Physician Burnout Statistics 2025: What the Latest Data Shows

New 2025 data from 72,000+ healthcare assessments reveals the latest physician burnout trends — and where progress is falling short.

If you’re looking for current, reliable data on physician burnout, you’ve come to the right place. Healthcare leaders, CMOs, and clinician wellness advocates search every year for longitudinal data they can actually use — data that goes beyond headlines and helps organizations understand where their physicians stand right now.

The 2025–2026 State of Well-Being Report is one of the most comprehensive sources of that data available today. Published annually by the Well-Being Index — a clinician wellness platform developed and validated at Mayo Clinic — the 2025 report is built on 72,193 Well-Being Index assessments completed by healthcare professionals across the United States between January 1 and December 31, 2025. It tracks eight occupation groups, five years of trends, and six dimensions of well-being and distress.

This article shares a snapshot of what the data reveals — and points you to the full report for the complete picture.

How Physician Burnout Is Measured in This Report

Before diving into the numbers, it helps to understand the framework. The Well-Being Index uses a validated, nine-question assessment tool that measures clinician well-being across six dimensions:

  • Burnout — whether work has left someone feeling burned out or emotionally hardened
  • Suicidal Ideation Risk — measured through depression symptom and emotional problem indicators
  • Severe Fatigue — including fatigue significant enough to affect daily function
  • Work-Life Integration — whether work schedules allow adequate time for personal and family life
  • Meaning in Work — the degree to which work feels meaningful
  • Quality of Life — a composite of all dimensions combined

Based on their assessment results, individuals are placed into one of four well-being categories: Distressed, Struggling, Okay, or Thriving. The report also tracks two threshold concepts useful for organizational benchmarking: a Hotspot (50% or more Distressed & Struggling — a signal for priority intervention) and a Brightspot (60% or more Thriving & Okay — a model worth replicating).

This multidimensional approach is what makes the data meaningful for leaders. A single burnout rate doesn’t tell you whether your physicians are emotionally hardened, sleep-deprived, or struggling with work-life balance. The Well-Being Index measures all of it — and the State of Well-Being Report shows how those dimensions interact across groups.

The Headline: Healthcare Well-Being Is Improving — But Not Evenly

The top-line story from the 2025–2026 State of Well-Being Report is one of cautious progress. Across all 72,193 assessments, 2025 represents the strongest well-being outcomes in the five-year tracking period:

  • 33.5% of healthcare workers are now Thriving — up 2.2 percentage points from 2024, and the highest point in five years of tracking
  • The combined Distressed & Struggling rate fell to 40.1% — down from 44.1% in 2021
  • The Distressed category alone dropped nearly 4 percentage points since 2022 (23.9% to 20.0%)

At the same time, burnout across all groups remains at 49% — stubbornly high even as other indicators improve. And critically, the progress is not evenly distributed. Some groups are improving fast. Others have flatlined. And physician burnout sits somewhere in between — with a story that’s more nuanced than either the optimists or the pessimists tend to tell.

Physician Burnout in 2025: Six Consecutive Years of Improvement

Among the eight occupation groups tracked in the report, physicians stand out for one important reason: they have improved every single year since 2019. According to the State of Well-Being Report, that makes physicians the occupation with the longest sustained improvement trajectory in the dataset.

Here’s what that looks like:

  • Physician Distressed percentage dropped from 28.7% to 22.4% between 2021 and 2025
  • The physician Thriving rate rose from 24.6% to 31.7%
  • Physician burnout fell from 50.0% (2024) to 45.6% (2025) — a 4.3 percentage point decline in a single year
  • The physician Distressed & Struggling rate declined 4.5 percentage points from 2024 to 2025, the second-largest single-year improvement of any group

Published research supports this trajectory. A study in Mayo Clinic Proceedings (Shanafelt et al., 2022) documented declining burnout and improving work-life integration satisfaction among physicians nationally — consistent with the multi-year trend visible in the Well-Being Index data.

Six consecutive years of improvement is meaningful. But with 42.8% of physicians still Distressed or Struggling, and 45.6% reporting burnout, there is no finish line in sight.

Where Physicians Stand Relative to Other Healthcare Workers

One of the most useful features of the State of Well-Being Report is the ability to compare physician well-being to other occupational groups — giving leaders important context for where physicians fall in the broader landscape.

