PayMetric Labs
2026/27 Tax RatesIncludes time cost

Lead Software Engineer: Remote vs Hybrid in UK

A Lead Software Engineer on £63K hybrid in UK needs to earn at least £49,000 remotely to break even (after tax, travel, meals, wardrobe, and the value of commuting time).

Lead Software Engineer hybrid vs remote break-even at £63K

Assumptions: £15/day transport, 60 min round trip, £5 daily meal premium, £500/yr wardrobe. 2026/27 Income Tax and National Insurance.

Office daysTrue netCommute impactBreak-even remote
1 day/wk

£43,997

/year

£3,100

costs + time

£57,700

remote gross

2 days/wk

£41,397

/year

£5,700

costs + time

£53,200

remote gross

3 days/wktypical

£38,797

/year

£8,300

costs + time

£49,000

remote gross

4 days/wk

£36,197

/year

£10,900

costs + time

£45,400

remote gross

5 days/wk

£33,597

/year

£13,500

costs + time

£41,800

remote gross

Net salary without commute: £47,097/yr (£3,925/month) after Income Tax and National Insurance.

Adjust for your actual offer

The table above uses the Lead Software Engineer median. Enter the exact salaries you are comparing to get a precise answer.

Compare two roles

Role A: Hybrid / In-Office

£
3 days

Role B: Fully Remote

£
No commute costszero commute deductions

Commute costs (for Role A)

£

Train, Leap/Oyster cap, fuel, parking

min
£

Buying lunch vs. eating at home

£

Professional clothing, alterations, dry-cleaning

Role B (Remote) leaves you £2/yr better off

Role A's salary advantage of £14,000 is wiped out by £8,300 in commute costs and lost time.

Role A: Hybrid (3d/wk)

Gross salary
£63,000
Net salary (after tax)
£47,097
Travel costs

£15/day × 138 office days

−£2,070
Meal premium
−£690
Wardrobe & dry-cleaning
−£500
Time cost (commute hours)

138h/yr × £37/hr

−£5,040
True net income£38,797

Role B: Fully Remote

Gross salary
£49,000
Net salary (after tax)
£38,800
Travel costs
Meal premium
Wardrobe & dry-cleaning
Time cost (commute hours)
True net income£38,800

What your Role A commute costs you per year

£3,260

Out-of-pocket costs

Travel + meals + wardrobe

£5,040

Time cost

138h @ £37/hr

£8,300

Total commute impact

The real cost of going in

Frequently asked questions

1

Is a £63K Lead Software Engineer hybrid role worth the commute in UK?

At £63K with a typical 3-day commute (£15/day transport, 60 min round trip, £5 daily meal premium, £500/yr wardrobe), your true net income is approximately £38,797 per year. Your net salary without any commute deductions would be £47,097. The commute costs you £8,300 per year in direct costs and lost time, meaning you would only need to earn £49,000 fully remotely to match this hybrid role's real value.

2

What remote salary matches a £63K hybrid Lead Software Engineer role in UK?

Assuming a 3-day hybrid schedule with a typical UK commute, you would need a remote salary of at least £49,000 to match the true net income of a £63K hybrid Lead Software Engineer role. This accounts for £3,260 in direct annual commute costs and £5,040 in time cost (138 hours of commuting per year valued at your hourly rate of £37/hr).

3

How much does commuting cost a Lead Software Engineer per year in UK?

On a 3-day hybrid schedule, a Lead Software Engineer in UK faces approximately £3,260 in direct annual costs (transport, meals, wardrobe) plus £5,040 in opportunity cost from 138 hours spent commuting each year. Total commute impact: £8,300.

4

How is the time cost of commuting calculated for a Lead Software Engineer?

Your hourly rate is calculated by dividing your gross salary by contracted hours across 46 working weeks (accounting for statutory leave). For a £63K Lead Software Engineer on 37.5 hours per week, that is £37/hr. On a 3-day hybrid schedule with a 60-minute round trip, you spend 138 hours commuting per year, valued at £5,040.

5

What tax deductions apply to a Lead Software Engineer salary in UK?

A £63K Lead Software Engineer salary in UK is subject to Income Tax and National Insurance, leaving a net salary of £47,097 per year (£3,925/month) before any commute costs. The effective tax rate at this income level is approximately 25.2%.

6

Why do you use 46 working weeks for commute calculations?

Both Ireland and the UK provide statutory minimum paid leave of approximately 4 weeks. Adding bank holidays brings the typical total to around 5.6 weeks per year. Using 46 working weeks ensures that commute costs and time calculations only apply to weeks when you actually travel to the office.