Workers, HR professionals rank stress as top workplace issue
Workers and employers agree that employee stress is a significant workplace issue, according to a recent survey from the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM).
Workers, HR professionals, and HR executives all ranked stress and burnout levels as the second most pressing issue in the 2026 SHRM State of the Workplace survey, released January 8.
“It’s part of the demand for a better employee experience,” noted James Atkinson, vice president of thought leadership at SHRM, adding that employees are looking to their leaders for stress and burnout solutions.
Pay levels also make a difference with workers, the survey found. Their top three workplace needs are:
- Employee salary or wages
- Employee stress or burnout
- Employee work/life integration
HR professionals and executives gave a higher ranking to leadership development when ranking their top workplace needs:
- Managers’ and supervisors’ ability to effectively lead their direct reports
- Employee stress and burnout levels
- Employee salary or wages.
The survey of more than 2,000 workers and 1,800 HR professionals also found that workers believe HR departments should make the overall employee experience one of their top priorities in 2026, along with total rewards.
The survey also found that 91 percent of employees who felt their organization was effective at addressing workplace needs were satisfied with their job, while 44 percent of those who felt their organization wasn’t effective at addressing them were satisfied.
“Organizations that prioritize employee experience are in a better position than those that don’t,” Atkinson said. “When you do it right, workers notice.”
Chief HR officers preparing for change
A second survey from SHRM looked at the top issues faced by chief human resources officers (CHROs). The 2026 CHRO Priorities and Perspectives survey, based on insights from 129 CHROs, found that:
- Leadership and manager development, employee experience, and organizational design and change management are the top three priorities for CHROS;
- Workplace culture is becoming a focus; the percentage of CHROs focusing on workplace culture has more than doubled since 2025; and
- Most CHROs expect growing adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) in the workplace over the next year with 92 percent anticipating greater integration of AI into workforce operations.
As AI changes the nature of jobs, employers will need to upskill and reskill workers, and managers and supervisors need to be prepared.
“It’s truly critical to have the right leaders in place to survive and thrive,” said Alexander Alonso, SHRM’s chief knowledge officer. “You need to make sure your leaders are prepared for change upon change upon change.”
Key to remember: Workers and HR professionals see stress, burnout, and the employee experience as top workplace issues for 2026, while CHROs want to make sure leaders are prepared for change.














































