Get an honest read of your burnout risk level before it catches you off guard.
Burnout is a state of chronic physical and emotional exhaustion caused by prolonged exposure to high-demand, low-resource work conditions. The World Health Organisation classifies it as an occupational phenomenon characterised by three dimensions: feelings of energy depletion, increased mental distance from one's job, and reduced professional efficacy.
What makes burnout particularly dangerous is its gradual onset. Unlike an acute health crisis, burnout accumulates slowly — often over months or years — while the individual continues to function, push through fatigue, and dismiss early warning signals. By the time most people recognise they are burned out, they are already in recovery territory rather than prevention territory.
Prevention is exponentially more effective than recovery. Studies show that recovering from full burnout typically takes 3–12 months, during which productivity, relationships, and health all suffer significant damage. A regular risk assessment — like this calculator — gives you a quantified signal before the damage is done.
This burnout risk calculator uses a validated three-variable formula that mirrors the risk factors most consistently identified in occupational health research: workload (weekly hours), sleep quality (hours per night), and perceived stress level.
Work hours are the primary driver. Research shows that working more than 55 hours per week is associated with a 35% increased risk of stroke and a 17% increased risk of dying from heart disease compared to working 35–40 hours per week. Each additional hour beyond 55 carries a disproportionately higher cost due to compounding fatigue and declining cognitive function.
Sleep is the single most effective recovery mechanism available. Every hour of sleep below 7 per night increases cortisol levels, reduces prefrontal cortex function (your decision-making centre), and accelerates the accumulation of adenosine (the chemical that makes you feel tired). The formula credits adequate sleep heavily as a protective factor against burnout.
Stress is multiplicative, not additive. A high-stress week at normal work hours can be as damaging as an extended period of moderate overwork. The stress variable captures the subjective dimension of burnout that objective metrics like hours cannot fully measure.
Your score maps to one of three risk categories, each with a specific recommended response:
These strategies are ranked by impact and ease of implementation. Start with the top two or three rather than attempting all of them simultaneously:
Everything you need to know about using this tool effectively.
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