Employee Benefits Package for Small Business

30–40%
of total compensation cost for a fully-benefited employee: health insurance, retirement match, paid leave, and ancillary benefits typically add 30–40% above base salary once all employer contributions are counted
$7,000–$22,000
annual employer cost per employee for a complete benefits package including health insurance ($6,584 avg employer contribution per year for single coverage), 401(k) match, and paid time off at market rates
3 required minimums
before any other benefits: workers&#8217. Compensation insurance (required in all states), FICA employer contributions (mandatory payroll taxes), and FMLA compliance for employers with 50+ employees: all else is optional but competitively expected

What a Small Business Employee Benefits Package Actually Includes

A small business employee benefits package is the combination of non-wage compensation an employer provides alongside salary: health insurance, retirement savings options, paid time off, and ancillary coverage like dental, vision, and life insurance. The package is both a compliance matter and a talent market matter. Some benefits are legally required regardless of business size. Others are optional but expected by candidates in most labor markets, and their absence is a documented driver of voluntary turnover and offer rejection.

The design challenge for a small business is cost-to-impact ratio. A full enterprise benefits suite is not financially viable for most businesses under 25 employees, but a benefits package that fails to meet market expectations on health insurance and retirement costs real money in recruitment difficulty, turnover, and compensation premiums required to attract candidates who would otherwise accept a lower salary in exchange for strong benefits. The most cost-effective approach is to identify the three or four benefits that matter most to your specific workforce: typically health insurance, retirement match, and flexible PTO. And fund those well rather than spreading a limited budget across every benefit category thinly.

The ACA threshold: benefits strategy changes significantly at 50 full-time equivalent employeesUnder the Affordable Care Act, businesses with 50 or more full-time equivalent employees (FTEs) are required to offer minimum essential health coverage or face employer shared responsibility payments. Below 50 FTEs, health insurance is optional. But businesses with 1–49 employees can access the SHOP Marketplace and may qualify for the Small Business Health Care Tax Credit (up to 50% of premium costs for employers with fewer than 25 employees earning below a threshold). At 50 employees, benefits strategy becomes a compliance planning question. Below 50, it is purely a talent market decision. Know which threshold your headcount puts you near.

Annual Employer Cost per Employee by Benefits Category (10-Employee Small Business, Estimated)


Employee Benefits Package Cost Estimator











Small Business Benefits Package Options: What Each Benefit Costs and When to Offer It

Benefit Required? Employer cost (est.) Retention impact When to add
Workers&#8217. Compensation insurance Yes: all states (TX excl.) 0.5%–5% of payroll depending on industry Compliance: not a retention factor Day 1 of first hire: no exceptions
FICA employer taxes (Social Security + Medicare) Yes: mandatory payroll tax 7.65% of wages Compliance: not a retention factor Day 1: automatic via payroll
Health insurance (group plan) No (required at 50+ FTEs) $5,200–$14,000/employee/yr employer share Very high: absence is a primary departure reason for family-age employees By 5–10 employees or when competing for professional-level talent
401(k) or SIMPLE IRA No $1,000–$2,750/employee/yr (depends on match %) High for employees 30+: retirement plan absence accelerates departure when competitors offer one By 15–20 employees or when retention timeline exceeds 2 years
Paid time off (PTO) No (state mandates vary) $2,600–$4,400/employee/yr (labor cost of days off) High: unlimited or generous PTO is a retention signal even when rarely used From first hire: minimum 10 days. 15 days is market standard
Dental and vision insurance No $480–$900/employee/yr employer share Medium: expected once health insurance exists. Absence is minor but noted When adding or upgrading health insurance
Short-term / long-term disability Varies by state $240–$540/employee/yr for basic coverage Low to medium: valued by employees with dependents. Rarely a hiring decision factor By 20–25 employees or when workforce skews toward family-age professionals
“A small business does not need to compete with a Fortune 500 benefits package to retain good people. It needs to not lose people to a competitor over benefits. That means health insurance at market rates, a retirement option, and enough PTO that employees do not feel penalized for being human. Everything beyond that is differentiation, not baseline.”

Building a Small Business Benefits Package That Retains People: 5 Steps

  1. Start with what the labor market for your specific roles requires: not what you can afford in isolation. Benefits decisions made in a vacuum produce packages that either overspend on benefits employees do not value or underspend on the specific benefits that drive departure in your talent pool. Before designing your package, look at what competitors in your geographic market and industry offer for the roles you hire most. Glassdoor, LinkedIn, and SHRM salary surveys provide benefits prevalence data by role and region. The benchmark question is not “what can the business afford” but “what will cause us to lose candidates and employees if the business does not offer it.”
  2. Prioritize health insurance above every other optional benefit. For full-time employees, group health insurance is the benefits decision that most directly affects hiring competitiveness and voluntary turnover. Employees with families or health conditions evaluate health insurance first. Its absence or inadequacy is a primary reason for departure and offer rejection in every professional labor market. If the budget requires a choice between offering health insurance with a minimal 401(k) match versus no health insurance with a generous match, health insurance wins for retention impact at most employee profiles.
  3. Use a PEO or benefits broker to access group rates that are not available buying direct. Small businesses purchasing health insurance directly face individual-market or small-group pricing that can be 20–35% higher than group rates available through a Professional Employer Organization (PEO) or an insurance broker with access to association health plans. Before accepting any insurance quote, compare it against: (1) SHOP Marketplace pricing for your state, (2) a PEO’s pooled group rates, and (3) an independent broker who can present multiple carriers. The cost differential on 5–20 employees can be $15,000–$40,000 per year.
  4. Set up a SIMPLE IRA before a 401(k) if you have fewer than 100 employees and limited admin capacity. A SIMPLE IRA requires employer contributions of either 2% of compensation for all eligible employees or a 3% matching contribution. But it has no annual discrimination testing, minimal administration, and setup costs that are a fraction of a 401(k) plan. For a small business establishing its first retirement benefit, a SIMPLE IRA gets a meaningful retirement option in place within 60 days without the plan design, compliance testing, and third-party administrator costs that a 401(k) requires. Upgrade to a 401(k) when headcount and employee preferences justify the added structure.
  5. Communicate the total value of benefits to employees annually: most undervalue what they receive. When an employer contributes $8,000 per year toward health insurance and $1,650 toward a retirement match for each employee, those contributions represent roughly $9,650 in additional compensation that most employees do not factor into their “is this pay fair” calculation. An annual total compensation statement: a one-page document showing salary plus the employer’s dollar contribution to each benefit: makes the full value of the package visible. Employees who understand the full value of their benefits are meaningfully less likely to accept offers based purely on a higher base salary.
Tip: For businesses under 25 employees, a PEO that pools benefits across hundreds of employers is often the most cost-effective path to competitive health insurance and retirement optionsA Professional Employer Organization gives small businesses access to large-group health insurance rates, a ready-made 401(k) plan, workers&#8217. Compensation pooling, and HR administration for a per-employee monthly fee that is typically cheaper than purchasing equivalent coverage independently. For businesses at 5–25 employees where individual components of the benefits package would each require separate vendors and separate administration, a PEO collapses all of that into one relationship. The calculation is: PEO fee + insurance cost through PEO versus: independent insurance broker + 401(k) TPA + workers&#8217. Comp carrier + HR software. The PEO wins on total cost more often than the per-employee fee suggests.

Evaluating a PEO to manage HR, benefits, and payroll for your small business?

Read: HR Outsourcing and PEO Services for Small Business →

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The SBM Editorial Team
An independent small business publication by the team at World Consulting Group.
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