Is My Burnout Bad Enough to Take Leave?

March 9, 2026

If you're asking the question, you already know the answer. Here's what to do next.

The question underneath the question


This is the question that comes up more than almost any other. Not "am I burnt out", most people asking already know the answer to that. The real question underneath it is: do I deserve to stop? The answer is yes. But it rarely feels that simple.



Most people have been conditioned to push through. To treat exhaustion as a badge of commitment. To believe that taking leave means failing, that if they were stronger, more organised, more resilient, they wouldn't need it. That thinking is everywhere, and it's wrong. Burnout is not a character flaw. It's what happens when the demands placed on a person exceed their capacity to recover, over and over again, for too long.


The signs you've gone past "just tired"


There's no universal threshold, but there are patterns worth paying attention to. Exhaustion that sleep and weekends no longer fix. A lost connection to work that used to feel meaningful, or worse, to people who matter. Mistakes that wouldn't normally happen, difficulty concentrating, or a constant low-grade dread. Physical symptoms, headaches, chest tightness, stomach problems, jaw clenching, that a doctor has linked to stress.


Anyone nodding along to most of those has gone past the point of "just being tired." And here's what matters: nobody needs to collapse before they're allowed to rest. Taking leave at the warning-sign stage is not giving up. It's the single most effective thing a person can do to prevent a much longer and more difficult recovery later.


What leave actually looks like


A GP can certify stress leave. If the burnout is being caused or significantly worsened by work, the hours, the pressure, the environment, the way someone is being treated, they may also be eligible for workers' compensation, which can cover medical expenses and a portion of income during recovery.


The fears are real and so is the cost of waiting


The fears are predictable because they're universal. What will people think? Will the job still be there? Will they be seen as someone who couldn't handle it? Those worries are valid, and pretending they don't exist helps no one. Too many people wait until they're in crisis, until the anxiety becomes a panic disorder, until the insomnia becomes medication-dependent, until a relationship breaks down, because they kept asking themselves if it was bad enough yet. If someone is asking the question, it's bad enough.



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