The HR Blog

Employee Wellbeing Is a Performance Issue, Not a Perk

Written by HR Butler | Jan 20, 2026 11:00:00 AM

Most conversations about employee wellbeing start in the wrong place.

They start with perks. Fitness challenges. Apps people forget about after week two. Posters about balance taped next to deadlines that quietly say otherwise.

The data tells a different story.

Research from Gallup (Read more Here) shows that employee wellbeing is directly tied to the outcomes leaders care about most: productivity, performance, burnout, and turnover. When wellbeing suffers, so does the business. Sometimes slowly. Sometimes all at once.

The Cost of Poor Wellbeing Is Not Abstract

Gallup’s research puts real numbers behind what many leaders already sense:

  • 75% of medical costs are driven largely by preventable conditions

  • $20 million in lost opportunity for every 10,000 employees due to struggling or suffering workers

  • $322 billion globally lost each year to burnout-related turnover and productivity loss

  • 15% to 20% of payroll, on average, lost to voluntary turnover tied to burnout

This isn’t about how employees feel on a random Tuesday. It’s about compounding risk that shows up in absenteeism, disengagement, and attrition.

What Wellbeing Actually Means

Gallup takes a holistic view of wellbeing. Not just physical health. Not just benefits.

Wellbeing is about how people experience their lives overall.

To measure it, Gallup uses Net Thriving, which looks at how people rate their current life and their expectations for the future. Employees fall into three categories:

  • Thriving: Positive today and optimistic about the next five years

  • Struggling: Getting by, uncertain about what’s ahead

  • Suffering: Experiencing persistent misery and a negative outlook

Think of Net Thriving as a workforce health indicator. It reflects current stability and future resilience.

The Five Elements of Wellbeing

Gallup’s global research identified five elements people need to thrive:

  1. Career Wellbeing – Liking what you do every day

  2. Social Wellbeing – Having meaningful relationships

  3. Financial Wellbeing – Managing money effectively

  4. Physical Wellbeing – Having energy to get things done

  5. Community Wellbeing – Feeling connected to where you live

The key insight for employers is this: career wellbeing is the foundation. If work is broken, the other elements struggle to hold.

Engagement Alone Is Not Enough

This is where the research gets uncomfortable.

Gallup found that engaged employees who are not thriving still pose serious risk. Compared to employees who are both engaged and thriving, they report:

  • 61% higher likelihood of burnout

  • 48% higher daily stress

  • 66% higher daily worry

  • Double the rate of daily sadness and anger

In other words, motivation without wellbeing is fragile. Engagement drives career wellbeing, but without attention to the whole person, it breaks under pressure.

Why Most Efforts Fall Short

Only 1 in 4 U.S. employees strongly agree their organization cares about their overall wellbeing.

That gap usually isn’t about intent. It’s about execution.

Wellbeing fails when it’s treated as a program instead of a system, a perk instead of a responsibility, or a campaign instead of a culture.

The Bottom Line

Employee wellbeing isn’t about being soft. It’s about being honest.

People’s paychecks, benefits, stress levels, and time all intersect at work. Organizations that acknowledge that reality build more resilient teams. The ones that don’t usually pay for it later, through turnover they didn’t see coming.

Wellbeing is not a perk.

It’s a performance issue.