Work stress report

Burnout and Work Stress Statistics

Work stress is not a niche problem. The clearest pattern is daily strain: low engagement, pressure on managers, economic uncertainty, and money worries. The practical response is planning and reflection, not a promise of clinical care.

Last updated: May 21, 2026
Based on public data
Not medical advice

Key stats

The data we used

Each figure below is tied to a cited public source. Our ratings are separate editorial analysis.

20%

Global employee engagement

Employees globally who are engaged at work in 2025.

Gallup 2026

40%

Global daily stress

Employees globally who experienced stress a lot of the previous day.

Gallup 2026

50%

U.S. and Canada daily stress

Highest regional daily stress share in Gallup's regional ranking.

Gallup 2026

45%

Manager daily stress

Managers reporting stress a lot of the previous day.

Gallup 2026

77%

Future of the nation

U.S. adults citing it as a significant source of stress.

APA 2024

73%

Economy

U.S. adults citing it as a significant source of stress.

APA 2024

Methodology

Where personal coaching support fits best

These are not diagnoses. They are practical coaching entry points where a user can name the pressure, reduce ambiguity, and choose a next action.

We used public survey findings from Gallup's State of the Global Workplace 2026 and APA's Stress in America 2024 release.
Each area is rated by how common the pressure is, how directly a person can act on it, and whether a short coaching exercise can help.
The source percentages come from the cited publishers. The ratings are our editorial judgment about where a reader may have a useful next step.
Rank
Opportunity
Rating
1

Work stress check-ins

40% global daily stress; 50% in U.S. and Canada

15

Stress is broad, recurring, and often benefits from a short reflection loop before it becomes avoidance.

2

Manager and leadership pressure

45% of managers reported high daily stress

13

Managers often need boundaries, delegation, feedback, and a way to separate urgent from important.

3

Financial and economic stress

73% of U.S. adults cited the economy as a significant source of stress

12

Money stress often needs clarity, prioritization, and a conversation plan before it needs another spreadsheet.

4

Uncertainty planning

77% of U.S. adults cited the nation's future as a significant source of stress

12

When the world feels vague and large, coaching can bring the focus back to controllable choices.

5

Remote and hybrid boundaries

46% daily stress among hybrid and on-site remote-capable employees

11

Flexible work still needs working agreements, recovery time, and explicit boundaries.

The best first step is measurement, not advice

A short check-in can help users separate pressure, fatigue, conflict, and unclear priorities before choosing a tool.

Coaching support is not clinical treatment

Reflection, boundary-setting, planning, and conversation preparation can reduce daily pressure. For persistent or clinical symptoms, a qualified professional is the right next step.

Work stress connects to many tools

The right next step depends on the source of the stress: a boundary, a money decision, a leadership conversation, or a smaller daily habit.

Useful for

People who want a practical stress inventory

Managers who need better boundaries

Users deciding which coaching tool to try first

Not for

Medical diagnosis

Crisis support

Replacing licensed mental health care

FAQ

Questions about this report

Is this a medical burnout test?

No. This is a research page and coaching guide. It is not a clinical assessment or diagnosis.

How are the scores calculated?

Each area is rated from 0 to 15 using three questions: how common it is, how actionable it is, and whether a focused exercise can help.

Why include workplace data in personal coaching?

Work stress often spills into habits, sleep, relationships, money decisions, and daily planning.

More personal coaching research

Burnout and Work Stress Statistics 2026 | CoachGPT Research