Moms Carry 71% of the Mental Load

Summary: New research shows that mothers take on 71% of household mental load tasks, including planning, scheduling, and organizing, while fathers manage just 45%. This imbalance often leads to stress, burnout, and strain on women’s careers and relationships.

Fathers tend to focus on episodic tasks like finances and home repairs but overestimate their overall contributions compared to mothers. Researchers encourage families to address the mental load imbalance through open discussions and shared responsibilities, especially during the holiday season.

Key Facts

  • Mental Load Gap: Mothers handle 71% of household mental load tasks, 60% more than fathers.
  • Gendered Roles: Fathers focus on episodic tasks like finances (65%), while mothers manage daily tasks (79%).
  • Impact on Women: The imbalance contributes to stress, burnout, and career strain for mothers.

Source: University of Bath

From choosing gifts and sending cards to planning Christmas dinner, the holiday season can feel like an avalanche of mental to-do lists.

New research from the University of Bath and the University of Melbourne, published in the Journal of Marriage & Family, reveals that mothers overwhelmingly carry this “mental load” while dads often take a back seat.

And it’s not just during Christmas – this imbalance happens every day of the year.

This shows a mom, a child, and a scale.
The gender divide in the mental load doesn’t just affect family life—it impacts women in the workplace and public life. Credit: Neuroscience News

The “mental load,” also known as “cognitive household labour” refers to the thinking work needed to keep family life running smoothly. This includes scheduling, planning, and organising tasks. 

The study, conducted in the US, found that mothers take on seven in ten (71%) of all household mental load tasks. These tasks range from planning meals and arranging activities to managing household finances.

The research team analysed data from 3,000 US parent respondents, examining the share of common mental load tasks they typically manage in their household.

Key Findings

  • Mums take on most of the mental load.
    Mothers handle 71% of household tasks that require mental effort—60% more than fathers, who manage just 45%.
  • Different roles for mums and dads.
    Mums take on 79% of daily jobs like cleaning and childcare—over twice as much as dads (37%). Dads, meanwhile, focus on episodic tasks like finances and home repairs (65%), although mums still do a significant share (53%), leading to duplication of effort.
  • Dads overestimate their share.
    Parents often overestimate their contributions, but dads do this more than mums. Fathers are also more likely to see household mental labour as equally shared, while mothers disagree.
  • Single parents juggle it all.
    Single mums and dads take on the full mental load. Single dads, in particular, do significantly more compared to partnered fathers.

The study focuses on individual parents rather than couples, so the findings reflect one parent’s perspective rather than a shared view. It also includes parents from a wide range of family types, including LGBTQ+ and single parents, making the results relevant to diverse households.

Dr Ana Catalano Weeks, a political scientist from the Department of Politics, Languages & international Studies at the University of Bath said: 

“This kind of work is often unseen, but it matters. It can lead to stress, burnout and even impact women’s careers. In many cases, resentment can build, creating strain between couples. We hope our research sparks conversations about sharing the mental load more fairly—something that benefits everyone.”

The gender divide in the mental load doesn’t just affect family life—it impacts women in the workplace and public life. 

A recent Gallup study shows working mothers are twice as likely as fathers to consider reducing their hours or leaving their jobs due to parental responsibilities.

Dr Catalano Weeks said:

“Going forward, the challenge for governments and employers who care about attracting the top talent is how to create policies that are supportive of both mothers and fathers sharing the unpaid work at home. One policy that comes to mind is well-paid, gender-neutral parental leave – which both the UK and US are way behind on compared to the rest of Europe.”

So, this Christmas, if you’re wondering who’s doing the mental heavy lifting – it’s probably mum. The researchers encourage families to take the first step: talk about the mental load, make a plan, and work together to make the holidays—and every day—more balanced.

Funding: The research was partially funded by the Carrie Chapman Catt Prize, Iowa State University, Bath’s Institute for Policy Research and the Department of Politics, Languages & International Studies at the University of Bath, and the Australian Research Council.

About this parenting and psychology research news

Author: Chris Melvin
Source: University of Bath
Contact: Chris Melvin – University of Bath
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Open access.
A typology of US parents’ mental loads: Core and episodic cognitive labor. Journal of Marriage and Family, 1–24” by Ana Catalano Weeks et al. Journal of Marriage and Family


Abstract

A typology of US parents’ mental loads: Core and episodic cognitive labor. Journal of Marriage and Family, 1–24

Objective

This article examines whether domestic cognitive labor functions like other forms of domestic labor as a means to “do gender.”

Background

Domestic cognitive labor is increasingly conceptualized as the invisible thinking work associated with childcare and housework. A critical question for this growing literature is the gender distribution of cognitive labor tasks: do women do it all, or does domestic cognitive labor follow similar patterns to other forms of domestic physical labor (e.g., childcare and housework), cleaving by separate spheres of activity? In this regard, is domestic cognitive labor another way parents “do gender” at home?

