Every day, engineers and tech workers check in anonymously on Recharge. They rate their energy, stress, motivation, boundaries, and recovery. We aggregate that data in real time. Here's what 30 days of data actually looks like.
Most conversations about developer burnout are anecdotal. Someone shares their story. People nod. Nothing changes. What's been missing is data — not survey data collected once a year, but real signals tracked consistently over time.
That's what the Recharge Burnout Index is.
The overall score is 57 out of 100
A score of 57 puts the industry in elevated risk territory. It's not critical — that would be above 75 — but it's well past the moderate range. In plain terms: most engineers in our dataset are carrying more stress than they can comfortably sustain.
What makes this number meaningful is that it's not a one-time snapshot. It's a rolling 30-day average built from daily check-ins. It accounts for bad weeks and good weeks. A score of 57 means that on most days, for most engineers, burnout signals are elevated.
Recovery is the weakest signal
Across all five signals — energy, stress, motivation, boundaries, and recovery — recovery scores the lowest. This matters because recovery isn't just about sleep or weekends. It's about whether the time you spend away from work actually restores you.
When recovery is consistently low, it means rest isn't working. Engineers are taking breaks but not feeling restored by them. That's one of the clearest early indicators that burnout has moved past tiredness into something more systemic.
Engineering managers score higher than individual contributors
Managers are absorbing stress from two directions — the demands coming down from leadership and the struggles coming up from their teams. They also tend to have less visible burnout. They're expected to be stable. The data suggests they're burning out quietly.
Motivation tracks closely with stress — but with a lag
One pattern that emerges clearly over 30 days: stress spikes first, then motivation drops about a week later. By the time someone seems disengaged or demotivated, the stress that caused it has already been building for a while. The window to intervene is earlier than it looks.
The live burnout index updates every hour at rechargedaily.co/burnout-index.
Originally published at rechargedaily.co
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