The reality: Employee benefits aren't optional anymore — they're the number one factor (after salary) that determines whether you attract talent or lose them to the company down the road. This guide covers every employee benefit a small business should consider, what each one costs, and how to administer them without drowning in paperwork.
If you're a small business owner trying to figure out employee benefits, you're not alone. The choices are overwhelming, the regulations are complex, and every insurance broker tells you something different. This guide gives you the straight answers — what employee benefits you're required to offer, what's optional but worth it, and how to manage the entire program without a full-time HR department.
Employee Benefits: Required vs. Optional
Let's separate what the law requires from what makes your business competitive.
Required Employee Benefits (Federal Law)
| Benefit | Who Must Offer | Employer Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Social Security & Medicare (FICA) | All employers | 7.65% of wages |
| Federal Unemployment (FUTA) | All employers | 0.6% on first $7,000/ee |
| State Unemployment (SUTA) | All employers | Varies by state (0.5–5.4%) |
| Workers' Compensation | Most employers (state-dependent) | $0.16–$18+ per $100 of payroll |
| FMLA Leave | 50+ employees | Unpaid (job protection only) |
| ACA Health Insurance | 50+ FTEs (ALEs only) | Must meet affordability threshold |
✅ Key point: If you have fewer than 50 full-time equivalent employees, you are not legally required to offer health insurance. But 56% of businesses with 3–49 workers choose to anyway — because they can't compete for talent without it. Read more about 2026 ACA affordability thresholds.
Optional (But Expected) Employee Benefits
These are the employee benefits that set your compensation package apart. In a labor market where workers have choices, employee benefits are your competitive advantage.
| Employee Benefit | Typical Cost to Employer | Employee Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Health Insurance (medical, dental, vision) | $560–$1,870/mo per employee | 🔴 #1 most valued benefit |
| 401(k) / Retirement Plan | 3–6% of salary (employer match) | #2 benefit — retention driver |
| Paid Time Off (PTO) | 6.6% of salary (avg 15 days) | #3 benefit — prevents burnout |
| HSA / FSA | $0 (pre-tax deduction) or small match | Tax savings for employees |
| Life & Disability Insurance | $15–$50/mo per employee | Financial security |
Health Insurance: The Biggest Employee Benefit Decision
Health insurance is the most expensive and most valued employee benefit. Here's what small businesses need to know:
Group Health Insurance Costs (2026)
- Single coverage: Average $7,911/year ($659/month). Employers pay 83% on average.
- Family coverage: Average $22,463/year ($1,872/month). Employers pay 73% on average.
- Cost trend: Premiums increased 7% in 2025 and are projected to rise another 5–8% in 2026.
Plan Types Explained
- PPO — Wider network, higher premiums. Employees choose any doctor. Best for: companies that want maximum flexibility.
- HMO — Lower premiums, narrower network. Requires referrals. Best for: cost-conscious employers in metro areas.
- HDHP + HSA — Lowest premiums, paired with a Health Savings Account. Best for: younger, healthier workforces. Employees can save pre-tax dollars. See 2026 HSA contribution limits.
COBRA: What to Know
If you have 20+ employees and offer group health insurance, you must offer COBRA continuation coverage when employees leave. COBRA lets former employees keep their coverage for 18–36 months — but they pay the full premium (plus 2% admin fee). Administering COBRA notices and tracking coverage windows is one of the most common reasons small businesses outsource their employee benefits administration.
Retirement Plans: 401(k) and Beyond
The 2026 401(k) contribution limit is $23,500 ($31,000 for workers 50+, plus the new $11,250 super catch-up for ages 60–63). Offering a 401(k) with employer match is the second most effective recruiting tool after health insurance.
Retirement Plan Options for Small Businesses
- Traditional 401(k) — Most common. Employer match is optional but expected (typically 3–6% of salary). Requires annual nondiscrimination testing.
- Safe Harbor 401(k) — Eliminates nondiscrimination testing by requiring either a 3% non-elective contribution or a 4% match formula. Popular with small businesses.
- SIMPLE IRA — For businesses with 100 or fewer employees. Lower admin costs but lower contribution limits ($16,500 in 2026).
- 403(b) — For nonprofits and churches. Similar to 401(k) with some additional flexibility. See our nonprofit payroll page for details.
Integration matters: Your 401(k) provider should integrate directly with your payroll system. If contributions are calculated manually and sent via spreadsheet, you're introducing errors and costing yourself hours every pay period. An all-in-one HR software platform handles this automatically.
Time Off: PTO, Sick Leave, and Holidays
Paid time off is the third most valued employee benefit. There's no federal mandate for PTO in the private sector, but competitive employers typically offer:
- 10–15 days PTO for new hires (increasing with tenure)
- 8–10 paid holidays per year
- Sick leave — required by law in 15 states + many cities (check your state)
Tracking PTO, accrual rates, carryover limits, and state-specific sick leave rules is a major administrative burden. A connected employee benefits and time and attendance system handles this automatically.
Voluntary Employee Benefits (Low Cost, High Impact)
These employee benefits cost you nothing (or very little) to offer but significantly increase your total compensation value:
- Dental & vision insurance — Often 100% employee-paid through payroll deduction
- Life insurance — Basic group life often costs $5–$15/employee/month for a $50K policy
- Short-term & long-term disability — Protects income during illness or injury
- Accident / critical illness / hospital indemnity — Supplemental coverage through carriers like Aflac
- Employee Assistance Program (EAP) — Mental health, financial counseling, legal referrals ($1–$3/employee/month)
- Commuter benefits — Pre-tax transit and parking deductions (no employer cost)
Employee Benefits by Industry
Different industries have different employee benefits priorities:
- Construction: Workers' comp by classification code is critical. Construction payroll requires pay-as-you-go workers' comp and trade-specific coverage rates. Read our complete workers' comp guide.
