More than 2 in 5 (43%) employees say a lack of time is the biggest thing standing between them and mental health care, while 42% say cost. Mental Health Awareness Month is this month, and it is a moment for employers to stop treating mental health as a communications campaign and start treating it as an operating problem to solve.
The five realities below come from Spring Health's HR and employee research in publishing its 2026 Workplace Mental Health Annual Report. Each one closes with action items employers can run within a single quarter.
Across every age demographic, employees treat mental health support as a factor in where they work. In fact, 69% of the employees surveyed said mental health benefits play a vital role in their job decisions. For 18-to-34-year-olds and 35-to-44-year-olds, those numbers are even higher: 83% and 78%, respectively.
That is a hiring and retention reality, not a wellness initiative. Workers will choose, stay at, and leave employers based on whether the benefit feels real to them.
What to do this quarter:
Spring Health’s 2026 employee research found four key ways AI anxiety affects employees: information overload (24%), a reduced sense of control over the future (23%), increased financial stability concerns (20%), and worsened job-related and work-life stress (19%).
The anxiety is not abstract. Employees are being asked to adopt AI inside their daily work without a clear answer to the question, "What does this mean for my role?"
What to do this quarter:
Even when employees have mental health benefits, they don't always use them. The reasons employees give in Spring Health's 2026 research are practical: 43% cite a lack of time, 42% cite cost, 30% cite difficulty finding the right provider, 29% cite wait times, and 27% cite stigma around receiving help.
That stack of barriers is the single biggest reason a generous benefit can still produce low engagement.
What to do this quarter:
About 3 in 5 (59%) employees we surveyed said their financial stress has increased over the past five years, and nearly three-quarters (74%) said financial stress has impacted their mental health.
Employees who don’t have adequate mental health benefits from their employers are 52% more likely to experience financial stress than people with employer-provided resources.
That shows up at work as lost productivity at best, and turnover at worst. Treating financial stress as a separate problem from mental health misses how the two reinforce each other.
What to do this quarter:
Spring Health’s 2026 employee research shows that women are 17% more likely than men to say they’re currently experiencing burnout. Women are also 7% more likely than men to cite cost as a barrier to mental healthcare.
Men, meanwhile, have more trouble accessing and embracing mental health care. They’re 28% more likely to cite privacy concerns as a barrier to care, 32% more likely to feel confused about how to access care, and 42% more likely to feel held back by manager resistance or discomfort.
The headline is that chronic stress shows up differently, and a one-size benefit will miss one group or the other.
What to do this quarter:
Mental health is no longer a benefit category. It is an operating capability that affects who you hire, who stays, how productive your population is, and how prepared your workforce is for the change AI is bringing to the workplace.
If Mental Health Awareness Month is when employers commit, the rest of the year is when they prove it.
This story was produced by Spring Health and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.
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