As few as possible. This week I've done 3 lots of 8 hours in the office and 2 lots at home. Last week it was the reverse.
I'm far more comfortable working at home because there are fewer interruptions during the day (when it's not school break or sick kids). Not coming into the office daily can save around 2 hours a day in commuting. After a couple of days of working at home I find I feel refreshed because I've had a couple of hours extra sleep and also a couple of hours extra personal time.
My employer prefers that I come into the office as much as possible, which is fine, but it's also a hassle with commuting, and distractions. I rarely stay in the office more than 8 hours; not because I don't want to, but because long term that is draining on your stamina, health, and personal life.
If you've got some flexibility then try and find a balance that works for you and your employer. When you're negotiating your employment terms suggest working from home a couple of days a week. If they're not keen you can still take the job and go to the office 5 lots of 8 hours a week.
Also, avoid those "you are expected to work reasonable overtime hours without notice or compensation" type clauses. The phrase 'reasonable' is subjective and they can deem it to be as many hours as they see fit. If they insist on the clause have them quantify it down to x hours per month, so long as x is a number you're comfortable with. At least then, if they ask you to do more than that you can demand compensation for your valuable time.
Edit: A friend of mine once told me he'd just work each day until the assigned tasks for the day were done. In that way he was doing 12 hours most days. Very draining. He completed so much work that his manager drones didn't adjust their estimates of his ability down to a sane level and kept assigning him more and more work. Over time they started to assume everyone else was slacking off and assigning more work to everyone and setting shorter deadlines to complete everything.
The moral of that story is if you regularly slave to complete all the assigned tasks you will set very high expectations of your abilities, and possibly wind up with too much work and not enough time.