Burnout Readiness Check Calculator

Know your limits before they impact performance seriously. Answer quick prompts, then see readiness instantly. Use the suggestions to plan a calmer career path.

Calculator

Include meetings, commute work, and after-hours tasks.
Most adults do best around 7–9 hours.
1 = calm, 10 = overwhelming pressure.
Days with genuine downtime and no heavy effort.
How much choice you have over decisions and pace.
Manager, peers, and resources you can rely on.
Connection between your work and what matters to you.
Any movement: walks, gym, sports, or chores.
Short resets, not scrolling sessions.
Recent symptoms (last two weeks)
This tool is educational, not a diagnosis.
Reset

Formula used

This calculator converts each factor into a 0–100 subscore, where higher means healthier readiness. The overall readiness score is a weighted average:

Overall Readiness = Σ( Subscorei × Weighti ) ÷ 100

Workload, sleep, and stress carry the most weight. Symptoms reduce readiness by lowering the symptoms subscore. Bands: 80–100 strong, 60–79 caution, 40–59 high strain, below 40 at-risk.

How to use this calculator

  1. Enter your typical week values, not a one-off day.
  2. Check any symptoms you’ve noticed in the last two weeks.
  3. Submit to see the overall score, strengths, and watchouts.
  4. Apply one or two actions from the recommendations first.
  5. Re-check weekly to see whether changes improve readiness.

Example data table

ScenarioHoursSleepStressRecoveryControlSupportMeaningActivityBreaksSymptomsReadinessBand
Balanced week407.8427781603183.2Strong readiness
Crunch period556.280456601443.8High strain
Recovery rebuild457.2626671402269.4Caution zone

FAQs

1) Is this a medical diagnosis?

No. It estimates readiness based on common risk factors. If symptoms feel intense or persistent, consider speaking with a qualified health professional.

2) How often should I check my readiness?

Weekly works well. Use the same day and similar conditions. Small changes become easier to spot when you track trends consistently.

3) Why do workload, sleep, and stress matter most?

They strongly influence energy, recovery, mood, and performance. When these drift for weeks, other supports often cannot fully offset the strain.

4) What score should trigger action?

Below 60 suggests you should adjust something now. Below 40 suggests urgent recovery steps and support. The recommendations point to the lowest areas first.

5) Can I use this for a team?

You can, but keep it voluntary and anonymous. The goal is better work design, not judgment. Focus on workload patterns, recovery time, and support systems.

6) What if I cannot reduce my hours?

Protect sleep, schedule downtime, and increase micro-breaks. Also negotiate scope, deadlines, or meeting load. Even small changes can raise readiness.

7) Why include symptoms?

Symptoms indicate how your body and mind are responding. They do not prove burnout, but repeated symptoms are a strong signal to pause and recover.

Related Calculators

Burnout Risk ScoreWork Burnout IndexEmployee Burnout CheckStress Burnout CalculatorJob Burnout RiskBurnout Level EstimatorWork Stress IndexBurnout Severity ScaleMental Exhaustion IndexWork Fatigue Score

Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.