Anonymous wrote:Absolutely- 100%
Working from home allowed us to only pay for after school care instead of before and aftercare. We save on gas and parking, but also on food because we eat dinner leftovers instead of restaurant food or convenience items like pre-made salads. We need babysitters less often on weeknights because one of can get the kids while the other has an event. When my spouse had a commute like yours he was never home before 7pm and the kids need to be picked up by 6pm.
It’s so much easier to deal with home maintenance and Dr appointments when you can do it over lunch instead of taking a half-day of PTO.
I’ll add that while it’s not an immediate cash flow benefit, there are little things that have value. We have more time to exercise which presumably makes us better engaged mentally during the day and lowers future medical bills. We eat more homemade meals and less takeout which is healthier. We walk our kids to school instead of driving them. We’re able to be more engaged in our kids’ school and activities, which strengthens our community ties. My husband planted an herb garden that he weeds at lunch time now that he works from home 3 days a week. We don’t look at our bank account and think “wow! What a difference” but the things we have gained by working from home or having a short commute (my office when I do go in is a 7 min drive) are things we can’t buy with money.