A new survey of U.S. hiring managers conducted by Sunlight suggests weight discrimination continues to influence hiring, pay, and promotion decisions across industries — raising new questions about equity as employers rethink performance and productivity in the future of work.
Hiring Decisions Shaped by Appearance
Nearly one in five managers surveyed (19%) said they are less likely to hire an overweight candidate. More than a quarter (28%) said a candidate’s weight affects their first impression, and 14% admitted offering overweight candidates less favorable job terms.
The findings suggest appearance-based bias still plays a measurable role in early-stage hiring decisions, despite growing corporate commitments to diversity and inclusion.
Certain industries report higher levels of bias. Managers in technology and software were most likely to say their company is less inclined to hire overweight candidates (36%), followed by manufacturing (33%) and finance, banking, and insurance (32%).
Pay and Promotion Gaps Extend Beyond Hiring
The disparities do not end once employees are hired. Seventeen percent of managers said they have given overweight employees smaller raises because of their weight. Fourteen percent reported being less likely to promote an overweight worker.
At a broader company level, 20% of managers said overweight employees are less likely to receive promotions, while 18% said they receive smaller raises overall. Sixteen percent said overweight employees earn less on average than their non-overweight peers.
Nearly one in four managers (23%) believe overweight employees are less likely to reach executive or leadership roles within their organizations.
Stereotypes Remain Embedded
Half of managers surveyed acknowledged holding at least one negative assumption about overweight workers. Roughly one-third associated overweight employees with lower stamina, weaker self-discipline, or reduced professionalism. Similar shares said overweight employees are taken less seriously by clients or seen as less credible leaders.
Medical experts continue to emphasize that body weight alone does not predict productivity, cognitive performance, or leadership ability.
Gender and Age Differences in Bias
The survey found disparities among managers themselves. Male managers were nearly twice as likely as female managers to say weight influences their first impression (34% versus 18%). Men were also more likely to report being less likely to hire or promote overweight employees and more likely to admit giving smaller raises.
Mid-career managers, ages 35 to 49, reported higher levels of bias than both younger and older peers, particularly regarding compensation decisions and leadership perceptions.
The Rise of GLP-1s in the Workplace
Thirty percent of managers said their company encourages employees to use GLP-1 medications for weight management.Â
Whether employer encouragement signals a health benefit expansion or introduces new forms of pressure remains unsettled, particularly as legal protections against weight discrimination remain limited in most states.
As companies redefine productivity in hybrid and performance-driven environments, the findings underscore a tension at the heart of the future of work: measurable output is increasingly digital and skills-based, yet appearance-based bias still shapes career trajectories.















