Boomerang Jobs: Workers Split on Returning to a Former Employer

Jasmine Escalera
By Jasmine Escalera, Career ExpertLast Updated: April 02, 2026
Person holding boxes exemplifying boomerang employee definition

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Is going back to a former employer a smart move or a step backward? A new MyPerfectResume survey of 1,101 U.S. workers reveals just how divided employees are on the concept of “boomerang jobs.” 

For some, returning is a savvy strategy for stability and growth. For others, it stirs up bad memories, reignites old workplace politics, and feels like a step backward.

The Boomerang Jobs Report examines the motivations, fears, and reputational factors that drive individuals to rejoin a past employer. What emerges is a nuanced picture: opportunity on one side, hesitation on the other.

Key Findings

  • 55% of workers say that returning to a past employer is a smart career move.
  • 37% of workers describe returning to a former employer as “playing it safe.”
  • 5% of workers view returning to a past employer as a sign of failure.
  • 67% of workers say they would consider returning to a previous employer if leadership had changed.
  • 65% of workers worry that workplace politics would resurface if they returned to a former employer.

Why Workers Would Return to a Former Employer

First off, let’s answer the question: What is a boomerang employee? A boomerang employee is an employee who leaves a company and later returns to work for the same organization.

For many, the decision to return depends on changes that make the workplace feel safer or more rewarding. Improved leadership and better work-life balance are the top motivators:

Why Others Won’t Look Back

For some, the past is best left behind. Bad experiences and workplace burnout are powerful deal-breakers:

Concerns About Returning

Even workers who consider returning worry about history repeating itself. The top fears center on the very issues that drove them away the first time:

Why Your Reputation Matters

A nearly universal theme is that how you leave a job shapes your chances of returning or recommending the employer in the future:

In today’s job market, the idea of returning to a familiar workplace may be tempting, but it’s also risky. Workers weigh not just pay and perks but also trust, culture, and career trajectory. 

Returning to a past employer is less of a sweeping trend and more of a personal calculation, influenced by how much change an organization has actually made since an employee left. 

Employers that want to attract boomerang workers will need to repair reputations, rebuild trust, and address the underlying issues that caused people to leave in the first place.


For press inquiries, contact Nathan Barber at nathan.barber@bold.com.

Survey Methodology

The findings presented in this report are based on a nationally representative survey conducted by MyPerfectResume on September 4, 2025. The survey collected responses from 1,101 U.S. adults who are currently employed or have been previously employed. It explored attitudes toward returning to former employers, motivations, concerns, and perceptions. Respondents answered a mix of yes/no, single-selection, and multiple-choice questions. Participants represented a broad cross-section of the U.S. population, encompassing a diverse range of genders, ages, and educational backgrounds.

About MyPerfectResume

MyPerfectResume Resume Builder with professional templates is designed to help job seekers elevate their careers. The easy-to-use platform was created to eliminate the hassle of resume writing, offering professionally written examples, free expert tips, step-by-step guidance to make a resume, and valuable interview advice to create an outstanding job application effortlessly. Since 2012, MyPerfectResume’s Resume Builder has helped more than 11 million job seekers create their perfect resumes online. Its comprehensive employment surveys have been featured in Forbes, Yahoo! Finance, CNBC, Newsweek, USA Today, BBC, Workable, and more. Stay connected with MyPerfectResume’s latest Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, X, and Pinterest updates.

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