Employee ‘job hugging’ hides rising workforce risks, MetLife warns

NEW YORK, UNITED STATES — Driven by persistent financial pressures and a volatile job market, employee retention rates have climbed, but new data from MetLife reveals this stability is largely superficial.
According to MetLife’s 2026 Employee Benefit Trends Study, which surveyed 2,480 HR decision-makers and 2,541 U.S. full-time employees in October 2025, while 77% of employees intend to stay with their current employer, more than half (56%) are doing so out of necessity rather than genuine commitment, signaling a fragile workforce dynamic that threatens long-term business performance.
Financial stress drives ‘job hugging’ and retention
A primary driver of this need-based retention is deeply eroded financial confidence among workers, which has plummeted to its lowest level since 2012.
According to MetLife data, 31% of employees are staying in their current jobs because the unpredictable job market makes it too risky to leave.
This creates a situation in which employers view high retention as an indication of a healthy culture, yet, in reality, workers feel confined in their workplaces and have no choice but to remain with their employers.
This option of retention and non-commitment has its own operational risk. The researchers found that a significant portion of employees (18%) are remaining because they want to.
Todd Katz, Head of the United States Group Benefits at MetLife, notes, “As employees cling to their jobs for security, retention alone can give employers a false sense of stability—even as [well-being], engagement, and productivity quietly erode.”
He also sounded an alarm, saying this puts employers back on their heels and pressures them to strengthen their culture, leadership, and benefits that will foster real connection and engagement, or productivity will silently continue to decline.
Workplace connection critical for employee productivity
The study also reveals that 50% of these workers are actively engaged in their jobs and are 54% less likely to be holistically healthy, which creates a risk of absenteeism and lower productivity.
The report reads, “Together, these findings show that connection is what separates surface-level stability from a workforce that is resilient, productive, and built to perform under pressure. Without it, outcomes stall, and loyalty weakens.”
The research conducted by MetLife points to connection, which can be determined as the employees’ feeling seen, valued, and supported in the workplace, as the most powerful predictor of positive results.
The MetLife findings mirror broader global trends, such as those tracked by Gallup’s annual workplace reports, which consistently show that low engagement costs the global economy trillions in lost productivity.
When employees feel fully connected, they are three times more likely to be holistically healthy workers, two times more likely to be engaged, and three times more likely to choose to stay because they want to.
Katz pointed out that “Benefits that adapt to employees’ needs—and are clearly communicated—reinforce trust, strengthen connection, and help organizations move beyond transactional loyalty toward more meaningful, sustainable outcomes.”
Moving beyond transactional loyalty aligns with broader human capital trends emphasizing a shift toward holistic employee well-being to build resilient organizations.

Independent




