Superhuman

1,500 Total Employees
Year Founded: 2009

What's the Work-Life Balance Like at Superhuman?

Updated on June 23, 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

Workload Sustainability

Superhuman approaches workload and work-life balance through flexible work norms, intentional in-person collaboration, defined time-off programs and benefits designed to help employees manage life outside work.

  • Flexibility with structure: Superhuman describes its work model as distributed but connected, giving teams flexibility for remote focus while using hubs, on-sites and coordinated office days for collaboration. Team members can choose how often they come into the office, and some wellness benefits increase based on hub attendance, creating a model that encourages connection without making every workday office-dependent. (Superhuman Careers page
  • Time away from work: Superhuman’s benefits include 20 days of paid time off, 12 paid holidays, two floating holidays and flexible sick time. The company also provides Supercharge Sabbaticals for eligible team members: 20 paid days after five years of continuous employment and 40 paid days at 10 years and every fifth anniversary after that. The sabbatical offers a time to grow, reflect and recharge before the next phase of an employee’s Superhuman journey.
  • Benefits that reduce outside-work pressure: Superhuman’s U.S. benefits include mental health support through Modern Health, with six coaching sessions and six therapy sessions per year for full-time U.S. team members and eligible dependents. The company also subsidizes childcare through Helpr at $20 per hour for up to 96 hours per year, provides up to $4,000 annually for dependent care tied to work travel and up to $2,800 annually for pet care tied to eligible in-person travel.
  • Support from managers: Employees point to a management style that emphasizes support rather than micromanagement. A director of engineering described leadership as removing roadblocks and providing guidance so employees can do their best work, while employee reviews cite helpful managers, supportive programs and strong collaboration as workplace strengths.
  • External signals:
    • Supportive Work Environment: Employees on external review sites frequently highlight Superhuman’s work-life balance, flexible work arrangements, smart coworkers, helpful leadership, and flexible hybrid culture. (Glassdoor; Blind; Comparably)
    • Sustainable Team Environment: Reviewers describe Superhuman as supportive and people-oriented, with managers and teammates who help make the workload not only sustainable, but also enjoyable. (Glassdoor; Comparably)
    • Work-Life Balance and Flexibility: External reviews cite “great work life balance” and flexible return-to-office practices. (Glassdoor; Blind; Comparably)

Bottom line: Superhuman supports work-life balance through flexible work, defined time off, long-tenure sabbaticals, mental health resources and practical family, dependent-care benefits that help employees manage life alongside work.

Superhuman's Candidate Tradeoffs

If you’re weighing whether Superhuman is the right fit, these are the core tradeoffs to consider.

  • Superhuman places greater emphasis on organization-wide flexibility and autonomy than on tightly standardized schedules and uniform work structures.

Superhuman Employee Perspectives

Share your principle for sustainable pace — and the signal that proves it works for your team?

My principle: Push hard, restore deliberately. High-performing teams are often fueled by ambition, ownership and a strong desire to do exceptional work: But without intentional recovery, that same intensity can become difficult to sustain over time. So we don’t aim for “balance;” that word sets people up to fail. We aim for awareness — knowing when to sprint and when to recover and making both intentional.

The signal it’s working? When someone on my team takes a real lunch, goes offline for a walk, or books a vacation without a second thought and — comes back sharper. That’s how we stay in the game long-term.

 

Which policy or norm makes flexible working arrangements succeed — and how do you measure its impact?

Our “ways of working” model is built on a simple idea: Flexibility only works when it removes friction and creates an environment people genuinely want to be part of. Rather than mandating office days, we give employees the flexibility to choose how and when they come into the hub, while making that experience as seamless as possible. One day that might mean taking the train, another day it might mean driving in because it better fits family commitments. Through commuter benefits, wellness support and other hub-related perks, we help remove the logistical barriers that often make in-person collaboration feel like a burden. We also tiered our global perks and wellness stipends based on in-office commitment (e.g. commuter benefits, up to $2,000 quarterly wellness funds, and more). It’s opt-in by design. The more you come in, the more support you get. No shame for staying home; real reward for showing up. 

But the policy only works because of the norms behind it. One of the strongest unspoken norms on our team is showing up fully present — whether that’s turning cameras on during Zoom meetings or teams intentionally aligning schedules to maximize collaboration time together.

Flexibility works best when people stay connected to each other, not just to the work. The results speak for themselves: average daily hub attendance jumped 57 percent in Q1, and 82 percent of team members said time in the hub strengthens their connection to their team and the company.

Beyond the metrics, we’ve seen trust and camaraderie build faster, decisions move more quickly, and collaboration become more natural when people intentionally create moments to work together — whether remotely or in person. That’s when flexible work stops feeling fragmented and starts feeling truly connected. You can feel it. Data confirms it, and that's the model working as designed.
 

Which wellness resource do people actually use — and what improvement have you seen on your team?

The resource people use most consistently is our global lifestyle and wellness stipend. We intentionally designed it to be flexible and meet people where they’re at and we can see it’s working because adoption is high. The stipend covers expenses our team members would have anyway — whether that’s groceries, delivery services, fitness or other everyday wellbeing expenses. It’s also very easy to use: Team members can shop directly through the vendor platform, use their card for eligible purchases, or submit reimbursements seamlessly.

But the resource that moved me most wasn’t a reimbursement metric — it was behavior. During mental health awareness month, our European benefits team organized a voluntary mindful stretching session in the middle of the workday and people genuinely showed up. We also saw strong engagement across our mental health awareness month programming, with team members from all locations choosing to make time for conversations and activities centered on wellbeing. To me, that’s the real signal: People feel comfortable engaging with wellbeing openly, during work hours, without stigma.

Sydney Wu
Sydney Wu, Director of People Ops and Compliance, North America

What People Are Saying About Superhuman

  • Remote or Hybrid Flexibility: Company materials describe a remote-first, hub-based hybrid model with home-office support and intentional in-person weeks, giving people more control over where and when they work. Structured hybrid practices are emphasized to support focus time rather than daily commutes.
  • Time Off Access: Policies highlight generous time off, additional company holidays, and long-tenure sabbaticals intended to enable meaningful rest and recharge. Signals encourage real disconnection rather than nominal unlimited time off.
  • Wellbeing Programs: Benefits include comprehensive health coverage, mental-health resources, and tiered lifestyle and wellness stipends for expenses like fitness, groceries, cleaning, and childcare. Support for home-office setups and hub-day perks further reduces day-to-day strain.

Superhuman's Benefits

Offers a flexible time off policy

Offers sabbatical leave

Provides floating holidays

Provides paid holidays

Provides paid sick days

Provides sick leave

Offers company-sponsored happy hours

Offers company-sponsored outings

Offers Employee Resource Groups

Offers fitness stipend

Partners with nonprofits

In-office days / expectations are defined

Provides work from home flexibility

Utilizes a flexible work schedule

Utilizes a hybrid work model