Skip to content
AICPA-CIMA
  • AICPA & CIMA:
  • Home
  • CPE & Learning
  • My Account
Journal of Accountancy
  • TECH & AI
    • All articles
    • Artificial Intelligence (AI)
    • Microsoft Excel
    • Information Security & Privacy

    Latest Stories

    • AI tools for finance professionals to prepare and visualize data
    • 6 gear recommendations for home office and business travel
    • Excel’s Dark Mode: A subtle change that makes a big difference
  • TAX
    • All articles
    • Corporations
    • Employee benefits
    • Individuals
    • IRS procedure

    Latest Stories

    • District court dismisses taxpayer’s refund claim
    • Nondeductible W-2 wages not included in Sec. 199A deduction computation
    • Court determines taxpayer lacked profit motive
  • PRACTICE MANAGEMENT
    • All articles
    • Diversity, equity & inclusion
    • Human capital
    • Firm operations
    • Practice growth & client service

    Latest Stories

    • AI tools for finance professionals to prepare and visualize data
    • How will accountants learn new skills when AI does the work?
    • Experiential learning: A game changer for accountants
  • FINANCIAL REPORTING
    • All articles
    • FASB reporting
    • IFRS
    • Private company reporting
    • SEC compliance and reporting

    Latest Stories

    • SEC proposes amendments to small entity definitions
    • Key signals from the SEC-PCAOB conference point to a busy new year
    • New SEC chair to CPAs: ‘Back to basics’
  • AUDIT
    • All articles
    • Attestation
    • Audit
    • Compilation and review
    • Peer review
    • Quality Management

    Latest Stories

    • Auditing Standards Board proposes changes to attestation standards
    • Change at the top: PCAOB will feature new chair, 3 new board members
    • How to prevent late-stage engagement quality review surprises
  • MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
    • All articles
    • Business planning
    • Human resources
    • Risk management
    • Strategy

    Latest Stories

    • AI early adopters pull ahead but face rising risk, global report finds
    • Looking to land a CFO role? 2025 was a good year
    • Report: AI speeds up work but fails to deliver real business value
  • Home
  • News
  • Magazine
  • Podcast
  • Topics
Advertisement
  1. newsletter
  2. Cpa Insider
CPA INSIDER

What to do about your after-hours work email

How to draw a line between work and personal time.

By Eddie Huffman
February 26, 2018

Please note: This item is from our archives and was published in 2018. It is provided for historical reference. The content may be out of date and links may no longer function.

Related

February 12, 2018

How to create more quality family time

February 5, 2018

Accountants reveal what inspires them every day

January 16, 2018

Delegating like a boss

TOPICS

  • Professional Development
    • Communication

You just sat down for dinner and your phone alerts you to a new work email. Can it wait until you’re back behind your desk tomorrow, or do you need to answer it right away? Can you relax and enjoy the rest of your evening, or should you jump back into work mode to keep your boss or a client happy?

It depends, according to experts in business etiquette. We asked two of them to weigh in with advice on what to do about after-hours work email.

Most people don’t expect an immediate response to every email, according to Rachel Wagner, founder and president of Rachel Wagner Etiquette and Protocol in Tulsa, Okla. The general expectation with business emails is that the recipient will respond by the end of the business day, if possible, or within 24 hours otherwise, she said.

It’s important to work with your boss or team to make sure everyone is on the same page, Wagner said: “In your particular group, team, or department, are you expected to respond to work emails after regular work hours? What about weekends and holidays? Sit down first and talk about that.”

Some emails merit a courteous response after hours, she said. For example, you might receive an important, time-sensitive document.

“You can send something out like, ‘Dear Bill: This email is to acknowledge I received the audit report on ABC Company, and will be looking at it first thing in the morning,'” Wagner said. “You’re not getting in a lengthy email discussion. It just reassures them when they send something very important.”

Other options

Advertisement

Setting an out-of-office message lets people know not to expect a rapid response from you, said Diane Gottsman, author of Modern Etiquette for a Better Life and founder of The Protocol School of Texas.

But sometimes it’s easier to respond to an email immediately while it’s fresh on your mind and avoid dwelling on it, Wagner said. To avoid an expectation of immediate replies, schedule such emails for delivery the next morning.

“It lets you have your evening,” Wagner said. “It doesn’t give the sender the idea that you’re on call all the time.”

Scheduling for later delivery can also be useful for sending a reminder when you don’t need or expect a reply until the following day, Gottsman said. She recommends sending yourself an email or creating some other kind of reminder instead of intruding on a co-worker’s personal time. After-hours emails can create psychological pressure on recipients to process work issues during personal time even if they understand that the matter is not urgent, she said.

