Are Employees Job Hugging? You Make The Call

Nearly half of U.S. workers are "job hugging" - staying in their current positions for security and stability amid economic uncertainty and a cooling labor market.

A Monster.com survey of 1,004 U.S. employees found that 48 percent identify as job huggers, and 75 percent expect to remain in their current roles for at least two more years.

Respondents cited comfort, pay, and job security as primary reasons for staying put, even as they acknowledged risks such as missed opportunities for higher pay, burnout, and limited career advancement.

Many participants reported pessimism about the broader economy, pointing to rising unemployment, fewer job openings, and concerns about inflation, tariffs, and potential recession. Additional research referenced in the coverage links this trend to a "Great Freeze" in the labor market, characterized by low voluntary turnover, cautious hiring, and an emphasis on workforce stability rather than aggressive expansion.

Source: https://www.newsweek.com/nearly-half-us-workers-job-hugging-amid-economic-uncertainty-10927295

So, the question for our readers is: Are Employees Job Hugging?

Here is the opinion of some of the McCalmon editorial staff:

Jack McCalmon, Esq. 

The way the term is being used suggests that "job hugging" is a problem, but what it really describes is stability. Workers are choosing to stay where they are because the job delivers on three fundamentals: comfort, pay and security. In a volatile economy, that combination is not a red flag. It is a sign that the employment relationship is working. When people feel reasonably paid, safe in their roles, and comfortable with their work environment, they are less likely to jump at the next offer, and that is exactly what most employers and employees say they want.

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Latest Numbers

  • Unemployment Rate
    4.3% in Jan 2026
  • Payroll Employment
    +130,000(p) in Jan 2026
  • Average Hourly Earnings
    +$0.15(p) in Jan 2026
  • Employment Cost Index (ECI)
    +0.7% in 4th Qtr of 2025
  • Productivity
    +4.9% in 3rd Qtr of 2025

Source: Department of Labor