Take this free mom burnout calculator to find out exactly where you are on the burnout scale — and what to do about it. If you’ve been feeling exhausted, empty, or like you’re just going through the motions, you deserve an honest answer, not another article telling you to practice self-care.
This mom burnout calculator uses 10 research-backed questions across four areas — physical, emotional, mental, and social — to give you a burnout score and personalized next steps. No email required.
How This Mom Burnout Calculator Works
Answer 10 honest questions about how you’ve been feeling. Each question has four options ranging from “rarely” to “almost every day.” At the end you’ll get:
- Your burnout score — a number from 0 to 30 with a clear label (Doing Well, Mild, Moderate, or Severe)
- A breakdown by area — whether your burnout is mostly physical, emotional, mental, or social
- Personalized next steps — specific actions matched to your score level, not generic advice
There are no right or wrong answers. The mom burnout calculator is most useful when you answer as honestly as possible — not as you wish things were, but as they actually are right now.
What Is Mom Burnout?
Mom burnout — also called maternal burnout — is a state of physical, emotional, and mental exhaustion caused by the chronic stress of caregiving without adequate recovery. It is different from regular tiredness. With normal tiredness, a good night of sleep helps. With burnout, rest doesn’t feel restorative. You wake up exhausted. You go through the day on autopilot. You feel detached from the people you love most.
Research published in Clinical Psychological Science found that maternal burnout affects an estimated 1 in 8 mothers and is associated with increased risk of anxiety, depression, and difficulties with the parent-child relationship. Using a mom burnout calculator is a helpful first step toward recognizing where you are.
Signs of Mom Burnout to Watch For
- Feeling exhausted even after sleeping
- Emotional numbness or detachment from your children
- Feeling like you have nothing left to give by mid-afternoon
- Constant irritability or short temper that feels out of character
- Loss of joy in things that used to bring you pleasure
- Feeling like you’ve completely lost your identity outside of motherhood
- Persistent feeling that things will never get better
Frequently Asked Questions
How accurate is a mom burnout calculator?
This mom burnout calculator is based on validated burnout assessment research and is a reliable tool for self-reflection. It is not a clinical diagnostic tool and should not replace a conversation with your doctor if you are concerned about your mental health.
Can burnout go away on its own?
Mild burnout can improve with intentional rest, boundary-setting, and asking for help. Moderate to severe burnout typically requires more significant changes — reducing load, seeking support, and sometimes professional help. It rarely resolves on its own without addressing the underlying cause.
What’s the fastest way to recover from mom burnout?
There is no fast fix — burnout builds over time and recovers over time. The most effective first steps are: asking for specific help from people around you, lowering your standards for non-essential tasks, and making sure basic physical needs (sleep, food, movement) are being met before anything else.
More free tools and guides from Real Life Mom Guides:
- Toddler Bedtime Calculator — find the ideal bedtime for your child’s age
- Baby First Year Cost Calculator — estimate your baby’s first year expenses
- All Free Parenting Tools — our full calculator library
Feeling burned out?
The Happy Sane Mom guide was written for exactly where you are — managing overwhelm, rebuilding routines, and finding yourself again without pretending it’s easy.
See the Happy Sane Mom Guide →