
New research from workplace and ID card specialists, Digital ID has revealed the hidden emotional toll of modern working life, with 34% of employees admitting they regularly feel isolated – even in hybrid or fully connected roles.
The data shows that loneliness isn’t just reserved for those living alone or working remotely full-time. In fact, 23% of workers said they’d gone more than three days without a meaningful conversation, despite regular meetings, Slack channels and email threads.
Among single people living alone, that figure rises to 41%, pointing to a broader social concern around digital-era disconnection.
Adam Bennett, workplace culture expert and spokesperson at Digital ID, said:
“We’re more digitally connected than ever before – but that doesn’t always translate to real human connection. Performative productivity, constant notifications, and shallow check-ins can hide a much deeper issue: many employees are silently struggling with loneliness. That’s not just a wellbeing concern – it’s a cultural and business one too.”
Key findings from the research include:
- 29% of employees say they feel loneliest just after team meetings, suggesting surface-level engagement is leaving people more emotionally drained than supported.
- 45% of hybrid workers say they’ve mastered the art of “looking busy” to mask a lack of connection or purpose.
- Industries with the highest reported loneliness include tech, legal, and customer service roles – often those most reliant on digital comms or shift-based work.
The findings come ahead of Loneliness Awareness Week (10–16 June), and highlight the need for employers to look beyond digital tools and towards creating psychologically safe, emotionally intelligent workplaces.
Bennett added:
“Loneliness at work doesn’t always look like someone sitting quietly at their desk. It can look like back-to-back Zooms, unread messages piling up, or even that team member who never takes their camera off mute. As employers, we need to create environments where connection is genuine, not just scheduled.”