Leaders have better lives but worse daily emotions: Gallup

WASHINGTON, UNITED STATES — Leaders around the world are thriving in their careers and reporting higher overall life satisfaction, yet they are also experiencing more stress, anger, and loneliness on a daily basis than the employees they manage, according to new data from Gallup’s 2026 State of the Global Workplace report.
The findings highlight a growing paradox in the future of work, where advancement into leadership roles appears to improve long-term wellbeing while simultaneously intensifying day-to-day emotional strain.
Leadership paradox reshapes future of work wellbeing
Gallup’s global analysis shows that leaders—defined as “managers of managers”—are more likely to be thriving in life and engaged at work than individual contributors.
However, they also report significantly higher levels of negative emotions in their daily experiences.
Compared with individual contributors, leaders “more frequently report experiencing stress (+7 percentage points), anger (+12), sadness (+11) and loneliness (+10) the previous day,” the report found.
At the same time, leaders are less likely to experience positive emotions. The report notes that leadership is “less likely than individual contributors to say they smiled or laughed a lot the previous day and less likely than managers to report experiencing enjoyment.”
The data suggests that traditional assumptions about career progression and well-being may need to be reconsidered as organizations navigate hybrid work, AI-driven transformation, and increasing workplace complexity.
While leadership roles continue to offer higher pay, status, and decision-making authority, they also appear to come with an emotional cost that is often overlooked in discussions about workplace success.
Engagement becomes critical buffer against emotional strain
Gallup researchers point to a key factor that may help explain the gap between leaders’ high life evaluation and their difficult daily emotions: engagement at work.
“The implication is that leaders have more difficult days than the people they lead — a paradox potentially hidden behind higher engagement and overall life satisfaction,” the report stated.
Importantly, engagement appears to significantly reduce emotional strain. Gallup finds that engaged leaders experience fewer negative emotions at levels comparable to or even lower than non-leaders.
The most striking example is loneliness, where there is a “21-point difference in loneliness between engaged and non-engaged leaders.”
“When leaders are engaged, they find their work absorbing, they enjoy the people they work with, and they feel connected to their organization,” the report explained.
This insight carries strong implications for the future of work, where leadership development is increasingly tied to employee experience, digital transformation, and organizational resilience.
As work becomes more distributed and AI reshapes decision-making processes, emotional sustainability among leaders may become as important as performance metrics.
Gallup concludes that leaders thrive when they have role clarity, purpose, and strong organizational connection—factors that not only improve their well-being but also cascade across teams.
In an evolving workplace, the emotional health of leaders may ultimately shape the health of entire organizations.

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