Knowing when to leave a job is one of the hardest calls you’ll make in your career. Stay too long and you stagnate or burn out. Leave too early and you might be running from something you were supposed to grow through.
So how do you actually tell the difference? Here are five signs it might be time, and what to do about each one.
You’ve learned everything this role is going to teach you. There’s no promotion on the horizon, no lateral move, no foreseeable change. Your boss knows it and nobody’s pretending otherwise.
Not everyone needs constant advancement to be fulfilled, some people genuinely thrive in mastery and consistency. But if you’re wired for challenge and growth, stagnation will eat at you. And it should.
What to do: Ask yourself this: if I stayed another one to two years, what specifically would that give me that I don’t already have? When I ask clients this question, the answer usually comes back vague or “nothing.” If that’s you, start getting clear on what role you actually want next so you can move with intention, not just frustration.
You’re becoming pigeonholed in a field you never wanted a future in. The skills you’re developing aren’t leading anywhere you want to go. And the longer you stay, the harder it gets to pivot.
Now, I want to be careful here. You don’t have to be passionate about the subject matter of your work to find meaning in it. Most people aren’t on fire about logistics or data migration, and that’s fine. What matters more is whether the tasks you do every day align with how God wired you. You can apply your strengths across a lot of industries.
What to do: Give the role at least six to twelve months before deciding. Job satisfaction often goes up once you get good at something. But if you’ve been here a while, you’ve given it an honest shot, and you know through experience, not just a feeling, that this isn’t the path? That’s a valid reason to start exploring what’s next.
The alarm goes off and the first thing you feel is dread. Not just on a rough Monday — every day, for months. Sunday scaries are a weekly fixture. You’re mentally composing your resignation letter in the shower.
If you’ve given this job your genuine best and you’re still fantasizing about leaving after three to six months of consistent dread — with no redeemable reason to stay beyond a paycheck — that’s worth taking seriously.
What to do: First, rule out what you can. Is the burnout tied to a specific project that has an end date? If so, consider riding it out and re-evaluating once the pressure lifts. Second (and I mean this), do a social media fast before making any big decisions. Three to six months off the comparison machine. I took a full year off social media and it was one of the biggest things that shifted me from restless and discontent to actually grounded. You might find that your job hasn’t changed, but your ability to be present in it has.
If you’re too emotionally depleted to show up for the people you love, if every social plan gets filtered through “I don’t have the capacity,” if your body is breaking down, that’s not a push-through-it situation.
I’ll get personal: during my most stressful season, I went to the ER three times for stress-related symptoms. I had a cyst grow in my arm that required surgery. It went away once my life came back into balance. That was my body screaming at me.
Busy seasons are normal. Stretching yourself toward a meaningful goal can build real character. But there’s a difference between productive stress and destructive stress. The question is: is what you’re sacrificing for actually worth it? Or are you just grinding because you feel trapped?
What to do: Be honest with yourself. If your health is being significantly impacted and the thing you’re working toward isn’t ultimately compelling or worth the cost, it’s time to start looking. No paycheck is worth your wellbeing.
If your boss takes credit for your work, undermines you to leadership, creates a culture of anxiety on your team, and they’re well-liked by the people above them, that’s dangerous. A two-faced manager in good standing can wreak havoc on your career, your confidence, and your reputation.
The conventional wisdom is to wait a bad boss out. And sometimes that works. But if they’re entrenched and protected, waiting just costs you.
What to do: Before you leave, try one thing: if you have rapport with your boss’s boss or other leaders in the company, give honest, professional feedback about what’s happening on your team. Sometimes that’s enough to create change. I’ve seen it work. But if you’ve tried and nothing is shifting, trust your instincts and start seeking employment under someone you can actually trust and learn from.
Before you make any move, bring it to God. Confess what you’re feeling. Confess what you actually want — even if it scares you. Confess what you’re afraid He might say. And then pause long enough to actually listen. Not frantic journaling. Not anxious spiraling. Real stillness.
And if you need a conversation partner who’s less biased than your friends and family — someone who can help you think through this clearly, book a free consultation with us at The Called Career. We’ll help you figure out your next faithful step.
