The number of American employees taking leave for mental health conditions has risen sharply in recent years, creating new challenges for employers struggling to balance workforce well-being with business operations.
According to workforce management company ComPsych, mental health-related leaves increased approximately 300% between 2017 and 2023, including a 33% jump during 2023 alone, reflecting a significant shift in how employees use protected medical leave for stress, anxiety, depression and burnout.
Additional research released this year by workplace mental health provider Spring Health found that 61% of human resources professionals reported an increase in mental health leave requests over the past year.
Much of the increase involves the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), which allows eligible employees to take up to 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave for qualifying medical conditions, including diagnosed mental health disorders.
For many employees, the leave provides an opportunity to recover before workplace stress develops into more serious medical problems.
Mental health professionals say the COVID-19 pandemic permanently changed how many workers view burnout, work-life balance and seeking professional treatment.
Surveys consistently show younger employees reporting the highest levels of workplace stress, with many citing heavier workloads, staffing shortages and ongoing economic uncertainty.
While the trend reflects greater awareness of mental health, employers increasingly face operational and financial challenges.
When employees take extended leave, companies often redistribute responsibilities among remaining staff, increasing workloads for coworkers and sometimes contributing to additional burnout across teams.
Spring Health reported that 16% of HR professionals experienced increases of 25% or more in mental health leave requests during a single year.
Approximately 40% identified disability claims and employee leave management as one of their organization’s fastest-growing workplace concerns.
The financial impact extends well beyond temporary staffing shortages.
Research cited by workforce specialists estimates untreated mental health conditions cost U.S. employers between $31 billion and $51 billion annually through absenteeism, reduced productivity and lower workplace performance.
Additional healthcare costs, employee turnover and recruiting expenses further increase the financial burden.
Companies have responded in different ways.
Some employers have expanded counseling services, employee assistance programs and flexible work arrangements in hopes of addressing problems before employees require extended leave.
Others have strengthened leave management policies to ensure medical leave is used appropriately while continuing to comply with federal and state employment laws.
The legal landscape also continues to evolve.
Although the Family and Medical Leave Act establishes nationwide protections, many states provide additional employee benefits, paid leave programs and broader workplace accommodations, creating compliance challenges for employers operating across multiple jurisdictions.
Human resources professionals increasingly view mental health leave as a permanent workforce planning issue rather than a temporary post-pandemic trend.
Many organizations are investing more heavily in wellness initiatives, manager training and early intervention programs designed to reduce burnout before employees reach the point of needing extended leave.
Business leaders also recognize that supporting employee mental health can improve retention, productivity and overall workforce stability.
At the same time, companies continue balancing those investments against rising healthcare costs, staffing shortages and operational demands.
For employers, the message is becoming increasingly clear: mental health has evolved from an employee benefit issue into a core business concern affecting productivity, labor costs and long-term organizational performance.
As awareness continues growing and employees become more comfortable seeking treatment, experts expect mental health leave to remain an increasingly important factor in workforce management across nearly every industry.
JBizNews Desk | New York
© JBizNews.com All Rights Reserved. Reproduction or Distribution without Written Permission is Prohibited.



