You’ve heard the idea thrown around. Work four days. Get paid for five. Take a three-day weekend — every weekend.
It sounds too good to be true. But what if the numbers back it up?
Across the world, thousands of real companies and employees have tested the four-day work week in structured, tracked, peer-reviewed trials. Researchers at Cambridge University, Boston College, and others have analyzed the results. The data is in — and it’s harder to ignore than ever.
This article breaks it all down. You’ll learn what the trials measured, who took part, what happened to revenue, and why governments are now paying attention.
What Is the Four-Day Work Week?
The four-day work week is simple. Employees work four days instead of five. They keep their full salary. They don’t work longer hours to make up the difference.
This is different from a “compressed schedule.” In a compressed schedule, you might work four 10-hour days. That’s still 40 hours. The four-day model cuts total working hours — usually to around 32 per week — with no pay cut.
The core idea is output over hours. You’re judged by what you produce, not how long you sit at a desk.
The Biggest Trials So Far: Who Took Part?
This wasn’t a small experiment done at one startup. These were large, multi-country programs with independent researchers tracking every detail.
The UK Pilot (2022)
The UK trial involved 61 companies and around 2,900 workers, running from June to December 2022. Researchers from the University of Cambridge and Boston College led the study. Companies ranged from small nonprofits to mid-size professional services firms.
Every participating company kept pay at 100%. Each business designed its own version of the shorter week based on its industry.
The International Six-Country Trial
A larger study tracked 2,896 employees across 141 companies in Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, the UK, and the US over six months. The results were published in Nature Human Behaviour in July 2025. A control group of 562 employees at non-participating companies was used for comparison.
Germany, Portugal, and Beyond
In 2024, 45 German companies trialed the four-day work week. The majority — 73% — were small or medium businesses. Financial performance across revenue and profit showed no significant decline compared to the year before.
4 Day Week Global has now run trials on six continents, with reports covering South America, Africa, Scandinavia, and the Asia-Pacific region.
What the Data Shows About Burnout
This is where the results get striking.
In the six-country trial, burnout decreased by 0.44 points on a five-point scale — representing a 71% reduction in burnout symptoms. Job satisfaction increased by 0.52 points.
The UK pilot found that 39% of employees reported feeling less stressed, and 71% showed reduced burnout levels by the end of the trial. Anxiety, fatigue, and sleep issues all declined. Mental and physical health both improved.
Sleep quality improved too. Employees in the trial were sleeping 16% more than before, and more than half — 55% — felt they could perform their job better with fewer hours.
The contrast is dramatic when compared to standard full-time work. A global survey of over 2,000 workers across 43 countries found that 42% of those working 40+ hours per week were experiencing burnout. Among those on a reduced-hour model like the four-day week, only 9% reported burnout.
What Happened to Company Revenue?
This is the question every business owner asks first. And it has a clear answer.
Company revenue stayed broadly the same during the UK trial — rising by 1.4% on average. When compared to a similar period from previous years, organizations reported revenue increases of 35% on average, indicating healthy growth during the period of reduced working hours.
In the US and Canadian portions of the international trial, revenue rose 8% during the trial period — a remarkable 37.55% increase compared to the previous year.
These numbers don’t suggest companies suffered. They suggest that when employees work smarter, businesses grow.
Staff retention numbers are also telling. There was a 65% reduction in sick days and a 57% fall in the number of staff leaving participating companies compared to the same period the previous year. Replacing an employee is expensive. Keeping them healthy and loyal is a revenue strategy on its own.
Actionable Steps: How Companies Made It Work
Moving to a four-day week isn’t just about removing a day from the calendar. Companies that succeeded made deliberate changes. Here’s what worked:
Cut unnecessary meetings. Most businesses that joined the trials found that a huge portion of their week was eaten up by low-value meetings. Removing even two to three recurring meetings per week freed significant time.
Set clear output targets. Employees were judged by results, not hours. Teams set weekly goals and were trusted to hit them in fewer hours. This removed the “performance theater” of looking busy.
