Designing Wellness for Highly Diverse MENA Teams
Year-end wellbeing programs often fail for a simple reason. They are built for a single type of employee in a region where workplaces are anything but uniform. In the UAE and KSA, teams include hundreds of nationalities, different cultural calendars, varied expectations around holidays, and unique family commitments.
A one-note approach cannot meet that level of diversity. December looks different depending on where someone comes from, what they observe, and how much of their support system is close by. If wellness programs do not acknowledge these differences, they lose relevance and participation drops quickly.
This guide explores how HR teams can design year-end wellness initiatives that reflect the realities of diverse MENA workplaces and create genuine connection at a time when many teams are stretched thin.
Why Diversity Matters in Year-End Wellness
The UAE and KSA host some of the most multicultural workforces in the world. According to the UAE Federal Competitiveness and Statistics Center, expatriates make up roughly 88 percent of the UAE’s population, and workplaces reflect that range of backgrounds. In Saudi Arabia, the Ministry of Human Resources reports increasing diversity within private sector roles, especially in industries like hospitality, technology, and logistics.
Because of this mix, the year-end period carries different meanings:
• Some employees celebrate Christmas.
• Some do not observe it at all.
• Many travel home for extended periods.
• Others stay in the region with limited family support.
• Some face peak workload in December due to sector cycles.
• Others use this time to prepare for Ramadan and Q1.
Designing wellness without acknowledging these differences makes programs feel distant, even when the intention is good.

The Gaps Most Companies Miss
Through employee interviews and regional research, several consistent gaps appear in MENA workplaces each December:
1. Over-focus on celebrations
Holiday-themed events work for some groups, but they do not resonate with all. Many employees prefer calm, clarity, and lighter routines over themed activities.
2. Lack of support for employees who remain in-country
A large segment stays local during the holidays. These employees often navigate loneliness or increased workloads due to colleagues being away.
3. Limited access for frontline and shift workers
Retail, facilities, logistics, and healthcare teams do not benefit from typical corporate events. They need wellness moments that align with their schedules.
4. Overlooked cultural norms
Different nationalities have different preferences around community, privacy, communication, and rest. One type of program cannot meet them all.
These gaps are not rooted in lack of care. They come from designing for the majority instead of designing for the whole.
How HR Can Create Inclusive Year-End Wellness
The goal is not to create dozens of programs. The goal is to design with intention so every employee sees themselves reflected in at least one initiative. Below are practical starting points.
1. Offer a menu of wellness-touchpoints rather than a single event
A simple mix might include:
• a reflection activity for employees who want quiet
• a light social connection moment
• a micro-learning on stress or energy resets
• an optional team gratitude exercise
• a wellness break or shorter meeting rule
Choice increases participation because it respects differences.
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2. Support employees who work during peak holiday periods
Create access points for shift workers and teams who cannot attend traditional sessions.
Examples:
• mobile wellness stations
• on-the-hour stretch prompts
• short audio breaks
• manager-led two-minute resets
• small recognition notes delivered onsite
These deliver impact without disrupting operations.
3. Consider cultural timing when planning activities
Year-end for many employees is not defined by Christmas.
It may be tied to:
• school holidays
• winter travel
• New Year traditions
• upcoming Ramadan preparations
Wellness programs feel more relevant when they match real-life timing, not imported calendars.
4. Prioritize connection for employees without local family support
A large portion of expats spend the holidays in-country.
Meaningful support may include:
• community circles
• optional social meetups
• access to quiet spaces
• mental health micro-resources
• small touchpoints recognizing they are here during a quieter season
These gestures create belonging.
5. Add low-effort rituals that work across cultures
Certain practices resonate universally:
• gratitude reflections
• team wins summaries
• manager appreciation notes
• guided two-minute breathing
• end-of-year digital detox hours
Rituals feel grounding because they are predictable and easy to join.
Plan inclusive and culturally relevant wellness touchpoints for next year with our 2026 Workplace Wellbeing Calendar. It includes month-by-month ideas designed for MENA workplaces.
How to Measure Impact Across Diverse Teams
Year-end wellness should create clarity, connection, and calm. HR teams can evaluate this through short, simple measures:
- A three-question pulse on energy and connection
- Participation patterns across workforce segments
- Manager check-ins to assess emotional load
- Feedback on what made the season easier
- Observing absenteeism and engagement changes in January
The goal is not to track attendance but to understand what helped people feel seen, supported, and stable.
Why Inclusive Year-End Wellness Sets the Tone for 2026
When employees feel recognized in all their differences, trust increases. Trust becomes the foundation for retention, engagement, and performance going into the new year.
A well-designed year-end program stabilizes teams before Q1, reduces friction for managers, and sets the emotional baseline for the year ahead. In a region as diverse as the UAE and KSA, inclusion is not an optional layer. It is the center of effective wellness planning.
Design a year-end wellness plan that meets the needs of every team.
Talk to us about building inclusive, practical wellness strategies for 2026 and beyond. Start a conversation →
