There’s a misconception that remote workers are on such a flexible schedule it’s like a vacation every day, but that could be further from the truth.
A recent CNBC article noted that Gen-Z and millennial remote workers are so reluctant to use their allotted PTO for fear of losing their jobs or using up valuable personal time that they’ve started “Quiet Vacationing.”
Millennial and Gen-Z remote workers are reluctant to use PTO but are still ‘quiet vacationing’ to maintain a work-life balance.
Instead of waiting to accrue PTO or asking their boss for time away, Gen-Z and millennial workers are just taking vacations while on the clock — at least, according to a 2023 Harris Poll.
Dubbed “quiet vacationing,” these young employees can be found lounging poolside with their laptops or simply resting intermittently in their home office, “mouse jiggling” to stay active.
One in three remote workers travels frequently while still doing their job, working from domestic and international destinations that suit their personal lives and hobbies. But is this kind of behavior frowned upon? Isn’t that why most people seek remote jobs?
Remote job perks give employees the freedom to work from anywhere, whether that means their backyard, bed, or Budapest. As long as they get their work done, is it truly “quiet” or “secret” vacationing because they’re not in a specified home office?
Many remote workers don’t take PTO because they feel employers frown upon it. Instead, they take ‘quiet vacations’ for breaks, travel, and rest.
“You will not be shaming and guilting us back into the old ways of working,” millennial burnout expert Peter Guse shared on TikTok. “First of all, millennials are trying to create a smidge of work-life balance in their lives … they’re saying, ‘We won’t be able to retire, why not go to the pretty places now and still work and get our jobs done,’ only for it to be called quiet vacationing.”