Source: Jessica Mariella | Dupe
If you’ve spent any time on WFH TikTok recently, you’ve probably seen a creator in a hoodie answering emails from the couch while Gilmore Girls reruns play in the background. That is what’s known as a soft-on day, and it might be the most quietly genius work-from-home trend to come out of 2026.
The concept comes from WFH content creator Sloane, who posts under @sloane_wfh and has built a small loyal following around making remote work feel sustainable instead of soul-crushing. Her premise is simple: every WFH employee should have at least one soft-on day a week—and she’s not the only one who thinks so. Users in the comments of her videos agree, claiming soft-on days are “mandatory.” Some even say they take up to three soft-on days every week to maintain their sanity and productivity output.
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Now, this isn’t to be confused with a “do nothing” day. Rather, it’s a day when you intentionally lower the pressure to recover from deeper work you’ve been doing the rest of the week. If you’ve been looking for the green light to slow down or just an excuse to work from the couch, this workplace trend might be for you. We’re sharing everything you need to know about soft-on days and what to do when you schedule your own.
In this article 1 What is a soft-on day? 2 How is a soft-on day different from a soft-off day? 3 The benefits of a soft-on day 4 Productive things to do on a soft-on day
What is a soft-on day?
According to Sloane, a soft-on day is a day “when you spend the day catching up on all the little things that you’ve been needing to get done.” She claims you “have to do it from your couch, in your cozies, while having your favorite re-runs on in the background.” This is a day when you’re online and getting things done, just at a lighter, lower-stress pace. So you’re available, you’re responsive, and you’re chipping away at the tasks that don’t require deep focus, but you’re not pushing yourself to operate at maximum productivity.
How is a soft-on day different from a soft-off day?
Even though their names are nearly identical, a soft-on day isn’t the same as a soft-off day. A soft-off day is when an employee technically shows up to work but puts forth the bare minimum effort, doing as little as possible without actually taking PTO. It’s a way to mentally check out without officially logging out. A soft-on day isn’t that. You’re still genuinely working on a soft-on day, just on the lighter end of the productivity spectrum. The easiest way to differentiate the two is by thinking of a soft-off day as a day of faking productivity and a soft-on day as a day of gentle productivity.
The purpose of implementing them is also completely different. A soft-on day is a preventative tool, the kind of day you schedule into your week before burnout sets in, so you can keep showing up without running yourself into the ground. A soft-off day is what you implement when you’re already burnt out. Employees take them when they’ve already pushed themselves past their limit, and they need to coast through a Tuesday to make it to the weekend. In other words, a soft-on day is a sustainability strategy, whereas a soft-off day is a recovery tactic.
READ: Are “Sneaky Fridays” The Reason So Many Are Being Forced Back Into The Office?
The benefits of a soft-on day
The whole appeal of a soft-on day is that it permits you to slow down without falling behind. But beyond that and other obvious draws, like being comfy and watching TV while you work, there are plenty more benefits:
- It makes room for the low-energy tasks you keep avoiding. Every job has a pile of small, annoying to-dos and admin tasks that don’t require much brainpower but somehow never get done. A soft-on day is the perfect time to finally summarize those meeting notes, clear out your inbox, and update that spreadsheet you’ve been ignoring.
- It encourages sustainable work habits. Running at 100% five days a week isn’t sustainable for anyone, and building in lower-intensity days helps you actually maintain the rest of your output without crashing every Friday afternoon.
- It conserves energy for the things that need it. Not every task on your to-do list needs your sharpest brain. Saving your peak focus for the work that actually requires it (and using softer days for everything else) is just smart energy management.
- It protects you from burnout. Burnout doesn’t usually happen because of one really hard week. It builds up slowly when there’s no recovery built into your normal routine. Soft-on days give you a regular pressure valve, so you’re not constantly running on fumes.
- It keeps your momentum going. Taking a full day off can sometimes throw your whole week off rhythm, especially if you’re in the middle of a big project. A soft-on day lets you stay in the flow without burning yourself out trying to maintain it.
- It reduces the guilt around rest. Because you’re still technically working, you don’t have to wrestle with the “should I be doing more right now” voice that ruins so many actual rest days. You’re being productive, just gently.
Productive things to do on a soft-on day
If you’re ready to try a soft-on day but don’t know what to actually do during it, here’s a starting list. None of these requires your A-game, and most of them have probably been on your to-do list for weeks.
- Clear out your inbox and finally hit “archive” on those 47 unread emails
- Summarize meeting notes from earlier in the week
- Update your project management tool with anything you forgot to log
- Respond to Slack messages you left on read
- Knock out expense reports or time tracking
- Schedule out next week’s calendar
- Tidy up your desktop, downloads folder, and Google Drive
- File or organize digital documents
- Update your LinkedIn or refresh your professional bio
- Catch up on industry newsletters or articles you’ve been saving
- Take a long lunch break and actually leave your apartment
- Do light planning for an upcoming project (without diving into execution)
- Sort through team-shared folders and clean up old files
- Draft and schedule emails to colleagues, clients, or industry contacts
- Follow up or respond to emails that are in limbo
- Check in with your team on projects, their bandwidth, and pending task statuses
- Schedule upcoming meetings or team check-ins
- Shout out a team member for an accomplishment they recently received
Remember, whether you schedule your soft-on day on a Friday to ease into the weekend or use it as a Monday warm-up to ramp into a busy week, the goal is the same: stay engaged, take the pressure off, and remember that gentle productivity is still productivity.