full table is available in the complete report. To view the full analysis and detailed metro rankings, visit:
For press inquiries, please contact Nathan Barber, Public Relations Specialist, at nathan.barber@bold.com.
Methodology
This analysis uses a time-value approach to estimate the economic cost of commuting. The calculation multiplies each metro area’s annual commuting hours by its average hourly wage to illustrate the opportunity cost of time spent traveling to and from work.
Data sources include:
**U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey (ACS), Table S0801:** mean one-way commute time to work.
**U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS), May 2024:** mean hourly wage for all occupations.
Commute times represent round-trip daily travel across 250 assumed workdays per year. The analysis ranks the 50 largest U.S. metro areas by annual time-value cost.
This framework quantifies lost time but does not capture actual lost wages or out-of-pocket expenses, such as fuel, parking, or transit fares. Hybrid schedules, remote work, and individual commute nuances may vary.
About MyPerfectResume
MyPerfectResume Resume Builder with professional templates is designed to help job seekers elevate their careers. The easy-to-use platform was created to eliminate the hassle of resume writing, offering professionally written examples, free expert tips, step-by-step guidance to make a resume, and valuable interview advice to create an outstanding job application effortlessly. Since 2012, MyPerfectResume’s Resume Builder has helped more than 11 million job seekers create their perfect resumes online. Its comprehensive employment surveys have been featured in Forbes, Yahoo! Finance, CNBC, Newsweek, USA Today, BBC, Workable, and more. Stay connected with MyPerfectResume’s latest Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, X, and Pinterest updates.
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The Invisible Pay Cut: Commuting Costs U.S. Workers Over $8,000 a Year in Lost Time, New Analysis Finds
This is a paid press release. Contact the press release distributor directly with any inquiries.
The Invisible Pay Cut: Commuting Costs U.S. Workers Over $8,000 a Year in Lost Time, New Analysis Finds
PR Newswire
Tue, February 10, 2026 at 9:26 PM GMT+9 5 min read
A MyPerfectResume study reveals how return-to-office mandates are quietly eroding the value of workers’ time and identifies which of the 50 largest U.S. metros face the highest time-value cost of commuting.
GUAYNABO, Puerto Rico, Feb. 10, 2026 /PRNewswire/ – A new analysis from MyPerfectResume®, a premium resume-building service, reveals that American workers lose an average of 223 hours each year to their commute, equivalent to nearly six unpaid 40-hour workweeks. When the value of that time is translated into dollars using federal wage data, the “invisible pay cut” totals $8,158 annually for the average U.S. worker.
The report, The Invisible Pay Cut, reframes commuting as part of the total work experience and highlights the significant, often overlooked burden reintroduced by widespread return-to-office mandates. The report ranks all 50 of the nation’s largest metropolitan areas to determine which cities face the highest dollar equivalent of their daily commute.
Key Findings
“While commuting isn’t a literal pay cut, it represents a real loss of time that could be spent working, resting, or living,” said Jasmine Escalera, Career Expert at MyPerfectResume. “By quantifying commute time in terms of value, we expose how returning to the office reshapes the economics of work for millions of people.”
Top 10 Metros with the Highest Invisible Pay Cuts
The metros listed below experience the steepest “time tax,” in which long commutes, combined with higher local wages, result in the largest annual time-value losses for workers.
Why the Invisible Pay Cut Matters
The analysis shows how commuting shapes the true nature of compensation and work-life balance in 2026:
Ultimately, the invisible pay cut reinforces a long-standing truth: time is money, and where we work determines how much of both we lose.
Full Rankings: All 50 Metros by Time-Value Cost
The report includes a ranking of all 50 major U.S. metro areas based on commute duration and local wages. The full table is available in the complete report. To view the full analysis and detailed metro rankings, visit:
For press inquiries, please contact Nathan Barber, Public Relations Specialist, at nathan.barber@bold.com.
Methodology
This analysis uses a time-value approach to estimate the economic cost of commuting. The calculation multiplies each metro area’s annual commuting hours by its average hourly wage to illustrate the opportunity cost of time spent traveling to and from work.
Data sources include:
Commute times represent round-trip daily travel across 250 assumed workdays per year. The analysis ranks the 50 largest U.S. metro areas by annual time-value cost.
This framework quantifies lost time but does not capture actual lost wages or out-of-pocket expenses, such as fuel, parking, or transit fares. Hybrid schedules, remote work, and individual commute nuances may vary.
About MyPerfectResume
MyPerfectResume Resume Builder with professional templates is designed to help job seekers elevate their careers. The easy-to-use platform was created to eliminate the hassle of resume writing, offering professionally written examples, free expert tips, step-by-step guidance to make a resume, and valuable interview advice to create an outstanding job application effortlessly. Since 2012, MyPerfectResume’s Resume Builder has helped more than 11 million job seekers create their perfect resumes online. Its comprehensive employment surveys have been featured in Forbes, Yahoo! Finance, CNBC, Newsweek, USA Today, BBC, Workable, and more. Stay connected with MyPerfectResume’s latest Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, X, and Pinterest updates.
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