The vast majority of the global workforce does not sit behind a desk. Warehouse staff, retail employees, healthcare workers, truck drivers, and construction teams make up roughly 80% of workers worldwide. Yet new research suggests these essential employees are also among the most financially vulnerable—and the consequences extend well beyond their personal lives.
A new study from Financial Finesse’s Think Tank estimates that financial stress among deskless employees costs employers approximately $28.9 million annually per 10,000 workers. The losses stem from reduced productivity, higher turnover, workplace incidents, and benefits that employees cannot effectively access or use.
Financial concerns are already a major workplace distraction, with workers spending an estimated 150 hours each year dealing with personal money issues. The burden is even greater for deskless employees. Nearly 44% reported high or overwhelming financial stress when entering a financial wellness program, compared with 37% of desk-based workers. Only 14% were considered financially resilient, compared with 17% of office workers.
Global labor data also shows deskless employees are more likely to work irregular schedules, hold temporary positions, and have less access to training and social protections, creating additional financial instability.
A Benefits Gap That Leaves Millions Behind
Many employers already provide financial wellness resources, but traditional delivery methods often fail to reach workers who spend their days on hospital floors, construction sites, retail shifts, or behind the wheel.
Unlike office employees who can easily join a webinar or browse company resources during the workday, deskless workers often require mobile-friendly tools, flexible scheduling, and communication methods designed around shifts and unpredictable hours.
The gap is not a lack of interest. In fact, research suggests deskless employees can make faster financial improvements than their office-based counterparts when support is accessible.
Among participants actively using workplace financial wellness programs, 41% of deskless workers who initially struggled financially reached the milestone of living within their means, compared with 30% of desk-based employees. Their financial resilience also increased by 113%, outperforming the 95% improvement seen among office workers.
Financial Wellbeing Is Becoming a Workforce Strategy
Financial stress does more than affect morale. Research involving more than 1,000 truck drivers found that financial worries were a stronger predictor of preventable accidents than factors such as fatigue or job tenure, highlighting how money concerns can interfere with attention and decision-making in safety-sensitive roles.
For employers, the findings point to a larger workplace challenge: benefits designed around office routines often overlook the majority of the workforce.
As organizations face ongoing labor shortages and retention challenges, improving access to financial support may represent an overlooked opportunity. Mobile access, text-based communication, and enrollment options that accommodate shift work are emerging as practical ways to reach deskless employees.
The future of workplace benefits may depend less on offering more programs and more on ensuring the workers who need them most can actually use them.