- Restaurants: High turnover means fast onboarding is essential. Restaurant employee benefits often focus on shift meals, flexible scheduling, and tip pooling structures.
- Healthcare: Healthcare employee benefits require credential tracking, shift differentials, and continuing education support.
- Nonprofits: Nonprofit employee benefits include 403(b) plans, grant-funded positions, and mission-aligned perks.
How to Administer Employee Benefits Without a Full-Time HR Person
The biggest challenge for small businesses isn't choosing employee benefits — it's managing them. Enrollment, life event changes, COBRA, deductions, carrier payments, ACA reporting, and open enrollment coordination consume hours every week.
The Manual Way (What Most Small Businesses Do)
- Paper enrollment forms → hand-key into carrier portals
- Manual deduction calculations → hope payroll matches carrier invoices
- COBRA notices → track in a spreadsheet and pray nothing falls through
- ACA reporting → hire a CPA to generate 1095-C forms at year-end
The Better Way (Connected HR Platform)
- Employees self-enroll online from any device
- Deductions sync automatically with payroll — zero manual reconciliation
- COBRA administration automated with notices and tracking
- ACA reporting (1094-C/1095-C) generated automatically from payroll data
- Open enrollment workflows with decision-support tools
Our HR software buying guide covers how to evaluate platforms that handle employee benefits enrollment alongside payroll and time and attendance.
Do You Need a Benefits Agency?
Here's a question most small business owners don't know to ask: should you work with a benefits agency, or just pick a platform and go it alone?
A benefits agency (also called a benefits broker or benefits consultant) acts as your intermediary with insurance carriers. They shop the market on your behalf, negotiate rates, handle renewals, and advise on plan design. The key difference from a traditional insurance agent: modern benefits agencies combine brokerage services with technology — giving you both the expert guidance AND the platform to administer everything.
Benefits Agency vs. DIY: What's the Difference?
| DIY (Online Marketplace) | Benefits Agency | |
|---|---|---|
| Plan shopping | You compare plans yourself | Agency shops carriers for you |
| Rate negotiation | Take what you get | Agency negotiates on your behalf |
| Renewal support | Figure it out each year | Agency manages annual renewals |
| Employee questions | You answer them | Agency provides support |
| Claims issues | Call the carrier yourself | Agency advocates for you |
| Cost to employer | $0 (but you spend hours) | $0 — agencies are paid by carriers |
✅ Key insight: Benefits agencies are typically paid by the insurance carriers (via commission), not by you. This means you get expert guidance, carrier negotiation, and renewal management at no additional cost compared to going directly to the carrier. The best agencies also provide the technology platform to administer enrollment, deductions, and compliance — so you get broker + tech in one relationship.
When a Benefits Agency Makes Sense
- You have 5+ employees and are offering group health insurance for the first time
- Your renewal rates jumped and you want someone to shop the market
- You're tired of managing multiple vendors (broker + payroll + HR software)
- You need help explaining plan options to employees during open enrollment
- You want one partner who handles both the insurance brokerage and the administration platform
BlueWave HR operates as a full-service benefits agency — we act as your health insurance broker, shop carriers on your behalf, negotiate rates, manage renewals, AND provide the iSolved People Cloud platform to administer enrollment, deductions, COBRA, and ACA compliance. One relationship instead of three.
Employee Benefits Compliance Checklist
- ✅ Correct worker classification — Only W-2 employees are eligible for employee benefits
- ✅ ACA affordability threshold — If 50+ FTEs, coverage must cost ≤ 9.02% of household income (2026)
- ✅ Contribution limits — 401(k): $23,500; HSA: $4,300 (single) / $8,550 (family)
- ✅ Section 125 plan document — Required for pre-tax deductions
- ✅ Summary Plan Description (SPD) — Must be provided to all enrolled employees
- ✅ COBRA notices — Within 14 days of qualifying event for employers with 20+ employees
- ✅ Filing deadlines — 1094-C/1095-C due March 31 (electronic) or February 28 (paper)
FAQ
What employee benefits are required by law?
FICA (Social Security + Medicare), federal and state unemployment insurance, workers' compensation, and FMLA leave (50+ employees). Health insurance is only required for Applicable Large Employers with 50+ full-time equivalent employees under the ACA.
How much do employee benefits cost per employee?
A competitive employee benefits package costs 30–40% of base salary. For a $50,000/year employee, expect $15,000–$20,000 in total benefits cost. Health insurance alone averages $7,911/year for single coverage.
What employee benefits do small businesses typically offer?
Health insurance (56% of firms with 3–49 workers), PTO, dental, vision, 401(k), life insurance, and disability. Flexible work and professional development are increasingly common competitive differentiators.
Do I need benefits administration software?
If you offer health insurance or a 401(k) to more than 10 employees, yes. Manual enrollment, deduction tracking, and compliance reporting at scale is error-prone and time-consuming. A connected HR software platform handles it automatically.
Need Help Building Your Employee Benefits Package?
BlueWave HR handles employee benefits enrollment, payroll deductions, COBRA, ACA reporting, and 401(k) integration — all through one platform. Get a free benefits audit and see what you're missing.
Get a Free Benefits Audit