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    Home » Is Workplace Stress Fueling a Therapy Boom in London?
    Mental Health

    Is Workplace Stress Fueling a Therapy Boom in London?

    By Jack WardApril 29, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    You’ll notice something every weekday at around 6:45 p.m. when you walk past a Pret near Liverpool Street. Suit-clad individuals aren’t quite running to the Tube these days. They are staring at their phones as if they are preparing for something while standing outside with a half-finished flat white in hand. A delayed Slack message. A director who hasn’t logged off sent a “quick” email. The corpse is located in the city. The position hasn’t let go yet.

    Drama is not what this is. This is the new standard. Additionally, it appears in the capital’s therapists’ schedules. Practices in Marylebone, Borough, and Hackney are all reporting the same thing, albeit in slightly different terms: a clear common thread of work, more clients, and younger clients.

    Instant Offices ranked London as the world’s most burned-out city in 2025, surpassing Melbourne, Singapore, and New York. The statistic that keeps coming up is that 91% of British adults reported experiencing “high or extreme” stress at least once in the previous year. Nine times out of ten. That is not a problem on the periphery. By default, that is the case.

    Everyone who works here is familiar with the triggers. Heavy workloads that extend into the night. Unpaid overtime is viewed as a moral litmus test. In a market where layoffs are now a quarterly occurrence, job security is in jeopardy. Then there’s the city itself: a commute that takes an hour at each end, rents that eat up the majority of a salary before payday, and a culture that may be exclusive to London where admitting you’re exhausted feels like you can’t do it. Speaking with people in the tech and finance industries gives me the impression that burnout is sometimes worn as a subtle badge of success. Until it isn’t.

    Is Workplace Stress Fueling a Therapy Boom in London

    In response, the therapeutic component of the equation has grown. The framing has changed, and specialty clinics are now openly promoting “burnout therapy” as a distinct category from general stress counseling. Teaching someone to breathe through a challenging situation is no longer the goal. It involves assisting a 32-year-old consultant in regaining functioning following months of 12-hour workdays. According to therapists I’ve spoken to, clients’ preferred language has also evolved. It was common to discuss being “stressed” in the past. “Fried,” “depleted,” and “running on fumes” are now used. Eventually, the body maintains a tally.

    To be fair, employers have begun to move, though it’s debatable if they’re doing so quickly enough. These days, a lot of London businesses provide employee assistance programs, virtual therapy through apps, mindfulness classes, and more. For a long time, McKinsey’s Health Institute has maintained that the most effective interventions aren’t bolted-on benefits but rather dull structural ones, such as manageable workloads, autonomy, and leadership that clearly turns off. The majority of businesses still prefer the benefits. The benefits might be partially deceptive because it’s simpler to pay for a meditation subscription than to deal with the workload that required it.

    A more subtle cultural change is also noteworthy. Saying “I’m seeing someone” is no longer as stigmatized, especially among younger Londoners. According to Mental Health UK’s Burnout Report 2026, 39% of people aged 18 to 24 reported taking time off for mental health problems brought on by stress. For a generation that is just a few years into their careers, that is a startling figure. Depending on how you interpret it, the fact that they are entering therapy earlier—sometimes proactively—is either a positive sign compared to older cohorts or a concerning one.

    It’s difficult not to question whether the therapy boom is treating the symptom while the cause continues to change after seeing this develop over the past few years. The goal of hybrid working was to reduce stress. Rather, it completely blurred the distinction between a desk and a sofa for many. Instead of ringing less, the phones ring later. London’s therapists will likely remain this busy until something changes in the work model itself, which is a much more difficult request than providing an app. Silently, Tuesday by Tuesday, gathering what the office neglected.

    Workplace Stress and Therapy
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    Jack Ward
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    Jack Ward contributes to Private Therapy Clinics as a writer. He creates content that enables readers to take significant actions toward emotional wellbeing because he is passionate about making psychological concepts relevant, practical, and easy to understand.

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