Passive-aggressive behavior at work is quietly corrosive: missed deadlines, backhanded remarks, deliberate silence, and “forgetting” to share information all sap team morale and slow delivery. With hybrid teams and stressed workforces, this behavior shows up more often and costs organizations in engagement and productivity. Gallup reports that global engagement remains low and lost productivity is a measurable economic issue — a useful reminder that toxic behaviors have real costs.
This guide gives short, practical steps you can use immediately — whether you’re an individual contributor, a manager, or HR — plus phrasing you can use in real conversations and prevention tactics your team can adopt.

Quick Signals that a Coworker is Passive-Aggressive
Passive-aggressive behavior is indirect. Look for patterns, not single incidents:
• Repeatedly missing deadlines but giving excuses instead of solutions.
• Silent treatment, eye-rolling, or sarcasm that undermines you in front of others.
• “Forgotten” information or not copying you on important emails.
• Backhanded compliments (“Nice job… for what you had to work with.”).
• Consistently doing the minimum and undermining team goals.
Research and HR coverage note that many employees report passive or toxic behaviors at work; these patterns often coexist with broader incivility or disengagement problems.
Understand Before You Act
Stop and diagnose. Passive-aggression often masks frustration, fear, or feeling powerless. There are typically two common types:
• Disengaged — not malicious, but withdrawn and inconsistent.
• Manipulative — deliberate attempts to control outcomes or undermine colleagues.
Ask: Is this a one-off stress reaction or a persistent pattern? What might be the underlying trigger — workload, unclear role, leadership style, or personal stressors? Understanding motive helps you choose an approach.
Do not Overreact — Keep Your Head Clear
Passive-aggressive people want a reaction. If you respond emotionally, they often win. Instead:
• Pause and take at least one breath before replying.
• Use neutral language and focus on observable facts (dates, emails, outcomes).
• Document repeated behaviors — dates, examples, and impact on work.
Staying calm protects your credibility if you escalate to a manager or HR later.

Practical Scripts: What to Say (and How)
Use short, factual, non-accusatory language. Here are ready-to-use lines:
When something is missing:
“Hey Sam — I didn’t get the file you mentioned in yesterday’s meeting. Can you resend it now? We need it to meet the deadline
When someone gives a snide comment:
“I noticed the tone of that remark in the meeting. I want to stay productive — can we focus on the next steps instead?”
When they undercut you privately:
“I heard you had concerns about the plan. I’d like to understand them. Can we discuss what you see as the risk and how to fix it?”
If behavior continues:
“I’ve tried addressing this directly. The ongoing delays and comments are affecting the project. I’ll document the issues and involve our manager so we can resolve it.”
These scripts align with HR best practice: be direct, fact-based, and focused on outcomes. SHRM recommends manager coaching and clear expectations to guide improvements.
If Direct Talk Fails, Escalate Smartly
- Save examples (emails, dates, missed deliverables).
- Request a private meeting with your manager and explain the impact on work — keep it about results, not personality.
- Ask for mediation, a role clarification, or an adjusted workflow (e.g., explicit deadlines, shared trackers).
- If behavior violates policy (harassment, sabotage), involve HR with documented evidence.
Managers can often defuse passive-aggression by clarifying roles, setting measurable deadlines, and coaching the individual; early manager involvement prevents escalation.
When You’re the Manager: Prevent and Respond
• Set clear responsibilities and measurable deliverables.
• Run regular 1:1s to surface frustrations early.
• Model direct feedback and expect your team to do the same.
• Use private coaching first; if no change, use formal performance steps.
• Promote psychological safety so people speak up before resentment builds.
Training managers in conflict resolution reduces the chance that passive aggression becomes cultural.
Don’t Mirror the Behavior
It’s tempting to respond in kind (silent treatment or sarcasm). That only normalizes toxicity. Stick to the facts, set boundaries, and escalate when needed.
Long-term prevention: build a healthy team culture
• Encourage open feedback rituals (retros, pulse surveys).
• Reward direct, constructive communication.
• Create rituals that reduce ambiguity: RACI charts, shared trackers, clear SLAs.
• Lead by example: show how to give and receive feedback.
These steps attack the root causes — ambiguity, powerlessness, and fear — that breed passive aggression.
When It’s Time to Walk Away
If the behavior persists despite documentation and manager/HR involvement, and your wellbeing is impacted, consider switching teams or employers. Toxic environments have measurable costs for engagement and mental health; sometimes the healthiest choice is to move.
FAQs
How do I tell if someone is passive-aggressive or just having a bad day?
Look for patterns over weeks, not single incidents. Passive-aggression is repeated, indirect resistance (missed promises, sarcasm, withholding information) rather than an occasional emotional reaction.
Is confronting them likely to make things worse?
If you confront with facts and focus on work impact (not character attacks), it usually improves clarity. Avoid getting emotional; if you fear retaliation, document first and escalate to your manager or HR.
Can HR force someone to change passive-aggressive behavior?
HR can coach, mediate, and apply performance improvement plans. They can also reassign or discipline when behavior breaks policy. But genuine change often requires the person’s willingness; document impact to make HR action effective.
What communication style works best with passive-aggressive coworkers?
Clear, written agreements (emails, shared trackers) and short, direct verbal check-ins. Avoid sarcasm or open criticism; ask them to confirm commitments and deadlines in writing.
Are there signs that a manager is enabling passive-aggression?
Yes: inconsistent enforcement, vague role definitions, lack of follow-up, or leaders who avoid conflict. These create fertile ground for indirect resistance — fix by clarifying roles and expectations.

Daniel is a business writer focused on entrepreneurship, finance, and investment strategies. He shares practical insights to help professionals and business owners make informed decisions in a fast-changing market.