Supporting employee wellbeing and reducing burnout
Employee wellbeing remains a major HR challenge in 2026. While many organisations now have wellbeing initiatives in place, employees are increasingly expecting employers to address the causes of stress rather than simply provide support once people are already struggling.
The CIPD Good Work Index is a useful source for understanding job quality in the UK, including wellbeing, work-life balance, autonomy, fairness and employee voice. CIPD research consistently shows that wellbeing is closely linked to how work is designed and managed.
In practice, this means wellbeing cannot sit only within benefits. It is affected by workload, manager behaviour, role clarity, psychological safety, flexibility and organisational change.
Common wellbeing challenges in 2026 include:
- High workloads in lean teams
- Stress caused by uncertainty or restructuring
- Poor boundaries in hybrid work
- Managers lacking confidence in wellbeing conversations
- Long-term sickness absence
- Employees feeling disconnected or unsupported
What employers should do
HR teams should take a more preventative approach to wellbeing. This means looking at the working conditions that contribute to stress and absence.
Practical steps include:
- Reviewing workload and capacity in pressured teams
- Training managers to spot early signs of stress
- Making reasonable adjustments easier to access
- Tracking absence and engagement data together
- Encouraging senior leaders to communicate priorities clearly
- Building psychological safety into team culture
Wellbeing strategies are most effective when they are practical, measurable and connected to day-to-day work.
Making hybrid and flexible working sustainable
Hybrid working is now embedded in many UK workplaces, but employers are still working out how to make it sustainable, fair and productive.
People Management, the CIPD’s HR publication, has highlighted hybrid working, inclusion and workplace purpose as key themes for HR in 2026. Its article on hybrid, inclusion and workplace purpose argues that the conversation has moved beyond where people work and towards how organisations create belonging, fairness and connection.
This reflects what many HR teams are experiencing. The challenge is no longer simply whether hybrid working should exist. It is how to make it work well across different teams, roles and employee groups.
Key questions include:
- How often should employees be in the office?
- What is the purpose of office time?
- How do managers lead hybrid teams effectively?
- Are remote workers getting equal access to opportunities?
- How do we maintain culture without forcing presenteeism?
- How do we apply flexibility fairly where roles differ?
What employers should do
Employers should create clear hybrid working principles rather than relying on vague expectations.
Good hybrid working guidance should cover:
- Team-level expectations
- Collaboration norms
- Office attendance principles
- Inclusion for remote, hybrid and part-time workers
- Manager responsibilities
- Performance expectations
- Wellbeing boundaries
The best hybrid working models are built around trust, clarity and purposeful connection — not simply office attendance targets.
Responding to AI and automation in the workplace
AI is rapidly becoming one of the most important HR challenges in 2026. Employers are exploring AI for recruitment, productivity, workforce planning, learning, reporting and employee services.
People Management has identified AI disruption as one of the major labour market and HR trends for 2026, including in its coverage of 2026 labour market trends.
For HR teams, AI creates both opportunity and risk.
Used well, AI can improve efficiency, reduce administrative burden and support better workforce insight. Used poorly, it can damage employee trust, create bias, increase surveillance concerns or leave people anxious about job security.
What employers should do
HR should play a central role in setting principles for responsible AI use at work.
These principles should cover:
- Where AI can and cannot be used
- How employee data will be protected
- How AI-supported decisions will be reviewed
- How bias will be monitored
- What employees need to know
- What training and reskilling will be provided
- How roles may change over time
AI adoption should not be treated as a technology project alone. It is a people, culture and change management issue.
Retaining talent in a cautious labour market
A cooling labour market does not remove retention risk. In fact, it can make retention more complex.
The ONS labour market data shows a softer employment market, while the CIPD Labour Market Outlook points to more cautious employer behaviour. But talented employees, especially those with scarce skills, still have options.
If high performers feel underpaid, overworked, poorly managed or unclear about their future, they may still leave. Even when external job movement slows, disengagement can show up through reduced effort, lower productivity or quiet withdrawal.
