20 questions assessing your level of burnout across emotional exhaustion, detachment and personal accomplishment.
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Burnout is reversible, especially when caught early. Here are five steps to recover your energy and protect yourself from sliding back.
Take a high result as permission to take your depletion seriously, not as one more thing to push through. That shift is where recovery begins.
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Burnout is not simply being tired after a hard week. It is a state of deep physical, emotional, and mental exhaustion brought on by prolonged, unrelenting stress, most often connected to work but increasingly to caregiving and the demands of everyday life. Burnout creeps in gradually, which is part of what makes it so insidious; by the time many people recognise it, they are already deep inside it. This free burnout test helps you recognise the warning signs early, while they are still reversible, rather than after they have hardened into something far harder to climb out of. Understanding where you stand is the first move toward protecting your energy and rebuilding what chronic stress has worn away.
Researchers describe burnout as having three core components. The first is exhaustion, a bone-deep depletion that sleep no longer seems to fix. The second is cynicism or detachment, a growing emotional distance from your work, your colleagues, or the people you care for, often expressed as irritability, numbness, or a loss of the meaning you once found. The third is a reduced sense of accomplishment, the nagging feeling that nothing you do matters or makes a difference. You can experience these to different degrees, and recognising which dimension is most pronounced for you helps clarify what is happening and what kind of recovery you need. Someone whose exhaustion dominates needs rest; someone whose cynicism dominates may need to reconnect with purpose.
Burnout rarely arrives overnight. It develops along a predictable arc that often begins, paradoxically, with high engagement and enthusiasm. Driven people pour themselves into their work, neglect their own needs, and push through the early warning signs because they care and because stopping feels like failing. Fatigue sets in, then resentment, then a creeping detachment, until eventually the well runs dry. Because each stage shades gradually into the next, many people do not notice how far they have slipped until they are deep in it. The chronic mismatch between demands and resources, too much workload, too little control, insufficient reward, recognition, or support, is what drives this slow slide. It is a problem of conditions as much as of individuals.
Untreated burnout does not stay neatly contained within working hours. It spills into the rest of life, flattening your enthusiasm for hobbies, straining relationships, and disrupting sleep and physical health. It is associated with a weakened immune system, increased risk of depression and anxiety, and a pervasive sense that you are running on empty with nothing left to give. Burnout also tends to undermine the very performance it grew out of, creating a vicious cycle in which you work harder and accomplish less, which fuels more self-criticism and more effort. Recognising it is not an admission of weakness; it is an accurate reading of a system that has been asked to give more than it can sustainably provide.
Recovery from burnout requires more than a weekend off. It usually calls for genuine changes to the conditions that produced it: reducing or redistributing workload, reclaiming a sense of control, setting firmer boundaries, and rebuilding the recovery time that disappeared. Equally important is reconnecting with meaning and with the people and activities that replenish you. For many, this is also a moment to reassess priorities and to question the beliefs, that rest must be earned, that worth equals output, that saying no is letting people down, that fuelled the burnout in the first place. With time, support, and structural change rather than sheer willpower, energy and engagement can genuinely return.
Once you have recovered, the goal becomes building a way of living and working that does not quietly refill the same trap. That means treating recovery as part of the cycle rather than an afterthought, building regular breaks, boundaries, and replenishing activities into ordinary weeks rather than waiting for a crisis. It helps to watch for your personal early-warning signs, the first hints of cynicism or dread, and to respond to them as information rather than pushing through. Sustainable effort is not about working less for its own sake; it is about pacing yourself so that your engagement can last. The people who avoid repeated burnout are usually those who have learned that protecting their energy is not selfish but essential to doing good work over the long run.
Your score indicates how close you may be to burnout right now. A lower score suggests you are coping and recovering reasonably well, with enough in reserve to meet your demands. A moderate score is an early-warning signal worth heeding before exhaustion deepens and detachment sets in. A higher score suggests significant burnout that deserves real attention, not just rest but changes to the demands and supports in your life, and possibly a conversation with a professional. Treat a high result as permission to take your depletion seriously rather than as one more thing to push through; doing so is what makes recovery possible.