The case against work friends: The office has changed. Maybe it’s time our relationships do too
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Spurred by the pandemic, the workplace has changed drastically. There’s been a shift from fully in-office work to a less rigid hybrid model, team meetings that previously took place in conference rooms have moved to Zoom, and relationships between colleagues have entered a different phase as well.

Some argue that the new remote-first way of work has eroded office friendships, drastically decreasing the amount of time people spend in-person socializing and building connections. We’re used to relying on work as a crucial part of our social lives, but since the physical workplace has lost its luster, it may be worth reevaluating and redefining the role colleagues play in our lives and reconsider whether intimate relationships with coworkers are as beneficial as we’ve been led to believe.

That change already seems to be accelerating. Just two in 10 respondents to a 2022 Gallup poll said they have a best friend at work, representing a three percentage point drop compared to 2019. There’s admittedly a case to be made for work friends because humans are social creatures. The average person spends more than 81,000 hours, or nine years, at work, according to Gallup. That tracks with the roughly 90,000 hours author Jessica Pryce-Jones calculated in her 2010 book Happiness at Work. It’s no wonder, then, that the office has been the No. 1 place Americans make friends, surpassing school, church, and neighborhood haunts, according to the Survey Center on American Life.

But, there are potential downsides to work friendships, as well, and they can bring unnecessary complexities to the workforce. Work friendships can create an us vs. them mentalityencourage gossipping and drama, lead organizations to misread loyalty to a close colleague as loyalty to the company, hinder career mobility, and cause companies to rely on interpersonal connections for employee job satisfaction rather than improve office environments, according to workplace experts and organizational psychologists Fortune spoke to and years of research.

What’s more, we’re spending less time working than before the pandemic, further supporting the argument that we need to look beyond the office for deep social connection. The number of hours people spent working fell by the equivalent of 33 hours a year per person between 2019 and 2022, according to the National Bureau of Economic Research. “It's a good thing for people to refigure out their relationship with work because we work like crazy in the United States,” says Jeff Hall, a professor of communication studies at the University of Kansas, where he focuses on relationships and social interaction. But doing so, he says, means acknowledging the impact decentralized work could have on loneliness.