What employers should do
HR teams should focus on targeted retention rather than generic perks.
This means identifying:
- Critical roles
- Flight-risk employees
- Teams with high workload or low engagement
- Roles where pay is behind the market
- Managers with high turnover
- Employees with unclear career paths
Useful tools include stay interviews, engagement surveys, exit interview analysis, manager check-ins and workforce planning reviews.
Retention in 2026 is about understanding what people value and removing the reasons they may be tempted to leave.
Strengthening manager capability
Line managers are central to almost every HR challenge in 2026. They are expected to support wellbeing, manage performance, lead hybrid teams, communicate change, handle employee relations issues and maintain engagement.
Yet many managers have not received enough practical training to do this confidently.
This becomes especially risky during periods of legal change. As employment rights evolve, managers need to understand how to handle sickness absence, flexible working, performance concerns, probation, working patterns and employee relations issues fairly and consistently.
What employers should do
HR teams should give managers practical, easy-to-use support.
This could include:
- Short manager briefings
- Conversation guides
- Policy explainers
- Decision trees
- Performance conversation prompts
- Wellbeing check-in questions
- Hybrid working guidance
- Templates for difficult conversations
Manager enablement does not need to be overcomplicated. Managers need clarity, confidence and timely guidance.
Improving productivity without increasing burnout
Productivity is a major business priority in 2026. The CIPD Labour Market Outlook highlights that employers are focused on controlling costs and improving business performance.
For HR teams, the challenge is helping organisations improve productivity without simply asking employees to work harder for longer.
Poor productivity is often caused by friction in the system, such as:
- Unclear priorities
- Too many meetings
- Weak management
- Poor systems
- Duplicated work
- Slow decision-making
- Skills gaps
- Lack of accountability
- Low engagement
What employers should do
HR should help leaders look at how work is designed and managed.
Useful questions include:
- Are employees clear on what matters most?
- Are teams spending too much time in low-value meetings?
- Are managers addressing underperformance early?
- Are systems helping or hindering work?
- Are people trained to use new tools effectively?
- Are leaders making trade-offs clear?
Sustainable productivity comes from focus, capability and trust — not constant pressure.
Communicating change clearly and consistently
In 2026, communication is not a “nice to have” HR activity. It is essential to trust, engagement and successful change.
Employees are dealing with a lot: employment law reform, AI, cost pressures, hybrid working debates, possible restructuring, wellbeing pressures and uncertainty about the future.
If leaders communicate vaguely or too late, employees fill the gaps themselves. That can lead to rumours, anxiety and disengagement.
HR teams have a critical role in helping leaders communicate clearly, honestly and consistently.
What employers should do
Strong HR communication should explain:
- What is changing
- Why it is changing
- Who is affected
- What employees need to do
- What support is available
- What managers should say
- What is still undecided
The key employee question is always: “What does this mean for me?”
Whether the topic is policy change, AI, hybrid working, wellbeing or restructuring, HR should make sure communications are timely, human and practical.
Conclusion: HR’s role in 2026 is more strategic than ever
The top HR challenges in the UK so far in 2026 are deeply connected.
Employment law reform affects policies, contracts and manager confidence. Skills shortages affect recruitment, retention and workforce planning. AI affects job design, trust and learning. Wellbeing affects productivity and absence. Hybrid working affects inclusion, culture and performance.
For HR teams, the opportunity is to move beyond reactive problem-solving and become a more strategic partner to the business.
The organisations that manage 2026 well will be those that:
- Prepare early for employment law changes
- Build stronger workforce planning capability
- Invest in manager confidence
- Take employee wellbeing seriously
- Use AI responsibly
- Communicate change clearly
- Balance productivity with trust
- Retain critical skills and talent
In a year shaped by uncertainty, HR has a vital role to play in helping UK employers stay compliant, productive and human.
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