In 2025, the Well-Being Snapshot by Role reveals a wide range of outcomes:

  • Residents & Fellows have the strongest outcomes of any group — just 15.8% Distressed & Struggling and a remarkable 59.2% Thriving. The report notes they operate within organized support structures: ACGME duty-hour regulations, mandated wellness curricula, and cohort-based peer support systems.
  • Physicians land in the middle of the pack — 42.8% Distressed & Struggling, 31.7% Thriving — improving steadily but still carrying significant strain.
  • Nursing remains the most distressed occupation group at 50.3% Distressed & Struggling — essentially flat for three consecutive years and the only group currently classified as a Hotspot.

The contrast between Residents and Nurses raises an important strategic question the report addresses directly: the groups with the most structured institutional support show the best outcomes and the most consistent improvement. Groups without equivalent frameworks have stagnated.

For physician leaders, this context matters. Physician well-being is improving — but the conditions that drive that improvement are worth understanding and sustaining.

The Dimension Most Leaders Overlook: Work-Life Integration

One of the report’s most striking findings isn’t about burnout at all — it’s about the gap between two protective factors: meaning in work and work-life integration.

Across all occupation groups, 77–83% of healthcare workers report finding their work meaningful. But only 41–54% feel their work schedule allows adequate time for personal and family life. That gap — as wide as 39 percentage points for some groups — represents a persistent tension at the heart of clinician wellness.

For physicians specifically, the report shows a meaning-in-work agreement rate of 83.1% — the highest of any occupation group tracked. Their work-life integration agreement rate? Just 45.7%.

The report notes that work-life integration has shown the least year-over-year progress of any well-being dimension tracked. Improving it likely requires operational changes — scheduling reform, staffing model redesign, administrative burden reduction — rather than programmatic wellness interventions alone.

This is exactly the kind of insight that gets buried in a single-metric burnout survey. It’s also exactly the kind of finding that helps leaders make more targeted decisions.

What the 2025 Data Means for Healthcare Leaders

The State of Well-Being Report closes with six recommendations for organizational leaders, drawn from cross-cutting analysis of the multi-year data. A few themes emerge clearly for those focused on physician burnout:

Structured support drives results. Physicians and Residents — the two groups with the most organized institutional well-being investment — show the best outcomes and the most consistent improvement. This pattern is consistent across five years of data.

Meaning in work may be an early warning signal. The report notes that declines in meaning-in-work scores have, in past years, preceded broader deterioration in other well-being dimensions. Tracking this metric alongside burnout gives leaders an earlier view of emerging risk.

Work-life integration is the hardest problem — and the most important. With the lowest agreement rate of any protective factor and the least improvement year over year, it requires structural solutions, not just wellness programming.

See the Full Physician Burnout Data — Free

This article shares only a portion of what the 2025–2026 State of Well-Being Report contains. The full report — available free — includes:

  • Year-over-year well-being trends from 2021 through 2025 across all eight occupation groups
  • Physician-specific breakdowns by specialty, career stage, and years since graduation
  • Burnout, emotional hardening, fatigue, overwhelm, depression indicators, and more — across all six dimensions
  • Hotspot and Brightspot identification across the healthcare workforce
  • Cross-cutting analysis revealing compound risk profiles and which groups face the greatest combined challenges
  • Six strategic recommendations for healthcare leaders

If you’re making decisions about clinician wellness in 2025 — or building the case for a more data-driven approach — this is the report to start with.

View the Free State of Well-Being Report →

Related Posts

Privacy Preferences
Web privacy policy
We take your privacy seriously, and we want you to know how we collect, use, share and protect your information.

What information we collect
We respect the right to privacy of all visitors to the Champions of Wellness site. We do not collect information that would personally identify you unless you choose to provide it. The personal information that you submit, such as on the request a quote page, is shared only with those people within the Champions of Wellness organization who need this information to respond to your request and we will utilize the information to improve Champions of Wellness operations. Information submitted through Champions of Wellness's online forms may be collected to ensure technical functionality. It will also be utilized to report any inappropriate use of our website. We do not save personal information to use for other purposes, nor do we provide it to any other groups.

Email communications, newsletter and related services
Champions of Wellness provides you with the opportunity to receive communications from us or third parties. You can sign up for a free email newsletter as well as unsubscribe from this at any time.

Email communications that you send to us via the contact and email links on our site may be shared with any member of our team and will be directed to the person most able to address your message. We make every effort to respond in a timely fashion once communications are received. Once we have responded to your communication, it is discarded or archived, depending on the nature of the message.

The email functionality on our site does not provide a completely secure and confidential means of communication. It's possible that your email communication may be accessed or viewed by another Internet user while in transit to us. If you wish to keep your communication private, do not use our email and call 888-426-7793.

You may decide at some point that you no longer wish to receive communications from our site. To stop receiving communications, send an email message to us.