Don’t let after-hours emails prevent you from having a personal life, Gottsman said. Everyone needs down time to recharge, enjoy family and friends, and take care of personal business. You can’t give those things the attention they deserve if you’re constantly answering work email away from the office, she said.

So enjoy your dinner. Most work emails can wait.

Eddie Huffman is a freelance writer based in Greensboro, N.C. To comment on this article or to suggest an idea for another article, contact Chris Baysden, senior manager of newsletters at the Association of International Certified Professional Accountants.

Advertisement
Advertisement

latest news

February 27, 2026

AICPA asks Department of Education to list accounting as a professional degree

February 27, 2026

IRS should open Trump accounts for eligible children automatically, AICPA says

February 26, 2026

AI early adopters pull ahead but face rising risk, global report finds

February 26, 2026

COSO creates audit-ready guidance for governing generative AI

February 26, 2026

GAO says tax pros helped shape IRS response to ERC issues

Advertisement

Most Read

IRS broadens Tax Pro Account for accounting firms and others
AI loses ground to pros as taxpayers rethink who should do their taxes
IRS clarifies how employees can claim 2025 tip and overtime deductions
How AI is transforming the audit — and what it means for CPAs
AI risks CPAs should know
Advertisement

Podcast

February 26, 2026

Talent shuffle: Why people want to change jobs and how leaders can adapt

February 19, 2026

Inside the AICPA’s effort to enhance the skills of early-career CPAs

February 11, 2026

Lessons in internal control lapses from major fraud cases

Features

How AI is transforming the audit — and what it means for CPAs
How AI is transforming the audit — and what it means for CPAs

How AI is transforming the audit — and what it means for CPAs

Promises of ‘fast and easy’ threaten SOC credibility
Promises of ‘fast and easy’ threaten SOC credibility

Promises of ‘fast and easy’ threaten SOC credibility

Built on purpose: CPA’s 6 steps to starting a not-for-profit
Built on purpose: CPA’s 6 steps to starting a not-for-profit

Built on purpose: CPA’s 6 steps to starting a not-for-profit

How to prevent late-stage engagement quality review surprises
How to prevent late-stage engagement quality review surprises

How to prevent late-stage engagement quality review surprises

FROM THIS MONTH'S ISSUE

Promises of ‘fast and easy’ threaten SOC credibility

CPAs who provide Service and Organization Control (SOC) examinations warn that an ongoing push for high-volume SOC services may come at the cost of quality and objectivity.

From The Tax Adviser

February 28, 2026

CPA firm M&A tax issues

February 18, 2026

Why LIFO, why now?

February 10, 2026

Navigating safe-harbor rules for solar and wind Sec. 48E facilities

January 31, 2026

Trust distributions in kind and the Sec. 643(e)(3) election

MAGAZINE

March 2026

March 2026

March 2026
February 2026

February 2026

February 2026
January 2026

January 2026

January 2026
December 2025

December 2025

December 2025
November 2025

November 2025

November 2025
October 2025

October 2025

October 2025
September 2025

September 2025

September 2025
August 2025

August 2025

August 2025
July 2025

July 2025

July 2025
June 2025

June 2025

June 2025
May 2025

May 2025

May 2025
April 2025

April 2025

April 2025
view all

View All

http://JofA_Default_Mag_cover_small_official_blue

PUSH NOTIFICATIONS

Learn about important news

This quick guide walks you through the process of enabling and troubleshooting push notifications from the JofA on your computer or phone.

CPA LETTER DAILY EMAIL

CPA Letter Logo

Subscribe to the daily CPA Letter

Stay on top of the biggest news affecting the profession every business day. Follow this link to your marketing preferences on aicpa-cima.com to subscribe. If you don't already have an aicpa-cima.com account, create one for free and then navigate to your marketing preferences.

Connect

  • X Logo JofA on X
  • facebook JofA on Facebook

HOME

  • News
  • Monthly issues
  • Podcast
  • A&A Focus
  • PFP Digest
  • Academic Update
  • Topics
  • RSS feed rss feed
  • Site map

ABOUT

  • Contact us
  • Advertise
  • Submit an article
  • Editorial calendar
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms & conditions

SUBSCRIBE

  • Academic Update
  • CPE Express

AICPA & CIMA SITES

  • AICPA-CIMA.com
  • Global Engagement Center
  • Financial Management (FM)
  • The Tax Adviser
  • AICPA Insights
  • Global Career Hub
AICPA & CIMA

© 2026 Association of International Certified Professional Accountants. All rights reserved.

Reliable. Resourceful. Respected.