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Financial Wellbeing Report 2025 reveals silent workplace crisis

Findings from Zellis suggests financial pressure is eroding the UK and Irish workforce, with 92 per cent of employees reporting financial stress in the past year. Launched today by Zellis, the UK and Ireland provider of HR, pay, workforce management (WFM), and benefits solutions, the Financial Wellbeing Report 2025 underlines the growing need for employers to treat financial wellbeing as a core part of their duty of care.

For too long, employers have treated financial wellbeing as a ‘perk’ or ‘add-on’. However, the report shows that employee financial resilience is critical for both employee wellbeing and in turn, business growth. Business leaders are also feeling the strain, with only 12 per cent saying they are unaffected by money worries.

Financial stress is not just a personal issue, it’s a workplace issue. Zellis’ survey of 2,500 employees and 500 business leaders in the UK and Ireland found that 89 per cent of respondents say their working lives have suffered as a result of financial stress.

The Financial Wellbeing Report comes swiftly after the government’s Financial Inclusion Strategy, which includes measures such as making financial education compulsory in English primary schools and the promotion of payroll saving schemes.

As the review explains, employers are uniquely placed to make a difference to the health and wellbeing of their employees. Zellis research shows that financial resilience is crucial to an employee’s overall wellbeing and organisations have a responsibility to cater to people’s financial needs. Tools that support employee financial wellbeing and help improve financial literacy are fundamental.

The Zellis report found that among those who have access to financial wellbeing tools and use them at least weekly, financial stress is lower.

“The cost-of-living crisis has not only exposed the fragility of employee household finances but has also laid bare the limitations of traditional employer support,” Gethin Nadin, Chief Innovation Officer, Zellis comments. “Despite the data, headlines, and lived experiences of millions of UK and Irish employees, too many organisations remain on the sidelines. But financial wellbeing of employees is no longer a peripheral concern – it is a business-critical imperative. This report shows employers must act not just out of compassion, but out of necessity for their own survival.”

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