Surveys
We, from time to time, survey visitors to our site. The information is used in an aggregated, de-identified form to help us understand the needs of our visitors so that we can improve our visitor experience. The information may be shared with third parties with whom we have a business relationship. We generally do not ask for information in the surveys that would personally identify you. If we do request contact information for follow-up, you may decline to provide it. If survey respondents provide personal information, it is shared only with those people who need to see it to respond to the question or request, or with third parties who perform data management services for our site. Those third parties have agreed to keep all data from surveys confidential.

IP addresses
The Web server will automatically collect the Internet Protocol (IP) address of the computers that access the Champions of Wellness site. An IP address is a number that is assigned to your computer when you access the Internet. It is not truly personally identifiable information because many different individuals can access the Internet via the same computer. We use this information in aggregate form to understand how our site or advertisements from Champions of Wellness are being used and how we can better serve visitors.

Cookies and other tracking technology
We collect information about visitors to our site using "cookies" and similar technology such as event tracking, pixel tags, visitor usage recordings and so on. We use this technology to recognize a repeat visitor and offer the visitor a set of content targeted based on a previous visit. We use session cookies to track a visitor's path through our site during a visit, to help us understand how people use our site and interact with us in order for us to continually improve our visitor experience.

How we use the information we collect

We use the information we collect for things like:
• Fulfilling requests for services or information
• Marketing and advertising products and services
• Conducting research and analysis
• Communicating things like special events and surveys
• Establishing and managing your account with us
• Identifying you on our websites and tailoring advertisements and offers to you (both on our websites and on other websites) based on your interactions with us in person and online
• Operating, evaluating and improving our business and website

Data retention
We will retain your information for as long as your account is active or as needed to provide you services, comply with our legal obligations, resolve disputes, and enforce our agreements.

Except for authorized law enforcement investigations or other valid legal processes, we will not share any personally identifiable information we receive from you with any parties outside of Champions of Wellness.

We may share some information to third parties
We may share your personally identifiable information with third parties who we have engaged to help us provide you services. In each case, we will ensure that these third parties have agreed not to use or disclose your personal information except to help us provide the services.

Except as noted above for newsletters and surveys, Champions of Wellness does not provide any third party access to your IP address and email address.

We may provide third parties with aggregate statistics about our visitors, traffic and related site information. This data reflects site-usage patterns gathered during visits to our website each month, but they do not contain behavioral or identifying information about any individual member unless that member has given us permission to share that information.

To help us determine the effectiveness of our advertising, we work with Web analytics tools hosted by third parties who receive non-identifiable information from your browser, including but not limited to the site or the advertisement you came from, your IP address, your general geographic location, your browser and platform information, and the pages you view within our site.

Ads by Google
Note that Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on our site. Google's use of the DART cookie enables it to serve ads to our site users based on their visit to our site and other sites on the Internet. No personally identifiable information is collected as part of Google's process. Users may opt out of the use of this DART cookie by visiting Google's privacy document.
If you would like more information about these practices and to know your choices about not having this information used by these companies, visit the Network Advertising Initiative. Some ad servers allow you to opt out of anonymous data collection through the use of cookies. To do so, you must opt out of such data collection with each individual site. You can opt out of cookies for several ad servers by visiting the Network Advertising Initiative gateway opt-out site. At that site you can also review the privacy policies of those ad servers.

Protecting your privacy
Whether you are visiting theChampions of Wellness site or working with one of our team members, we use reasonable security measures to protect the confidentiality of personal information under our control and appropriately limit access to it. Champions of Wellness cannot ensure or warrant the security of any information you transmit to us, and you do so at your own risk. We have taken reasonable steps to ensure the integrity and confidentiality of the personal information that you may provide. You should understand, however, that electronic transmissions via the Internet are not necessarily secure from interception, and so we cannot 100% guarantee the security or confidentiality of such transmissions.

If you reached this site via an ad from Champions of Wellness
If you come to a Champions of Wellness website via a Champions of Wellness advertisement, the ad may have been served to you based on your interests or selected for you based on your browsing activities.

Protecting children's privacy
We are committed to protecting children's privacy on the Internet, and we do not knowingly collect any personal information from children.

Links to other websites
Our websites link to client websites, many of which have their own privacy policies. Be sure to review the privacy policy on the site you're visiting.

Privacy policy updates
We may need to update our privacy policy as technology changes and Champions of Wellness evolves. If we make significant changes to this privacy policy, we'll update it here.

This policy was last updated in August 2021.
Shopping Cart
Close
  • No products in the cart.
Your cart is currently empty.
Please add some products to your shopping cart before proceeding to checkout.
Browse our shop categories to discover new arrivals and special offers.