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Workplace bullying, gaslighting and harassment can feel similar when you are the person experiencing them.

All three may leave you anxious before meetings, replaying conversations after work or wondering whether you are overreacting. They may also overlap inside the same harmful workplace relationship.

However, they are not identical.

Workplace bullying generally describes intimidating, humiliating, undermining or harmful conduct.

Workplace gaslighting describes a pattern of psychological manipulation that distorts reality and weakens your confidence in your own memory or judgment.

Workplace harassment can have a specific legal meaning, particularly when unwelcome conduct is connected with a protected characteristic such as race, religion, sex, age or disability.

Understanding the difference can help you describe the problem accurately, preserve useful evidence and choose a more appropriate next step.

This article provides a clear comparison of bullying vs gaslighting at work, explains where harassment fits and shows how to document conduct without making unsupported conclusions.

For a wider explanation of manipulation, blame-shifting, boundary punishment and emotional harm in professional settings, read our guide to workplace narcissistic abuse.

Workplace Bullying vs. Gaslighting vs. Harassment: The Quick Answer

The simplest distinction is:

A single situation can involve more than one category.

For example, a manager may repeatedly humiliate an employee, deny that the humiliation occurred and connect the behavior to the employee’s race or disability.

That situation may involve bullying, gaslighting and potentially legally relevant harassment at the same time.

The categories are tools for understanding the conduct. They are not substitutes for a workplace investigation or qualified legal advice.

Why Naming the Problem Matters

The words you use can influence what happens next.

If you describe every disagreement as gaslighting, the underlying concern may be dismissed as a communication problem.

If you describe all bullying as illegal harassment, an employer may focus on whether a protected characteristic is involved instead of addressing the harmful conduct through its general workplace policies.

If you describe a reality-distorting pattern only as “rudeness,” the psychological effect of repeated denial and manipulation may be missed.

Accurate language helps you identify:

You do not need the perfect label before protecting yourself. But a clearer description can make your next step more focused.

Workplace Bullying vs. Gaslighting vs. Harassment

What Is Workplace Bullying?

Workplace bullying generally refers to unwanted behavior that intimidates, humiliates, undermines, excludes or harms another person at work.

ACAS workplace bullying guidance describes bullying as behavior that may be offensive, intimidating, malicious or insulting, or an abuse or misuse of power that undermines, humiliates or causes harm.

Bullying may come from:

Common Workplace Bullying Examples

Examples may include:

Does Bullying Have to Be Repeated?

Workplace bullying is often understood as a repeated pattern. However, workplace policies and legal systems differ, and some may also recognize a severe one-off incident.

The more useful questions are:

Is Workplace Bullying Illegal?

Bullying is not automatically unlawful in every country or situation.

Conduct may become legally relevant when it involves discrimination, harassment, retaliation, threats, assault, health and safety violations, contractual breaches or other protected rights.

Even when conduct does not meet a legal definition, it may still violate an employer’s respectful-workplace, anti-bullying, conduct or grievance policies.

What Is Workplace Gaslighting?

Workplace gaslighting is a pattern of psychological manipulation in which someone repeatedly denies, distorts, hides or rewrites information in ways that can make another person doubt their memory, perception or professional judgment.

Research on workplace gaslighting has examined gaslighting as a distinct form of harmful workplace behavior and developed measures for studying it in professional relationships.

Gaslighting is not simply:

The concern is a repeated pattern that causes reality, responsibility or evidence to become unstable in a way that disadvantages one person.

Common Workplace Gaslighting Examples

Examples may include:

What Makes Gaslighting Different From Lying?

A lie attempts to make you believe something untrue.

Gaslighting goes further by weakening your confidence in your own ability to know what is true.

For example, a coworker may falsely claim that they completed your work. That is dishonest.

If they repeatedly alter records, deny conversations, tell others that you are confused and use your frustration as evidence that your memory cannot be trusted, the pattern moves closer to workplace gaslighting.

Why Workplace Gaslighting Can Be Difficult to Prove

Gaslighting often occurs through small, deniable incidents.

Each event may appear unimportant on its own:

The pattern becomes clearer when incidents are recorded together.

What Is Workplace Harassment?

“Harassment” has both an everyday meaning and a legal meaning.

In ordinary conversation, people may use harassment to describe persistent unwanted behavior that frightens, humiliates, insults or pressures someone.

Legal definitions are more specific and depend on the country, state, province or jurisdiction.

Harassment Under US Federal Employment Law

According to the EEOC guidance on workplace harassment, harassment under US federal employment discrimination law involves unwelcome conduct based on a legally protected characteristic.

