Cultura de trabalho e ritmo semanal em Hungary
Hungary operates a forty-hour standard workweek under the Labour Code, with most office workers running a nine-to-six day with a thirty- to sixty-minute lunch break. The five-day Monday-to-Friday rhythm is universal in office work. Hungarian collective bargaining is less centralised than in Germany or Austria, and individual employment contracts therefore play a larger role in setting working conditions.
Statutory paid leave starts at twenty working days per year and increases with age in fixed steps, reaching thirty working days for employees aged forty-five and over. This age-based leave entitlement is unusual in Europe and means that long-tenured Hungarian workforces have a meaningfully higher cost in terms of paid leave than the headline figure suggests.
Budapest has emerged as a significant shared services and software development hub over the past two decades, with major operations from German, Austrian, US and UK multinationals. English fluency is universal in modern technology and BPO sectors, while German remains widely spoken given the historical and economic ties to Austria and Germany.