Human Resources Online Serves 5 Dad Jokes for Father’s Day

Human Resources Online published a Father’s Day dad jokes collection with inputs from five contributors, mixing puns, groans and low-pressure workplace humour.

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Human Resources Online Serves 5 Dad Jokes for Father’s Day

Human Resources Online published dad jokes for Father’s Day, turning a light workplace format into a small break for readers and office colleagues. The collection pulls in five contributors, including Aditi Sharma Kalra, and it leans into the kind of humour that can spark a smile, then a groan, in the middle of a workday.

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The collection is titled “Puns, groans and questionable punchlines: The ultimate workplace dad joke collection for Father’s Day.” It includes input from Deborah Quek, Priya Sunil, Sarah Gideon and Umairah Nasir as well. The setup is simple: a pun, a confident pause and at least one person willing to groan.

Aditi Sharma Kalra joins five-contributor set

Aditi Sharma Kalra is one of the five named contributors behind the collection. That matters for readers because the piece is not a single voice article; it is built as a shared workplace feature, with each contributor helping shape the tone rather than a single writer carrying the joke list alone.

The collection also gives a practical clue about what counts as a dad joke in this setting. The jokes are described as clean, low-pressure and easy to share, which keeps the format usable for offices where people want humour without much risk or preparation. The idea is not polished stand-up; it is the kind of small moment that can fit between tasks.

Father’s Day, HR and office humour

Human Resources Online ties Father’s Day to dads, father figures and caregivers, and the piece says the day can feel happy for many people and more complicated for others. That split gives the collection a broader purpose than just jokes: it creates a light entry point into a day that does not land the same way for everyone.

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Some of the lines are described as classics, while others are the sort that may leave readers wondering whether comedy should require approval from HR. That joke about HR is doing a lot of work. It keeps the tone workplace-friendly while also signalling that the collection is aiming for harmless mischief, not edgy humour.

Readers and a pause at work

The practical value for readers and office colleagues is straightforward. A small moment of humour can help people pause, smile and connect during a busy workday, especially when the message is delivered in a format that asks for little more than a pun and a willingness to groan. For teams that share informal messages, that makes the collection easy to reuse without turning it into a performance.

Human Resources Online also points readers toward Telegram and Instagram. For anyone following along, the immediate takeaway is not a new policy or a major workplace shift, but a ready-made set of Father’s Day dad jokes built for quick sharing, quick reactions and the kind of laughter that arrives with a groan attached.

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Entertainment journalist specialising in digital media, influencer culture, and the business of fame. Host of a top-rated entertainment podcast.