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Home » The Four-Day Workweek is Officially Here – But You’ll Be Working 10-Hour Days.
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The Four-Day Workweek is Officially Here – But You’ll Be Working 10-Hour Days.

Sam AllcockBy Sam AllcockApril 3, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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The Four-Day Workweek is Officially Here, But You’ll Be Working 10-Hour Days.
The Four-Day Workweek is Officially Here, But You’ll Be Working 10-Hour Days.
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For many years, the four-day workweek was mainly a thought experiment, something that wellness advocates and economists discussed at conferences and that employees discreetly brought up during performance reviews when they felt brave enough. The trials then began. The data then appeared to be surprisingly good.

The UK conducted the biggest experiment in history, Japan’s government officially supported it, and Microsoft reported a 40% increase in productivity in its Tokyo offices following a single month of shorter weeks in 2019. The concept transitioned from aspiration to policy somewhere between the research papers and the Reddit threads. The four-day workweek is no longer a pipe dream. Now, the question that often gets lost in the announcement is what version you will actually receive.

CategoryDetails
Concept OriginRobert Owen’s labor reform advocacy, late 18th century
First Major AdopterFord Motor Company — 5-day, 40-hour week (1926)
Two Main ModelsCompressed (4×10 hours) vs. Reduced (4×8 hours / 32 hrs)
Key Global TrialUK: 70 companies, 3,300+ workers, 6-month trial (2022)
Trial Model Used100-80-100 (100% pay, 80% time, 100% productivity)
Microsoft Japan Result40% productivity boost; 92% employee preference
Countries with ProgramsJapan, New Zealand, Iceland, Belgium, Spain, UK, Ireland, Canada
US Legislative EffortRep. Mark Takano’s 32-hour workweek bill (introduced 2021)
Primary Benefit ClaimedImproved well-being, reduced burnout, higher productivity
Primary RiskCompressed hours leading to longer, more exhausting workdays
ReferenceAmerican Psychological Association — Rise of the 4-Day Workweek

At 4 p.m. on a Thursday, two different models living under the same upbeat headline feel very different. The first is the compressed workweek, which consists of four days with ten hours each, a total of forty hours, the same compensation, the same output expectations, and one fewer commute. The second is the truly shortened workweek, which consists of four days, eight hours, and a total of thirty-two hours.

The full salary is retained in exchange for a commitment to maintaining productivity. The UK’s historic 2022 trial, which involved 70 companies and over 3,000 workers, employed the 100-80-100 framework (100% of pay, 80% of the time, 100% of the results). This is the version that proponents cite when discussing the movement’s potential. However, this isn’t always the version that employers discreetly adopt when they make a big announcement about taking four days off as well.

It’s worth taking a moment to reflect on the past because it sheds light on the current controversy. In 1926, Ford Motor Company implemented a five-day, forty-hour workweek, which was a true worker concession during a period when factory shifts typically lasted ten to sixteen hours over six days. The eight-hour workday was not a gift; rather, it was a hard-won standard. One hundred years later, in exchange for a Friday off, the compressed four-day model requires employees to incorporate those improvements back into their schedules.

That is not insignificant. There is real value in a three-day weekend. However, it’s not quite the labor reform that its branding occasionally implies, and it’s important to distinguish between an employer subtly rearranging the same hours into a more enticing package and a structural change in how we view work.

The research does, however, consistently demonstrate that when businesses actually cut hours rather than compress them, something genuine is occurring. Even Microsoft’s leadership team was taken aback by the results of the company’s experiment in Japan: productivity increased by 40%, electricity consumption decreased, meeting times were shortened, and employees reported measurably higher morale. From 2015 to 2019, Iceland conducted a large-scale trial that involved roughly 1% of the nation’s workforce.

The results showed that worker well-being significantly improved and productivity was either maintained or increased. These aren’t anecdotes. They indicate that the five-day workweek is not as sacred or effective as a century of habit has made it seem, and they are documented results from controlled experiments. Whether there is organizational and political will to pursue the authentic version instead of the cosmetic one is the question.

Observing businesses enthusiastically announce four-day work weeks while covertly adding ten-hour workdays to employment contracts gives the impression that the movement is in danger of being assimilated and subdued by the very establishments it was intended to oppose. According to the Harvard Business Review, some companies have discovered that workers started working ten-hour days on their own initiative.

This was due to their anxiety about appearing productive enough to support the arrangement, so they simply compressed their current workload without being asked. That isn’t a result of wellness. In new clothes, that is the old pressure. Additionally, it raises a legitimate question about whether the culture surrounding work—such as the unspoken expectation of availability, the performance of busyness, and the anxiety about appearing insufficiently committed—can truly shift simply because the calendar does.

The nations with the strongest labor laws and the clearest legal framework regarding overtime are typically the ones that have made the most progress in preventing informal compression. The four-day system is now officially supported by Japan’s Labor Standards Act. In 2022, Belgium granted workers a legal right to a four-day workweek, albeit in a condensed format.

Rep. Mark Takano’s proposed legislation in California calls for cutting the typical workweek to 32 hours and requiring overtime compensation above that amount. This is the only way to stop compression from making up the difference. The shorter week is more of an ambition than a guarantee in the absence of such structural enforcement.

Whether American employers will embrace the movement’s aesthetics or its spirit is still up in the air. The compressed model is inexpensive and simple to use. The truly shortened week necessitates operational redesign, trust, and a readiness to acknowledge that output can continue even when hours are reduced.

It is more difficult to convince companies that still measure productivity by hours worked and presence rather than results. However, it’s the only variation of the four-day workweek that truly embodies what its name suggests. The alternative version simply indicates that your Thursdays are extremely long and your Fridays are free.

The Four-Day Workweek is Officially Here But You’ll Be Working 10-Hour Days.
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Sam Allcock
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Sam Allcock is a journalist, digital entrepreneur, and media strategist with a passion for purpose-driven storytelling. With over a decade of experience in the media landscape, Sam has built a reputation for creating impactful narratives that bridge the gap between innovation, integrity, and social responsibility. As the founder of multiple digital ventures, Sam understands the power of strategic communication in shaping public discourse. His work explores how technology, entrepreneurship, and ethical leadership intersect to create meaningful change. On Purposed.org.uk, Sam contributes thought-provoking articles that challenge conventional thinking and advocate for a more conscious approach to business and media. Beyond his writing, Sam actively supports initiatives that promote transparency, trust, and long-term value in both corporate and community settings. His insights are grounded in a belief that purpose is not just a trend, but a transformative force in today's world.

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