Protected characteristics covered by the laws enforced by the EEOC can include:

Applicable protections can also include retaliation for participating in or opposing certain discriminatory practices.

Under this framework, the conduct must also meet the relevant legal threshold. Petty slights and ordinary annoyances generally do not become unlawful harassment unless the conduct is extremely serious or sufficiently severe or pervasive under the applicable standard.

Important: Other countries and local jurisdictions use different definitions and may protect additional characteristics or conduct.

Common Harassment Examples

Depending on the facts and applicable law, examples may include:

Not Every Bullying Incident Is Legal Harassment

A manager may bully an employee because they dislike being questioned, want control or routinely mistreat everyone.

That behavior may be unacceptable and may violate company policy. However, under some legal frameworks, it may not qualify as unlawful harassment unless the required connection with a protected characteristic or another legal right exists.

This distinction should never be used to excuse bullying.

It only means that different policies, reporting procedures and legal protections may apply.

Workplace Bullying vs. Gaslighting vs. Harassment Comparison

Question Workplace Bullying Workplace Gaslighting Workplace Harassment
What is primarily targeted? Dignity, safety, reputation, power or ability to work Confidence in memory, perception and judgment A person through unwanted conduct, sometimes connected to a legally protected characteristic
Typical behavior Humiliation, intimidation, exclusion, threats or repeated undermining Denial, distortion, rewriting events, withholding facts or making someone doubt reality Offensive, hostile, degrading or intimidating conduct that may meet a legal or policy definition
Does it usually involve repetition? Often, although severe one-off incidents may also matter Usually a repeated pattern Can involve repeated conduct or a sufficiently serious incident, depending on the applicable standard
Must a protected characteristic be involved? Not necessarily No Often yes for claims under employment discrimination laws such as US federal law
Is it automatically illegal? No No Not automatically; the legal definition and threshold must be met
Can it violate workplace policy? Yes Yes, depending on the conduct and policy Yes
Useful evidence Repeated incidents, witnesses, messages, workload records and exclusion patterns Written instructions, timelines, conflicting accounts, edits and contemporaneous notes Messages, witnesses, protected-context evidence, complaints, policy records and retaliation evidence

Where Bullying, Gaslighting and Harassment Overlap

These categories are not separate boxes with solid walls.

A person may use gaslighting as a bullying tactic. Harassment may include bullying. A harasser may also deny the conduct in a way that becomes gaslighting.

Bullying That Includes Gaslighting

A manager repeatedly gives an employee verbal instructions and later denies giving them.

The manager then criticizes the employee publicly for failing to follow the “correct” process.

The humiliation and repeated professional undermining may resemble bullying.

The denial and reality distortion may resemble gaslighting.

Bullying That May Also Be Harassment

A supervisor repeatedly mocks an employee’s accent and excludes them from client meetings because of assumptions about their national origin.

The repeated humiliation may be workplace bullying.

Because the conduct is connected with national origin, it may also raise harassment or discrimination concerns under applicable law.

Harassment Followed by Gaslighting

A coworker makes repeated sexual comments.

When the employee objects, the coworker says the comments never happened, claims the employee encouraged them and tells others that the employee is inventing the problem.

The unwanted comments may raise harassment concerns.

The later denial and rewriting of events may resemble gaslighting.

Gaslighting Without Obvious Bullying

A manager calmly and privately changes instructions, removes records and denies previous decisions.

There may be no shouting, insult or public humiliation.

However, the repeated distortion may still weaken the employee’s confidence and professional position.

Bullying Without Gaslighting

A manager openly shouts at an employee, insults them in meetings and assigns punitive workloads.

The conduct may be bullying even if the manager never denies or rewrites what occurred.

Seven Workplace Examples and How to Classify Them

Example 1: Public Humiliation

A manager repeatedly calls one employee incompetent during team meetings.

Most likely category: Workplace bullying.

It may also become harassment if the comments are linked with a protected characteristic or meet another applicable legal definition.

Example 2: Denied Instructions

A manager gives a verbal instruction, later denies it and tells the employee that their memory is unreliable.

Most likely category: Possible workplace gaslighting, particularly if it is repeated.

If the employee is then publicly punished, the situation may also involve bullying.

Example 3: Disability-Based Mockery

Coworkers repeatedly imitate an employee’s disability and circulate offensive messages.

Most likely category: Potential harassment and bullying.

The employee should consider reviewing workplace policy and obtaining advice relevant to their location.

Example 4: Exclusion From Information

A coworker repeatedly leaves someone out of important emails and later says that everyone received the information.

