Updated
Updated · theshout.com.au · Jul 1
Australian Hospitality Workers Top Happiness at 82.91% as ACT Jumps to 85.28%
Updated
Updated · theshout.com.au · Jul 1

Australian Hospitality Workers Top Happiness at 82.91% as ACT Jumps to 85.28%

1 articles · Updated · theshout.com.au · Jul 1

Summary

  • Deputy’s 2026 Shift Pulse Report found 82.91% of Australian hospitality workers finish shifts feeling good or great, the highest rate among four major frontline industries.
  • More than 1 million anonymous end-of-shift surveys collected from May 2025 to April 2026 showed cafes at 85.77% and bars at 83.11%, with hospitality sub-sectors taking five of the national top 10 happiest shift jobs.
  • Pressure still runs high: 6.44% of hospitality workers ended shifts stressed or frustrated, the second-highest negative sentiment after retail, as late nights, labour shortages, customer-facing strain and unstable rosters weigh on staff.
  • The ACT posted the sharpest turnaround, rising from last place in 2025 to Australia’s happiest jurisdiction in 2026 at 85.28%, while recording the second-lowest unhappiness rate at 4.34%.
  • Across generations, overall frontline happiness stood at 81.14%; Generation Alpha led at 87.23%, while Gen Z combined 83.95% happiness with the highest unhappiness rate at 6.32%, highlighting cost-of-living and scheduling strains.

Insights

Why are the happiest young workers also the most likely to quit, and what does this mean for hospitality's future?
With hospitality workers both happy and stressed, can AI fix their burnout without killing the industry's human touch?
Is a $3.8B turnover crisis caused by bad schedules, or is it a symptom of hospitality's deeper wage problem?