Kultura pracy i tygodniowy rytm w Romania
Romania operates a forty-hour standard workweek under the Labour Code, with most office work running a nine-to-six or ten-to-seven schedule with a one-hour lunch break. The five-day Monday-to-Friday rhythm is universal, and overtime work is restricted to a maximum of eight hours per week and forty-eight hours per week including overtime.
Statutory paid leave is twenty working days per year for most full-time employees, and many collective agreements or individual contracts add a few more days. The cultural expectation is for a summer leave block in July or August, with smaller breaks at Easter and around the winter holidays in late December and early January. Romanian Orthodox Easter often falls on a different date from Western Easter, and the surrounding period is treated as a major family holiday.
Romania has become one of the largest software development and shared services hubs in Eastern Europe, with major centres in Bucharest, Cluj-Napoca, Timișoara and Iași. The cultural environment in modern Romanian technology offices is comparable to other international startup hubs, with English fluency essentially universal in IT roles and remote-first arrangements common.