Most likely category: Possible bullying, gaslighting or both, depending on repetition, intention, effect and evidence.

Example 5: One Rude Comment

A stressed manager makes one dismissive comment and later apologizes.

Most likely category: Poor conduct, but not necessarily bullying, gaslighting or unlawful harassment.

Context and repetition matter.

Example 6: Racial Jokes

A team repeatedly shares jokes about an employee’s race after being asked to stop.

Most likely category: Potential workplace harassment and bullying.

Legal significance depends on the jurisdiction and full circumstances.

Example 7: Changing Performance Standards

A manager repeatedly changes the standard after an employee completes the work and insists that the requirement never changed.

Most likely category: Possible gaslighting and workplace bullying.

Written instructions and version history may be particularly useful evidence.

How to Identify What You Are Experiencing

You do not need to choose one label immediately.

Begin with five practical questions.

1. What Exactly Happened?

Describe the conduct without interpretation.

Instead of:

“My manager gaslighted and harassed me.”

Write:

“During the June 10 meeting, my manager instructed me to send the report directly to the client. On June 12, after I sent it, the manager denied giving the instruction and said in front of the team that I had acted without approval.”

2. Is It a Pattern or an Isolated Incident?

Record how often similar conduct has occurred.

A repeated pattern may support concerns about bullying or gaslighting. A sufficiently serious one-off incident may still require attention.

3. Is a Protected Characteristic or Protected Activity Involved?

Consider whether the conduct relates to:

If so, seek location-specific advice promptly because reporting deadlines may apply.

4. What Is the Professional Impact?

Record whether the conduct has affected:

5. What Evidence Exists?

Relevant evidence may include:

What to Do If You Are Experiencing Workplace Bullying

Document the Pattern

Record dates, locations, participants, witnesses, exact conduct and professional impact.

Review Workplace Policies

Look for policies covering:

Consider an Informal Approach When Appropriate

If the conduct is lower-risk and you feel safe doing so, a calm direct statement may help:

“Comments about my competence during team meetings are affecting our ability to work together. Please raise performance concerns with me privately and provide specific examples.”

You are not required to confront someone personally when doing so feels unsafe or inappropriate.

Use Formal Procedures When Necessary

If the conduct is serious, repeated or unresolved, consider reporting it through the designated manager, HR representative, union representative or formal grievance channel.

Focus the Report on Four Elements

What to Do If You Are Experiencing Workplace Gaslighting

Create a Contemporaneous Record

Write down important events soon after they happen, while details are fresh.

Confirm Verbal Instructions in Writing

Use neutral messages such as:

“Confirming my understanding from today’s meeting: I will revise the proposal, send it for your approval on Thursday and wait for written approval before sending it to the client.”

Preserve Version History

Where workplace systems permit it, retain:

Follow confidentiality rules and applicable law. Do not remove restricted company information or make secret recordings without checking whether doing so is permitted.

Use External Reality Checks

A trusted mentor, therapist, representative or adviser may help you distinguish factual inconsistencies from stress-driven uncertainty.

Avoid Debating Motives

Instead of saying:

“You are trying to make me doubt myself.”

Say:

“The instruction in this email differs from the account provided today. I would like us to confirm which instruction applies.”

What to Do If You May Be Experiencing Harassment

Preserve Relevant Evidence

Keep appropriate records of:

Review the Employer’s Reporting Procedure

Identify:

Consider Location-Specific Advice Promptly

Legal definitions and deadlines vary.

An employment lawyer, government employment body, union or qualified local adviser can explain the options that apply to your specific location and circumstances.

Document Possible Retaliation

After a complaint, record unexpected changes involving:

A change after reporting does not automatically prove retaliation, but the timeline may be important.

How to Document the Problem Without Choosing a Label

You can create useful records without deciding whether the conduct is bullying, gaslighting or harassment.

Use This Basic Incident Format

Weak Documentation

“My boss bullied and gaslighted me all week.”

Stronger Documentation

“On June 15 at 10:30 AM, my manager stated during the team call that the deadline had always been June 14. The attached project message dated June 8 records the deadline as June 17. When I referred to that message, the manager said I was confused and removed me from the client update meeting. Team members A and B were present.”

The second version allows another person to review the conduct without first agreeing with your label.

What Not to Do

Try to avoid:

When to Seek Immediate or Professional Help

Consider prompt professional assistance when the situation involves:

Use appropriate emergency, law-enforcement, medical, employment or legal resources for the circumstances and location.

How These Patterns Connect With Narcissistic Workplace Behavior

Bullying, gaslighting and harassment are behaviors or legal concepts. They are not diagnoses of Narcissistic Personality Disorder.

