5.5 to 6 Days of Work: Is It Time to Seriously Change?

5.5 to 6 Days of Work: Is It Time to Seriously Change?

Thailand ranks 3rd globally for longest working hours — yet productivity per hour tells a very different story.

Nearly 46.7% of Thai workers exceed 48 hours per week. Thailand ranks 96th out of 100 countries for work-life balance.

3rd

Longest working hours

46.7%

Workers exceed 48h/week

96th

Work-life balance ranking

+40%

Productivity gain in trials

The Thailand Reality

Across many Thai industries the standard is still 5.5–6 working days. Saturday work remains common and long evening hours are culturally normalized.
Thailand
46.7%
South Korea
38.1%
Japan
28.3%
Singapore
24.1%
Germany
8%

The 100-80-100 Model

100%
80%
100%

100% pay — 80% hours — 100% productivity.

Real-World Case Studies

Microsoft Japan tested a four-day workweek and saw productivity rise by 39.9%. Similar trials across Iceland and Europe show improved wellbeing without productivity loss.
“The majority of the Thai workforce already experiences burnout symptoms. The cost of replacing burned-out employees often exceeds the cost of prevention.”

Why This Matters for Thailand

Current Reality

  • Saturday work culture
  • Presenteeism
  • High burnout
  • Talent attrition

Redesigned Model

  • Output-driven culture
  • Flexible working models
  • Higher retention
  • Competitive talent attraction

A Practical Roadmap

Phase 1 — Audit

Measure real working hours and identify inefficiencies.

Phase 2 — Pilot

Start with one team and remove Saturday work.

Phase 3 — Scale

Use pilot data to expand across the organization.
N

Nina Phinnipha Suriyong

Founder of APlus Career. Executive search and talent strategy leader across Thailand and Southeast Asia.