Methods

Applying unique survey data from a sample of US parents (N = 3000), we assess a 21-item battery measuring different domestic cognitive labor tasks. We first apply exploratory factor analysis and confirmatory factor analysis to identify whether domestic cognitive labor holds underlying constructs. Second, we estimate whether gender differences in these indices are robust in regression models net of a range of sociodemographic factors.

Results

We identify that domestic cognitive labor, like other forms of domestic labor, forms two distinct facets, with mothers holding the bulk of the core Daily tasks related to family well-being and fathers holding the Episodic tasks related to maintenance and finances. Further, we document that, consistent with previous housework literature, question wording structures parents’ reported contributions by gender.

Conclusion

Ultimately, our study expands our theoretical, conceptual, and methodological understanding of domestic cognitive labor and points to the value of “doing gender” perspectives.

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  1. it can easily be even less well balanced than your article indicates, depending on the type of career each parent has. in my case, one parent (dad) was a physician in solo private practice, on call 7 days a week. he never fixed an appliance, called a repair person, mowed a lawn, or paid a bill! he did fix breakfast for his 3 kids and helped with homework often. once mom returned to work, juggling kids’ schedules was still all on me. after all, there can only be one commander-in-chief. everyone else must be willing to take orders for everything to get done.

  2. Nothing is said about whether husbands are simply spending all day at the pub or, perhaps in a few cases, earning the primary income which supports the rest of the family. I wonder why… Incidentally Anne Moir’s book Brainsex amply explains the usual ‘imbalance’ with household tasks: setting apart the usual baby & toddler routines which a mother would naturally prefer to do, there are the different standards for cooking and household maintenance. And which sex is much the fussier, according to Moir, and prefers to do the task herself to ensure they’re done ‘properly’? Yes, you guessed it. Moir’s dissertation was a review of the academic psych literature on experiments investigating sex differences. To her consternation as a young feminist, Moir discovered that older generations were NOT imagining it when they presumed the differences were real, ingrained and not ‘remediable’ by indoctrination. Chalk up another victory for common sense.

  3. This is a sad attempt of science attempting to rear its ugly head in the realm of societal and family norms. It also is a continuation on the war on biology to present it in such a manner that all such arrangements as described above are detrimental and should be changed. People can live with traditional gender rolls happily, and they do across the world. Stop trying to science the family apart, and stop telling women they have to conform to “science” to be happy. Not all want to.

  4. Interesting that finances are listed as “episodic”. In actuality, finances are a perpetual mental load. It’s not just paying the bills, which I could see as episodic, but really includes planning, budgeting, and financial management which are all very heavy on mental load. It appears that this may be a situation of data being gathered to suit the intended results. If finances are not cognitive labor, then why is meal planning cognitive labor? It seems that some of the fundamental assumptions are poorly based which would lead to improper conclusions.

  5. Did not read the whole thing, but from a part where it stated women take on things like gifts, sending cards, planning dinner, etc. and men take on things like finances, repairs, etc., it’s pretty clear that the women are wasting a lot of stress and worry over mostly unnecessary crap. No wonder they all seem to constantly worry and stress about relationships, social interactions, “happiness”, “joy”, “sadness”, “depression”, and a lot of other emotional garbage that ruins their health. Stick to the necessities of life and let the rest of that superfluous shit go.

  6. “New research shows that mothers take on 71% of household mental load tasks, including planning, scheduling, and organizing, while fathers manage just 45%”

    I guess the children are responsible for the remaining -16% which explains a lot. Which parent is customarily responsible for household arithmetic?

    Thank you for brightening up my day!

    1. Which of your parents was responsible for imparting critical thinking skills? Or reading past the first sentence of an article?

      The article clearly states that “The study focuses on individual parents rather than couples, so the findings reflect one parent’s perspective rather than a shared view.”
      Therefore there’s no reason to believe the percentages should sum to 1. Dad responds to a survey and is found that he’s contributing to 45% of home tasks. Mom 71%. More than one person may be involved in one task (as the article also mentions – “duplication of effort”). The venn diagram between mom tasks and dad tasks is not mutually exclusive.

  7. Interesting article, although I almost stopped reading it as it was absurdly repetitive in the amount of times the conclusions were noted throughout it. While I believe there is likely an imbalance between a wife and husband there is insufficient detail of the study to give credibility to the numerical findings. The description of the 3000 samples and the details of the methods (e.g., the indices) are sorely lacking. It would be nice to have this detail to support a level of confidence in the results and conclusions.

    1. Your ability to click on a link is sorely lacking. They’ve clearly linked the full article which is open access. If you’re truly so curious and dissatisfied with this summary of the findings, reference the original published article. Original Research: Open access.
      “A typology of US parents’ mental loads: Core and episodic cognitive labor. Journal of Marriage and Family, 1–24” by Ana Catalano Weeks et al. Journal of Marriage and Family

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