A person displaying narcissistic traits may use bullying or gaslighting, but not every person who bullies or gaslights has NPD.

Similarly, harassment may be committed by someone with no known personality disorder.

The responsible approach is to focus on observable conduct.

For leadership-related patterns, read:

For peer-to-peer behavior, read our guide to narcissistic coworker signs.

Name the Problem Before Choosing the Next Step

You may not be able to determine immediately whether a situation is bullying, gaslighting, legally relevant harassment or a combination.

You can still begin with what is known:

This is the approach used throughout Reclaim Your Power.

The guide does not ask you to diagnose another person or force every workplace experience into one label.

It helps you move from confusion toward:

Explore the complete seven-chapter recovery path when you are ready to move from naming the problem toward protecting yourself and rebuilding confidence.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between workplace bullying and gaslighting?

Workplace bullying generally targets someone through intimidation, humiliation, exclusion, threats or repeated undermining.

Gaslighting targets confidence in reality by repeatedly denying, distorting or rewriting information in ways that can make someone doubt their memory or judgment.

Gaslighting can be used as a bullying tactic, but not all bullying involves gaslighting.

Is workplace gaslighting a form of harassment?

Gaslighting may occur as part of harassment, but it is not automatically unlawful harassment.

Legal harassment definitions vary. Under US federal employment discrimination law, the conduct generally must be connected with a protected characteristic and meet the applicable legal standard.

Is workplace bullying illegal?

Not always.

Bullying may violate company policy even when it does not meet a specific legal definition. It may become legally relevant when it involves discrimination, harassment, retaliation, threats or other protected rights.

Can one incident be workplace bullying?

Bullying is commonly associated with repeated behavior, but a severe one-off incident may still violate workplace policy or law.

The definition depends on the employer’s policy and applicable jurisdiction.

Is lying the same as gaslighting?

No.

A lie is a false statement. Gaslighting generally involves a broader pattern that weakens another person’s confidence in their own perception, memory or judgment.

Can a difficult manager be mistaken for a bully?

Yes.

A manager may be demanding, disorganized or poor at communication without deliberately bullying employees.

The distinction becomes clearer through repetition, fairness, accountability, proportionality and whether the behavior improves after concerns are raised.

What evidence is useful for workplace gaslighting?

Useful evidence may include written instructions, meeting summaries, project histories, version records, conflicting messages, witnesses and notes made shortly after incidents.

How should I report workplace bullying to HR?

Describe specific conduct, dates, witnesses, evidence, effect on the work and the outcome you are requesting.

Avoid relying only on general labels such as “toxic,” “bullying” or “gaslighting.”

What makes workplace conduct unlawful harassment?

The answer depends on local law.

Under US federal employment law, unlawful harassment generally involves unwelcome conduct connected with a protected characteristic and conduct that meets the applicable legal threshold.

Seek qualified advice for your location and circumstances.

Can bullying, gaslighting and harassment happen together?

Yes.

A person may bully someone through humiliation, gaslight them by denying the conduct and harass them through comments connected with a protected characteristic.

Should I confront the person responsible?

Not automatically.

Consider the seriousness of the conduct, power imbalance, available evidence, safety, workplace policy and possible retaliation.

In some situations, a brief direct boundary may help. In others, formal reporting or professional guidance may be safer.

What should I do if I cannot decide which label applies?

Document the observable facts without choosing a label.

You can ask a manager, HR professional, union representative, therapist, employment adviser or lawyer to help you assess the appropriate next step.

Final Thoughts

Workplace bullying, gaslighting and harassment can overlap, but they describe different aspects of workplace harm.

Bullying often attacks dignity, position or safety.

Gaslighting attacks confidence in reality.

Harassment describes unwanted conduct and may carry a specific legal meaning depending on its connection with protected characteristics and the law that applies.

You do not need perfect terminology before taking your experience seriously.

Start with the facts.

What happened?

Did it repeat?

What evidence exists?

Was a protected characteristic or complaint involved?

How did the conduct affect your work?

What needs to happen next?

Clear language will not solve every workplace problem, but it can help you move from confusion toward a more deliberate response.

Continue with our guide to workplace narcissistic abuse, or explore the complete seven-chapter recovery path for practical guidance on recognition, documentation, boundaries, decision-making and recovery.

Educational and legal disclaimer: This article provides general educational information. It does not determine whether specific conduct is unlawful and does not replace legal, employment, medical or mental-health advice. Workplace policies, legal definitions and reporting deadlines vary by location. Seek advice from an appropriately qualified professional for your circumstances.

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