8 Reasons Why Gen Z Is Rethinking Hustle Culture
Jun 13, 2025 • Luzy D. Dayrit
Jun 13, 2025 • Luzy D. Dayrit
Once upon a time, we all dreamed of becoming a millionaire by 25. Retire the parents. Travel the world. Balance fitness, a booming career, 100 hobbies, and a thriving social life—all while documenting it on TikTok or YouTube, of course. Influencers made it look possible: just a bit of time management, a few side hustles, and a relentless “grind” mindset.
Yeah… no. Now, a lot of people who chase that dream are burned out and just want one thing: to be mentally stable. So, Gen Z is rethinking the hustle dream and flipping the script. Some still go all in on the grind, but others are choosing rest, slower living, and maybe even surviving on the bare minimum—but romanticizing it beautifully.
So, why exactly is Gen Z shifting from hustle to healing? Here are 8 reasons to ponder:
Millennials chased what society told them was success—owning a house, a high-paying job, starting a family—but ended up overworked, underpaid, and mentally exhausted. Gen Z saw that firsthand. With inflation, a broken economy, and a pandemic in the mix, it’s no surprise that the 30s are now the new 20s. And the 20s? Basically an extension of teenage years.
Waking up at 4 AM to juggle three side hustles, a day job, and a gym session sounds impressive… until you’re eating dinner at 11 PM with a side of burnout and breakdowns. The glamorized hustle life isn’t sustainable for most. And honestly? If it works for you, amazing—but many have tried and realized it’s just not it.
Pre-pandemic, success was measured by material things: a car, a house, a stable job that pays well. But lockdown made people realize success can also mean having time—time for yourself, your hobbies, your family. Now, more Gen Zs are defining success as living life, not just surviving it or building generational wealth.
Gone are the days of glorifying busy-ness. Now it’s all about slow mornings, Pilates sessions, quiet coffee runs, skincare routines, and remote work. It’s not laziness—it’s peace. Gen Z still gets things done, just without the constant pressure to rush everything due to constant monitoring, tight deadlines, and always being present in the office when you do not need to be.
Sure, financial wealth is great. But emotional wealth? That’s priceless. Due to the rise of social media, a lot of Gen Z are choosing therapy, emotional awareness, and breaking toxic family cycles. They refuse to be stuck with the “Well, this is who I am” mindset and are actually healing their wounds instead of passing them down. Because yes, money helps—but generational peace of mind? That’s a real treasure.
Past generations followed a clear life path: graduate, get a job, buy a house, start a family. Gen Z said, “Cool story—but I want to go rock climbing, paint sunsets, and take up underwater basket weaving first.” It’s not rebellion. It’s living intentionally and refusing to let life pass by due to being in survival mode for the rest of their life.
Gen Z still hustles. They start businesses, freelance, and work 9-to-5s—sometimes all at once. But now it’s about working smart, not just hard. They set boundaries, automate what they can, and prioritize mental health. They grind, but they know when to rest too and live life and be human rather than being a robot stuck in the cubicle.
Gen Z isn’t anti-success—they just don’t idolize struggle as the only way to get what you want. They’re embracing the idea that success looks different for everyone. For some, it’s six figures, big houses, and fast cars. For others, it’s healing, peace, and learning to love and discover themselves again.
So whether you’re grinding to hit your millionaire goal or simply trying to live a calm, joy-filled life—guess what? It’s valid.
You get to define success for yourself. Create your own timeline. Strategize around your strengths. Don’t let someone else’s hustle dream become your burnout story. Live wisely. Hustle if you must. Romanticize rest when you can. Either way, this is your life—own it.
Luzy enjoys self-reflection, understanding other people’s perspectives, and observing the world around her. She loves hearing about others’ experiences, feelings, and ideas, which often inspire her writing.
Input your search keywords and press Enter.