South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Optimal number of hours you should work every day

- By Andrew Merle Fast Company

Have you ever wondered about the optimal number of hours you should work? The answer is 7.6 hours. (We’ll explain why in a moment.) But perhaps you are one of those people who brags about your 70-hour workweek. Or maybe you are on the other end of the spectrum, chasing the

4-hour workweek dream. Whatever your particular appetite for work is, know there’s plenty of evidence that putting in more hours doesn’t necessaril­y equate to higher productivi­ty. Research tells us that productivi­ty falls sharply after 50 hours per week, and drops off a cliff after 55 hours.

Additional­ly, not taking at least one full day off per week leads to lower hourly output overall.

Our nonstop lifestyle has resulted in

48% of working adults feeling rushed for time, and 52% feeling significan­t stress as a result. That’s probably why the four-hour workweek is such an enticing dream, even if it’s not entirely feasible for many of us.

So how do we get everything done without feeling like we’re in a constant relay race?

Time management expert Laura Vanderkam conducted a study to determine how the number of hours you work affects how much time you think you have.

Of the 900 people included in the study, the average person worked 8.3 hours per day. And the results showed that there was only a one-hour difference between the people who felt like they had a lot of time and those who felt time-pressured. Those who felt like they had the least time overall worked 8.6 hours, whereas those who felt like they had the most time worked just one hour less, or 7.6 hours.

So, to not feel starved for time, aim for a 7.6-hour work day. That would equate to a 38-hour workweek.

Work hours and happiness

A 38-hour workweek is remarkably similar to the number of hours worked in Denmark, consistent­ly one of the world’s happiest countries. (Denmark has placed among the top 3 happiest countries on the World Happiness Report in each of the last 8 years). People in Denmark work hard but rarely put in more than 37 hours a week, often leaving the office by 4 or 5 p.m. Other Scandinavi­an countries enjoy a similar work-life balance, and similar happiness rankings.

Happiness expert Dan Buettner takes it a step further. Buettner has reviewed the research on more than 20 million people worldwide through the Gallup-Sharecare Well-Being Index, and has conducted extensive on-the-ground research in the world’s happiest countries. “When it comes to your work, try to work part-time, 30 to 35 hours a week,” he said.

Buettner also recommends taking six weeks of vacation per year, which is the optimal amount for happiness. If that isn’t possible, he says, at the very least you should use all of your allotted vacation time and keep negotiatin­g for more until you’re getting six weeks.

Unfortunat­ely, Americans are not taking half of their vacation days, and two-thirds of Americans report working even when they are on vacation.

Maybe 30 work hours per week and six weeks of vacation is not practical for you. But that’s okay.

If you want to achieve the perfect blend of productivi­ty, happiness and time affluence, a more realistic goal is to work slightly below 40 hours per week.

The research shows that even shaving an hour or two off of the standard

40-hour workweek can have huge benefits, both at work and at home.

Less than 10% of workers are able to achieve that schedule. A good goal is to be one of those people. Here’s to the

38-hour workweek!

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