Editor’s Note: This story originally appeared on Monster.
Laughter is alive and well at work. But according to new research from Monster, it is also carefully managed.
In the Workplace Laughter Report, a national survey of more than 1,000 employed U.S. workers, most employees say they laugh regularly on the job. At the same time, many are recalibrating when and how they show humor, especially around senior leaders.
The takeaway for job seekers and employees alike is clear: Humor can build connection and relieve stress, but it also carries reputational risk. Navigating that balance is becoming a modern workplace skill.
Key Findings from Monster’s Workplace Laughter Report
- 76% of workers are less likely to joke around senior leadership
- 77% laugh at least three times during a typical workday
- 30% say their workplace has become more serious over the past year
- 95% say laughter helps them feel more connected to coworkers
- 69% hold back humor at least sometimes to avoid seeming less professional or credible
- 57% admit to laughing at jokes they did not actually find funny
Workplaces Are Still Laughing
Despite headlines about burnout and rising pressure, most workers are not sitting in silence all day.
- 39% laugh three to five times in a typical workday
- 18% laugh six to ten times
- 21% laugh more than ten times
- 3% never laugh at work
Nearly all workers agree that laughter serves a purpose. Ninety-six percent say it reduces stress, and 95% say it helps them feel more connected to coworkers.
Humor remains one of the fastest ways to build rapport, particularly in team settings where trust and collaboration matter.
But the Tone Is Tightening
Even with frequent laughter, 30% of workers say their workplace has become more serious over the last year. Another 52% say the tone feels about the same. Only 16% say it has become more relaxed and humorous.
And context changes everything.
Three in four workers, 76%, say they are less likely to joke or be humorous when senior leadership is in the room. Comfort levels shift noticeably depending on the audience:
- 96% feel comfortable being humorous with close teammates
- 70% feel comfortable around senior leadership
- 69% feel comfortable in large or cross-functional meetings
This shift creates what could be called a “laugh gap.” Humor flows more freely among peers but tightens as hierarchy enters the picture.
For professionals, especially those early in their careers, this can create uncertainty. Should you show personality to stand out? Or stay neutral to protect credibility?
Professionalism vs. Personality
More than half of workers, 51%, say humor is encouraged at their workplace. Another 42% say it is allowed but with clear limits.
Yet nearly 7 in 10, 69%, admit they hold back humor at least sometimes because they worry it could make them seem less professional or less credible.
This tension speaks to a larger career challenge. Employees want to be authentic and relatable, but they also want to be taken seriously.
Interestingly, performative laughter is common. Fifty-seven percent of workers say they have laughed at a joke they did not actually find funny. That suggests humor is not just about connection. It can also be about social navigation.
Where Humor Shows Up Most
Workers believe that laughter tends to appear in lower-stakes environments. Here’s where it’s happening:
- 66% happens in one-on-one conversations
- 52% during breaks or lunch
- 43% informal moments
- 28% team meetings
- 26% Slack or chat messages
Workers most often associate workplace laughter with individual contributors. Executives are least often named as the source of humor.
When humor disappears, employees take notice. More than half, 52%, interpret the absence of laughter as a sign of high stress or burnout. Others see it as fear of saying the wrong thing, tight deadlines, or pressure from leadership.
In other words, laughter is more than a mood booster. It is a cultural signal.
What Is Off Limits?
Employees are drawing clearer boundaries around certain topics.
- 52% say politics is off limits
- 36% say leadership or management
- 31% say clients or customers
- 22% say company culture
- 15% say workload or burnout
- 17% say nothing feels off-limits
In a polarized and high-pressure environment, workers are keenly aware of how quickly a joke can be misinterpreted.
For job seekers, this matters. During interviews or early days on the job, reading the room is critical. Pay attention to how leaders communicate. Observe how teams interact. Notice what gets laughs and what gets silence.
Navigating Humor at Work
So how should professionals approach humor in a workplace that is still laughing, but more cautiously?
- Read the hierarchy. The data is clear that leadership presence changes the room. When senior leaders are around, keep humor light, inclusive, and non-controversial.
- Focus on shared experiences. Self-deprecating humor about everyday work challenges is often safer than jokes about politics, leadership, or clients.
- Watch for cultural cues. If humor mostly happens in informal chats or one-on-one settings, follow that lead. Not every meeting needs a punchline.
- Protect your credibility. If you are in a new role or aiming for promotion, balance personality with professionalism. You can be warm and approachable without being edgy.
- Notice when laughter disappears. A sudden drop in humor may signal stress or burnout on your team. That is a cue to check in, not crack a joke.
Humor at Work Is Evolving
Workers know laughter reduces stress and strengthens connection, but they are also carefully managing when, where, and with whom they share it.
For professionals, the ability to balance authenticity with awareness may be one of the most underrated career skills today.
Laughter can build trust. It can also feel risky. The key is knowing your audience and using humor in a way that supports, rather than undermines, your goals.
Methodology
This survey was conducted by Pollfish on February 2, 2026, among more than 1,000 currently employed U.S. workers.
Respondents answered a series of multiple-choice questions examining workplace culture and interpersonal dynamics, with a particular focus on how humor and laughter show up at work and how they affect connection and communication.
The sample included representation across generations: 18% Gen Z (born 1997–2009), 28% Millennials/Gen Y (born 1981–1996), 28% Gen X (born 1965–1980), and 26% Baby Boomers (born 1946–1964). Respondents identified their gender as 48% female, 52% male.


