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Advancing your career used to mean working long hours, communicating formally, and following strict hierarchies. Baby boomers and Gen Xers placed a high value on loyalty, job stability, and climbing the corporate ladder. They followed clear and traditional career paths, prioritized titles, and often stayed with one company for many years. Overworking, sacrificing personal time, and pushing through burnout were just part of the hustle. The same has been true for many millennials.
Gen Z is changing the paradigm. By 2030, Gen Z will account for 30% of the workforce, and this new wave of workers is replacing the hustle culture with work-life balance, mental health, and flexibility.
Only 36% of Gen Z feel “very engaged” at work (13 points behind the rest of the U.S. workforce), and 91% have faced at least one mental health challenge or burnout. They now expect employers to step up and support them.
Upwork, an online marketplace for hiring skilled freelancers, explains anti-hustle culture and how Gen Z is reshaping the modern work ethic by rebelling against constant grind, avoiding burnout, and prioritizing their well-being.
What is the anti-hustle culture, and where did it come from?
The anti-hustle culture is a mindset that opposes the idea that success requires nonstop busyness and sacrifice, which can lead to burnout. This mindset promotes a more balanced approach to work by prioritizing mental health, self-care, wellness, work-life balance, and overall employee well-being over the constant hustle.
The anti-hustle culture didn’t come out of nowhere. For decades, older generations believed in doing whatever it took to move up, including staying loyal to one company (the antithesis of today’s side-hustle culture), working overtime, and putting career first. Now, younger workers, especially Gen Z, are challenging that model and redefining what success looks like.
Gen Z is looking for work that feels meaningful, offers flexibility, and supports their values and well-being. They’re working to live, not living to work, and for them, work-life balance often ranks as high as pay.
Social media trends
Recent trends like “Bare Minimum Monday” and “Lazy Girl Jobs” across podcasts and social media platforms like TikTok have helped fuel the anti-hustle culture.
Bare Minimum Monday encourages workers to start the week slowly by focusing only on essential tasks. The idea is to ease into Monday, reduce anxiety, and avoid burnout.
Lazy Girl Jobs, a term popularized by TikToker Gabrielle Judge, promotes low-stress, well-paying roles that offer flexibility, better work-life balance, and more job satisfaction, without g