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14.8 Hours Weekly Meeting Average

Research showing average professionals spend 14.8 hours per week in meetings, representing 37% of a 40-hour work week. Critical context for understanding why focus time is scarce and why morning time blocks must be protected before meetings consume the day.

Last updated: 2026-03-19 14:40

Overview

Research shows that the average professional spends 14.8 hours per week in meetings—37% of a standard 40-hour work week. This statistic explains why focused work time is so scarce and highlights the importance of protecting time blocks for deep work.

The Meeting Problem

Time Breakdown

In a 40-hour week:

Impact on Focus Time

Why Morning Protection Matters

Meeting Creep

The Best Energy Window argument

Organizational Patterns

Meeting-Heavy Roles

Meeting Inflation

Time Blocking as Defense

Morning Focus Blocks

No-Meeting Policies

Reducing Meeting Time

Meeting Hygiene

Recovery Strategies

Team leaders discovering 30% of time in non-essential meetings:

Individual Strategies

Calendar Management

  1. Block focus time first: Before meetings fill calendar
  2. Decline strategically: Not all meetings require attendance
  3. Suggest alternatives: "Can we handle this async?"
  4. Batch meetings: Cluster together to preserve blocks
  5. End early: Don't fill allocated time if unnecessary

Communication

The Math of Recovery

Scenario 1: Reduce to 10 hours/week

Scenario 2: Protect morning hours

Key Takeaway

The 14.8 hours spent weekly in meetings explains why focus time is precious. Protect morning hours (9-11 AM) before meetings consume them, as this is when most people have peak cognitive performance. Without intentional calendar defense, meetings will expand to fill all available time, leaving only fragments for deep work.

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