2 min read
5.0
39

Ranking the most stressful industries in the U.S. by Welltory

Nika Zdanovich
Chief Commercial Officer
Mariia Ermatova
Project Manager
Workplace stress affects millions of Americans every single day but some industries are definitely more stressful than others. This ranking digs deeper into the problem and ranks industries by stress score, which is derived from factors such as average weekly hours, earnings, rate of injuries, burnout levels, and more.

From leisure & hospitality to construction: who tops the list?

According to the ranking, the leisure & hospitality industry tops the list with the highest stress among workers. Irregular hours, customer-facing work, and low pay are some of the key factors that make jobs within this industry really stressful.
The list continues with professional & business services and transportation & warehousing while wholesale trade stands out as the least stressful industry.

Complete ranking list

IndustryNumber of employeesFinal stress scoreAverage weekly hoursJob openings rateWorkplace injury and illness rateAverage weekly earningsLayoffs and discharge ratesEmployee quit ratesWorker burnout rate
Leisure and hospitality17.0M6625.56.07%2.9%$587.271.62%3.52%76%
Professional and business services22.6M5636.55.54%1.1%$1,633.382.02%2.52%79.26%
Transportation and warehousing6.8M5338.24.39%4.5%$1,212.851.42%1.95%68.75%
Mining and logging625K5045.23.13%2.6%$1,835.071.1%2.15%80.86%
Private education and health services27.2M4632.75.22%3.4%$1,162.490.75%1.9%72.15%
Information2.9M4337.15.38%1%$1,987.881.5%1.37%81.38%
Construction8.3M43392.82%2.3%$1,562.732.2%1.47%75.86%
Retail trade15.6M4229.93.65%3.1%$765.741.07%2.37%69.81%
Utilities596K4241.93.6%4.2%$2,225.311.1%2.07%68.75%
Other services6.0M4031.94.45%1.7%$1,052.71%1.85%75.04%
Manufacturing12.8M40403.1%2.8%$1,424.030.95%1.45%75.32%
Financial activities9.3M3237.64.12%0.2%$1,802.540.62%1.32%82.5%
Wholesale trade6.2M2939.22.91%2.3%$1,542.920.7%1.42%69.81%

Methodology

The Industry Stress Ranking was developed by analyzing the major U.S. industries and combining seven key workplace indicators into a single stress score from 1 to 100. These seven factors offer a comprehensive view of how stressful each industry is:

  1. Average Weekly Hours

Measures how many hours employees work per week on average. Longer hours often signal higher workload and increased stress levels.

  1. Job Openings Rate

Shows the rate of open jobs in the industry that can indicate labour shortage and this will usually put more stress on the existing workers.

  1. Workplace Injury and Illness Rate

Tracks how often workers experience injuries or illnesses on the job. Higher rates reflect more physically demanding or hazardous work environments.

  1. Average Weekly Earnings

Represents how much workers make on average weekly. Lower earnings contribute to financial stress, especially within industries with demanding workloads.

  1. Layoff and Discharge Rates

Represents how frequently workers are laid off or discharged. Higher rates indicate job insecurity which often leads to high stress.

  1. Employee Quit Rates

Shows the percentage of employees voluntarily leaving their jobs. High quit rates often point to dissatisfaction, burnout, or stressful working conditions.

  1. Worker Burnout Rate

Reflects the percentage of employees reporting burnout symptoms such as exhaustion, low motivation, or mental fatigue — a direct indicator of workplace stress.

Because each factor uses different units, they were first normalized so they can be compared on the same scale. This was done using a standard min–max normalization formula, which converts any number into a value between 0 and 1. After normalization, each factor was assigned a weight based on its importance in contributing to workplace stress, then combined to produce a final stress score from 1 to 100.

Sources used for gathering data - U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and two independent surveys measuring worker burnout (Ringover and BMC Public Health).

Was this helpful?

Ask AI for a summary of page

ChatGPTGeminiClaudePerplexityGrok

Written by Nika Zdanovich

Chief Commercial Officer at Welltory. A strategic leader with expertise in business growth, marketing strategy, executive coaching. She drives brand visibility and helps bring Welltory’s mission to a wider audience.

Written by Mariia Ermatova

Project manager and brand advocate at Welltory. She helps turn complex health data into engaging stories and meaningful user experiences.

Stress