January Workplace Wellness Ideas & Awareness Days for HR Teams

(Without Making More Work For You)

TL;DR

  • January at work is about rebuilding routines, not aggressive goal-setting or “new year, new you” energy.
  • The most effective January programming is light, optional, and genuinely supportive.
  • Aim for 2–3 low-lift initiatives, not a packed calendar no one asked for.
  • Key moments include National Mentoring Month, International Mind-Body Wellness Day (Jan 3), Martin Luther King Jr. Day (Jan 19), and Bell Let’s Talk Day (Jan 21, Canada).

Who This January Guide Is For

This January workplace wellness guide is designed for: People & Culture / HR Leaders, Office / Workplace Experience Managers, EAs and Wellness ERGs.

If you’re responsible for planning January awareness days, employee engagement, or wellness programming, this guide is built to save you time, energy, and second-guessing.

Download The Full 2026 Calendar (PDF)

All the important days. None of the “wear a silly hat” days. Plan the whole year in 30 minutes.

2026 Workplace Awareness Days Calendar (At-A-Glance)

Month Month-Long Wellness & Awareness Observances Key Workplace Awareness Days
January 2026
  • National Mentoring Month
  • Jan 3 – International Mind-Body Wellness Day
  • Jan 19 – MLK Day
  • Jan 21 – Bell Let’s Talk Day

January at a Glance (For Workplace Planning)

Primary focus: Re-entry, mental health, routine rebuilding
Best weeks to activate: Weeks 2–3 (once inbox shock wears off)
Ideal number of initiatives: 2–3 total

January Awareness Days

Key January awareness days and observances commonly acknowledged at work:

  • All month: National Mentoring Month
  • January 3: International Mind-Body Wellness Day
  • January 19: Martin Luther King Jr. Day
  • January 21: Bell Let’s Talk Day (Canada)

January Workplace Wellness Themes That Actually Work

January is best treated as a low-pressure planning month focused on mental health, reconnection, and easing back into routines — not performance optimization or major change initiatives.

Teams are returning from time off, adjusting to new schedules, and managing post-holiday fatigue (financial, emotional, or both). Programming that feels gentle, optional, and supportive consistently outperforms anything framed around “new year, new you.”

How People & Culture Teams Use January Strategically

Strong People & Culture teams use January to set the emotional tone for the year, not to roll out every initiative at once.

January workplace wellness supports:

  • Burnout prevention early in Q1
  • Psychological safety after time away
  • Retention through visible care and support

When January feels humane and grounded, teams are far more receptive to deeper engagement later in the quarter.

What to Avoid in January Workplace Programming

Avoid these common January missteps:

  • Mandatory wellness activities or challenges
  • Diet culture or weight-loss framing
  • Overloading calendars during re-entry weeks
  • Messaging that implies employees need to “fix” themselves

January wellness should reduce friction, not create more work for HR or employees.

How to Celebrate National Mentoring Month (January, 2026)

National Mentoring Month is a month-long observance focused on connection, learning, and knowledge-sharing at work.

In workplaces, this is often acknowledged through:

  • Informal mentorship pairings
  • Peer-to-peer coffee chats
  • Internal knowledge-sharing sessions

January is ideal for mentoring because it reinforces connection without adding deadlines, deliverables, or pressure.

How to Celebrate International Mind-Body Wellness Day (January 3, 2026)

International Mind-Body Wellness Day highlights the connection between physical health, mental health, and stress regulation.

Workplaces typically mark this day with:

  • A short Chair Yoga session or guided movement break
  • A brief mindfulness or breathwork reset
  • Calendar-blocked time for employees to step away from work (even 30 minutes is meaningful)

This day works best when it feels restorative, not performative.

How to Celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day (January 19, 2026)

Martin Luther King Jr. Day honors the legacy of Dr. King and invites reflection on equity, justice, and community.

Most organizations acknowledge MLK Day by:

  • Sharing thoughtful educational resources
  • Offering space for reflection rather than programming overload
  • Supporting volunteerism or community engagement

The tone should be respectful, grounded, and action-oriented.

How to Celebrate Bell Let’s Talk Day (January 21, 2026, in Canada)

Bell Let’s Talk Day is a Canadian mental health awareness day focused on reducing stigma and encouraging conversation.

Workplaces often recognize it by:

  • Sharing mental health resources employees can access privately
  • Hosting an optional Understanding Anxiety workshop
  • Encouraging leaders to model openness and normalize mental health conversations

This day is about visibility and psychological safety, not forced vulnerability or mandatory sharing.

Top January Wellness Idea

If you only have time to plan one thing in January, schedule a virtual 30-minute Chair Yoga session in Week 2 or 3.

It’s low-risk, quick to book, accessible for all bodies, and consistently well received — even by people who “don’t do wellness.”

  • Budget: $400–$600 for up to 200 employees
  • Setup: Can be booked same-week
  • Pro tip: Block the calendar early, before Q1 meetings multiply

Just for Fun: Quirky January Workplace Holidays

These work best as Slack moments, not full events.

Light moments matter in January. A few fun ones teams enjoy:

  • National Popcorn Day, January 19: A simple, affordable treat for in-office teams
  • National Compliment Day, January 24: Simple, human, surprisingly effective

Keep Planning:

Kayla Baum Profile Photo

Author: Kayla Baum

Founder & CEO, Twello

DisruptHR Finalist
Mindfulness Without Borders Certified
International Keynote Speaker

Kayla Baum is the Founder & CEO of Twello, where she’s helped more than 1,100 organizations (maybe 1,200 now?), including KPMG, Amazon, Capital One, and CARE International bring practical, evidence-based wellness into the workday. Working closely with HR and People & Culture teams every day gives her a grounded perspective on what actually supports employee well-being (and what never gets used).

Each date on this awareness calendar is vetted through leading health agencies and long-standing observance organizations, then filtered through Twello’s real-world experience of what workplaces can realistically acknowledge. No noise. No gimmick days. Just what matters for teams.

Areas of Expertise

Workplace Wellness Strategy Workplace Mental Health Mindfulness Training Stress & Burnout Prevention

Bring Your Workplace Wellness Days to Life

Have questions about workshops, wellness programming, or how to celebrate?

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Frequently Asked Questions

January Workplace Wellness FAQ

Most teams do best with two to three optional initiatives spread across Weeks 2–3.

ONLY if they are optional, inclusive, and not tied to weight or performance goals. My recommendation… skip it. Folks have enough pressure to get their steps in already. 

Yep, in one click!

The PDF includes a 1-page cheat sheet and the full calendar with room for notes, so you can sketch ideas or flag dates for specific departments.

Of course! That’s our job.

A surprising number of observances shift year to year, so we re-verify everything before releasing the annual update.

(It’s tedious, but worth it.)

Of course! We offer workshops and ready-to-run activities aligned with many major observances, so HR and People teams can acknowledge important dates without scrambling. Check out our entire catalog here.