Restroom Lurking on the Rise: Employees Seek Sanctuary from Mounting Job Stress
Job stress and burnout have reached such critical levels that many workers are now retreating to office restrooms—not just for their intended purpose, but as temporary sanctuaries to decompress, cry, scroll on their phones, or simply escape overwhelming pressure. This growing phenomenon even has its own workplace buzzword: **“restroom lurking.”**
A Symptom of a Culture Without Calm
For years, modern work culture has glorified speed, urgency, and constant availability. The “always-on” ideal—marked by endless multitasking, instant email responses, back-to-back meetings, and extended workweeks—has pushed employees to the brink.
Arianna Huffington, CEO of Thrive Global, emphasizes that calm is no longer a luxury but a necessity: “When we’re stressed or stuck in fight-or-flight mode, all the qualities we need to succeed—decision-making, creativity, collaboration, and problem-solving—go offline.”
Olivia Smith, RN, founder of Write a New Story and a master certified coach, describes today’s workplace as a “productivity pandemic.” She notes that companies are demanding more output from fewer people while bombarding employees with constant interruptions and digital overload. The result? Chronic exhaustion is normalized, and any sign of calm is often mistaken for underperformance.
With a reported 66% burnout rate, declining mental health, layoff anxiety, and heavy workloads, it’s no surprise that “restroom lurking” has become a common coping mechanism.
The Numbers Behind the Trend
According to a recent Kickresume survey, **44% of workers** admit to hiding in office restrooms to regain composure when overwhelmed. Ten percent say they spend more than 10 minutes at a time there. Women (53%) report using this strategy more often than men.
Peter Duris, CEO and co-founder of Kickresume, views the trend as a clear warning sign: many employees feel they have no other safe space during the workday to emotionally reset. The restroom has become a last-resort “micro-escape” in environments lacking privacy, quiet areas, or genuine support.
Tips for Employees
If you find yourself frequently “lurking” in the restroom, Duris offers this advice:
- **Reflect on the root cause.** Ask yourself whether the stress stems from your daily work or from external personal pressures.
- **Talk to your manager.** Be honest (within your comfort level) about workloads or mental health challenges affecting your performance. A supportive manager will look for solutions.
- **Support your colleagues.** If you hear someone upset in the restroom, a simple, gentle “Hope you’re okay—let me know if I can help” can make a big difference.
Guidance for Managers
Leaders should not view restroom lurking as laziness or disengagement. Instead, it often signals deeper issues like overload, lack of autonomy, or insufficient support. Duris recommends three key steps:
- **Hold regular one-on-ones.** Create private spaces for employees to discuss well-being and challenges openly.
- **Help prioritize workloads.** Work together to identify urgent tasks versus those that can wait. If overload is chronic, advocate for additional staffing.
- **Normalize breaks.** Provide break rooms or explicitly encourage stepping away from desks when needed. If someone seems distressed, offer them a moment without demanding an explanation.
Creating a Calmer Workplace
Restoring calm may be one of the most powerful competitive advantages in 2026. Huffington’s Thrive Global offers practical examples: quiet rooms, flexible scheduling, “Thrive Time” for recharging, and the **Thrive Reset**—a neuroscience-backed 60-second guided breathing exercise paired with calming visuals and music.
“Focusing on the rising and falling of our breath for just one minute has a dramatic effect on the brain,” Huffington explains.
Bottom line: When workplaces fail to provide humane conditions for decompression, employees will create their own escapes—even in restroom stalls. Forward-thinking companies that prioritize calm, recovery, and genuine support will likely see better engagement, creativity, and retention in return.
