%0 Journal Article %T The right to disconnect as an employees’ fundamental right %A Moras-Olaś, Kinga %J Studies on Labour Law and Social Policy %V Volume 28 (2021) %R 10.4467/25444654SPP.21.024.14266 %N Volume 28 Issue 4 %P 305-323 %K right to be offline, right to disconnect, remote work %@ 1429-9585 %D 2021 %U https://ejournals.eu/en/journal/szppips/article/prawo-do-bycia-offline-jako-podstawowe-prawo-pracownika %X The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and the associated possibilities for the employers to order employees to perform their work remotely has caused the widespread perception of the employee’s right to be offline outside its working hours (also referred to as a “right to disconnect”) as a fundamental right. This article contains a synthetic analysis of the institution of remote working as the main source of threat to employees’ rights as well as considerations with regard to proposed solutions aimed at protecting the employee against such threat. On the one hand, remote work has a protective function being instrumental in safeguarding the continuity of businesses and the  employee’s workplace despite the pandemic, but on the other hand, it significantly interferes with the private sphere and may lead to violations of the regulations on working time. The European Parliament’s proposals on the right to be offline should be assessed positively, although they undoubtedly only guarantee an absolute minimum level of protection. The analysis was carried out following the formal dogmatic method also taking into account comparative tools. ASJC: 3308, JEL: K31