Use time-blocking. Workers focused on deep work during the shorter week. Less multitasking, more single-task sprints.
Design it for your industry. Some companies stopped work completely for a three-day weekend, while others staggered reduced teams across the week. One restaurant calculated their 32-hour week across an entire year, with longer hours in summer and shorter ones in winter.
Involve the whole team. The trials that worked best gave employees a say in how the shorter week was structured. Buy-in from staff is essential.
Real-World Example: What Retention Looks Like
Consider B Lab U.S. & Canada, a nonprofit that adopted the four-day model in 2023. Their internal survey found that 93% of staff reported better work-life balance and reduced burnout, while 73% reported a stronger sense of autonomy. Leaders said the change prompted sharper prioritization, fewer meetings, and better focus — without sacrificing output.
This pattern repeats across industries. When workers feel trusted and rested, they protect their schedules more fiercely. They waste less time because they have less time to waste.
The Challenges: What Can Go Wrong?
The four-day work week doesn’t work perfectly for every situation. Here are the real obstacles and how to handle them:
Customer-facing roles. Businesses with weekend or evening demand need creative scheduling. The solution isn’t to deny the model — it’s to stagger shifts so coverage stays strong while individuals still benefit.
Manager resistance. Some leaders equate presence with productivity. The fix is data. Show them the trial results. Let them pilot it with one team first.
Workload creep. If the amount of work stays the same but hours drop, stress goes up. The four-day week only works when companies also reduce or streamline the workload itself.
Short-term adjustment pain. The first few weeks can feel chaotic. This is normal. Successful trial participants went through two months of preparation — including workshops, coaching, and peer mentoring — before the official trial began. Don’t rush the launch.
Government Adoption: Is This Becoming Policy?
Governments aren’t just watching. Several have stepped in directly.
Iceland ran public-sector trials from 2015 to 2019 involving 2,500 workers, which led to widespread adoption across the country. Dubai’s government reported 98% employee satisfaction in its pilot program. Tokyo introduced a four-day option to specifically encourage women’s workforce participation.
As of 2025, more than 2.7 million UK workers — nearly 11% of the entire workforce — now work four-day weeks across full-time and part-time arrangements.
The movement has crossed from experimental to mainstream.
Conclusion
The four-day work week has been tested at scale, across continents, industries, and company sizes. The results are consistent: burnout drops sharply, employees perform better, and revenue holds steady or grows.
One year after the UK trial ended, at least 89% of participating companies were still operating the four-day model. At least 51% had made it permanent.
This isn’t a perk. It’s a productivity system backed by large-scale evidence.
If you’re an employee, this data gives you a framework to advocate for yourself. If you’re a manager or business owner, it gives you a roadmap. The question is no longer whether the four-day work week works. The question is whether you’re ready to try it.
Your next step: Share this article with your team. Then ask one simple question together: “What could we stop doing that wouldn’t hurt our results?” That’s where the four-day week really begins.
FAQs
Does a four-day work week hurt company revenue?
No. Large-scale trials show revenue stays flat or rises. The UK pilot found average revenue grew by 1.4% during the trial, and US/Canada participants saw a 37.55% increase compared to the prior year. Reduced absenteeism and turnover offset any lost hours.
How much does a four-day work week reduce burnout?
Significantly. In the largest international trial, burnout dropped by 71% among participating employees. Workers on reduced-hour models are also far less likely to experience burnout than those working 40+ hours per week.
Which countries have trialed the four-day work week?
Trials have been conducted in the UK, USA, Canada, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, Germany, Portugal, Iceland, Japan (Tokyo), Dubai, South America, and several African nations. Iceland and the UK have seen the widest adoption so far.
Do employees have to work longer hours on the four days they work?
No. The four-day work week is not a compressed schedule. Employees work fewer total hours — typically around 32 per week — at the same salary. The model focuses on output, not hours at a desk.
Is the four-day work week permanent in companies that tried it?
For most, yes. In the UK trial, 92% of companies planned to continue after the pilot. One year later, 89% were still doing it and 51% had made it a permanent policy.
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