Office harassment
Unwanted sexual comments, jokes, texts, images, touching, pressure, staring, repeated attention, or comments about your body, dating life, clothing, or private life.
Workplace harassment resource hub
This guide is built for women researching sexual harassment, retaliation, coercion, assault, or abuse connected to an office, interview, business trip, supervisor, coworker, client, customer, or vendor.
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What counts
Federal guidance and national resource organizations describe sexual harassment as unwelcome conduct connected to sex, sexual attention, sexual behavior, or a hostile work environment. The impact matters, not just what the other person says they intended.
Unwanted sexual comments, jokes, texts, images, touching, pressure, staring, repeated attention, or comments about your body, dating life, clothing, or private life.
A supervisor, manager, owner, recruiter, executive, or person controlling shifts, pay, clients, assignments, references, or promotions uses that power sexually or retaliates when you say no.
Assault or coercion during an interview, private meeting, work trip, client visit, after-hours event, ride, housing arrangement, or isolated job duty.
Research context
NSVRC summarizes research showing that workplace sexual harassment is widespread, often underreported, and can affect mental health, physical health, job stability, and workplace morale.
NSVRC cites research reporting that 38% of women have experienced sexual harassment at work.
NSVRC summarizes research that many women report unwanted sexual attention, coercion, crude conduct, or sexist comments at work.
NSVRC notes that many people never file a formal legal charge and many do not complain internally.
Source context: National Sexual Violence Resource Center workplace harassment resource collection.
Checklist
Documentation does not need to be perfect. A simple private timeline can help you explain the pattern later to an advocate, counselor, workplace rights resource, attorney, or hotline.
Private next steps
A hotline or local advocacy center can help you talk through safety, privacy, and options without requiring a formal workplace report.
View hotlinesWorkplace rights resources can help you understand reporting, retaliation, documentation, and employment-related options.
View rights resourcesCounseling can help with sleep, anxiety, stress, body responses, and decision-making after harassment or assault.
View counseling resourcesUse the private intake matching flow. It asks only two situation questions before contact details.
Start private matchingTrusted references
These links help support topical authority and give users direct paths to national organizations, federal guidance, workplace-specific toolkits, and rights information.
Related guides
Examples, documentation steps, retaliation concerns, and support options.
FAQ answer about retaliation concerns after reporting workplace harassment.
Support options when the person who caused harm had job-related power.
FAQ
It may include unwelcome comments, pressure, sexual messages, requests for sexual favors, unwanted touching, offensive images, leering, retaliation, or conduct that creates a hostile work environment. This page is informational and not legal advice.
Yes. Harassment can involve people connected to your job even if they are not your supervisor. The setting, employer response, and power dynamics can all matter.
Retaliation concerns are common. Consider documenting changes in hours, assignments, pay, reputation, discipline, HR treatment, or pressure to quit. A workplace rights resource may help you think through options.
No. Some people choose to report internally, and others first speak with a hotline, counselor, advocate, or legal resource to understand privacy and next steps.