Workplace misconduct has reached its highest level in nearly 7 years, and the numbers should make every executive pay attention. A landmark 2025 report from HR Acuity lays out a harsh reality for companies across the United States.
According to the survey, 55% of employees witnessed misconduct, up sharply from 41% the prior year. That’s not just a compliance headache. It’s a direct threat to productivity, employee retention, and the bottom line. Turnover driven by toxic cultures has cost businesses an estimated $223 billion over five years, according to SHRM. If you’re a CEO still treating workplace culture as a “soft” initiative, those numbers should recalibrate your thinking fast.
The State of Workplace Misconduct in 2025: A Closer Look at the Data
Getting a handle on what’s actually happening requires more than scanning headlines. The HR Acuity survey gathered responses from more than 2,000 U.S. employees, revealing a layered picture for executives and HR leaders alike. Yes, allegations are climbing. But so is employee willingness to speak up, which creates a genuine opening for organizations willing to act on it.
A Troubling Surge in Allegations
Here’s the number that stops most people: 55% of employees encountered misconduct in 2025, nearly matching the 2019 peak of 56%. That jump signals that inappropriate behaviors, from harassment to outright discrimination, are either becoming more common or more visible. Probably a bit of both.
There is a silver lining, though. According to the report summary, investigation and resolution rates have also hit record levels. So more problems are surfacing, but they’re being addressed more frequently. For leaders, that’s a nuanced situation: you can’t celebrate the reporting increases without also owning the conditions that created the misconduct in the first place.
The Hybrid Work Paradox
Today’s workplace is a patchwork of in-office, remote, and hybrid setups, and that mix has created a surprising gap in how misconduct gets reported. The survey found that 67% of misconduct occurs in a physical office. Yet employees who work in that setting are, somewhat paradoxically, less likely to report it. Only 76% of in-office workers file reports, compared with 86% of their remote colleagues.
Why the gap? Physical proximity to an aggressor likely creates social pressure and a sharper fear of immediate retaliation. Think about it: if you sit three desks away from the person you’re reporting to, the stakes of speaking up feel far more immediate than they do from your home office. The distance afforded by remote work seems to function almost like a safety buffer, making people more comfortable coming forward.
| Work Environment | Where Misconduct Occurs | Reporting Rate | Key Takeaway for Leaders |
|---|---|---|---|
| In-Office | 67% of all incidents | 76% | Higher incident rates, lower reporting; likely driven by fear of retaliation or lack of psychological safety |
| Remote | Not specified as primary location | 86% | Greater reporting confidence, possibly due to distance from aggressor and reliance on documented digital communication |
Allegations Are Growing More Complex
On top of rising volume, HR teams are now facing more intricate investigations than they’ve seen in years. A growing share of cases involves multiple issue types. Picture an allegation of harassment that also ties into claims of discrimination and retaliation, all wrapped up in a single complaint. According to HR Acuity’s findings, this kind of multi-layered complexity increases legal exposure and demands more sophisticated investigative skills. For underprepared HR departments (and that includes more organizations than you’d expect), the liability risk is real and growing.
Steps Executives Should Take to Build a Culture of Safety
Leadership doesn’t just influence workplace culture; it defines it. Poor management is one of the strongest predictors of employee distress and attrition. Research shows that 56% of employees left over a manager, while workplace stress connected to poor leadership affects the mental health of 76% of the workforce. So what can executives actually do about the rise in misconduct? Here are four moves worth prioritizing.
- Fortify and promote reporting channels: A simple open-door policy doesn’t cut it anymore. Companies need to implement confidential, anonymous reporting tools (such as NAVEX or EthicsPoint) and ensure every employee knows how to access them. This matters especially for hourly and in-office staff, since data show that only 63% of hourly workers report concerns about misconduct, and even fewer of those allegations are investigated.
- Modernize anti-harassment training: Generic modules that haven’t been updated since 2018 won’t move the needle in a hybrid environment. Training should address misconduct across platforms, including Slack messages, Zoom calls, and in-person interactions. A modern curriculum should focus on practical skills such as bystander intervention and clarify the specific responsibilities supervisors have in preventing and addressing harassment.
- Lead with empathy and accountability: A positive workplace culture is established from the top down. Executives and senior leaders need to consistently model respectful behavior and hold all managers accountable for their conduct. Given that 61% of workplace bullies are supervisors, a zero-tolerance policy for leadership misconduct isn’t optional; it’s the foundation for building trust across the organization.
- Use people analytics to spot patterns early: Organizations should be pulling anonymized data from exit interviews, engagement surveys (tools like Qualtrics, Culture Amp, or Lattice can help here), and HR case management systems to identify hotspots. That data can reveal which departments, teams, or specific managers have recurring issues. Proactively addressing those patterns can prevent problems from escalating into lawsuits or PR crises.
A Practical Guide for Employees Facing a Hostile Workplace
While leadership holds the primary responsibility for building a safe environment, employees who experience or witness harassment shouldn’t have to wait around for the culture to change. You can take clear, practical steps right now to protect yourself and push toward a resolution. Sound familiar? You’re not alone, and knowing how to respond is the first step toward reclaiming a sense of control.
Document Everything and Review Your Company’s Policy
If you experience an incident, the most important first action is to create a detailed, private record of what happened. Your log should include the date, time, location, a description of what was said or done, and the names of any witnesses. Think of this as building your own evidence file, because that’s exactly what it becomes if the situation escalates. After documenting, locate and review your company’s employee handbook to understand the formal procedure for filing a complaint with HR or management. Don’t skip this step; the process details matter more than you’d think.
Navigating the Reporting Process
When you’re ready to report, submit a formal written complaint, ideally by email, to create a clear paper trail. Your complaint should be factual, professional, and focused on specific details without speculation or editorializing. Stick to what happened, when it happened, and who was involved. And here’s something important to remember: reporting harassment is a legally protected activity. Any form of retaliation from your employer for making a good-faith complaint is illegal, full stop.
When the Problem Is Your Manager
The situation gets considerably more complicated when the harasser is someone above you in the chain of command. Unfortunately, that’s a distressingly common scenario.
According to a Harris Poll survey, approximately 60% of employees report working under a toxic manager. Ask anyone who’s been in that position, and they’ll tell you it feels like the system is designed to protect the person causing the problem, not the person reporting it.
When dealing with a toxic supervisor, it is essential for workers to accurately identify the particular statutory protections and legal remedies available to them. In states like California, for example, employers can be held strictly liable when a manager is the harasser, meaning the company may be on the hook even if it claims it didn’t know about the conduct. Knowing your rights around documentation, anti-retaliation protections, and the higher standard of accountability for supervisors gives you a real foundation for seeking a resolution.
Forging a More Respectful and Resilient Workplace
The latest data paints a troubling picture, but there’s a meaningful upside buried in the numbers. The parallel rise in reporting confidence signals that employees are less willing to stay silent and are increasingly demanding safer, more respectful work environments. That’s progress, even if it doesn’t feel like it yet.
Getting there requires a dual commitment. Leaders need to build systems that are genuinely accountable (not just policies that look good in a handbook), and employees need to feel empowered and protected enough to actually use them. A respectful workplace isn’t a perk anymore. It’s a fundamental pillar of any modern, profitable, and resilient business.

