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More Employers Offer Caregiver Leave as Need Mounts

A new survey found that many employers plan to add or expand caregiver leave as they contend with workforce burnout, changing family dynamics and competition for talent.

According to WTW’s “2025 Absence, Disability and Medical Leave Survey,” caregiver leave is expected to see the fastest growth of any leave benefit over the next two years, despite only a handful of states requiring it by law. The shift comes as caregiving demands intensify across a multigenerational workforce. Many employees juggle work while caring for aging parents, children or other dependents, often with limited financial or workplace support.

Employers are finding that caregiver leave can help reduce stress and burnout, improve morale and productivity and support retention in a tight labor market where replacing workers is increasingly expensive.

What the WTW survey found

  • 73% of employers plan to enhance leave programs over the next two years.
  • 39% of employers expect to offer caregiver leave within two years, up from 22%.
  • Employers cite improving employee experience (67%) and strengthening attraction and retention (60%) as the top reasons for expanding leave benefits.
  • 49% of employers identify leave program administration as their biggest challenge, followed by system integration and workforce coverage.

The importance of caregiver leave

Caregiver leave addresses a growing gap for a workforce that increasingly spans multiple generations. Nearly one quarter of U.S. adults are part of the so-called “sandwich generation,” caring for both children and aging parents, according to another report. These employees often provide about 20 hours of unpaid care per week and may spend $10,000 to $11,300 a year out of pocket to support family members.

Although caregiver leave may qualify under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), it is typically unpaid unless employers offer wage replacement. That financial strain can increase stress and burnout, pushing some caregivers to reduce their hours, change jobs or leave the workforce entirely.

From a business standpoint, caregiver leave can help mitigate turnover risk. Replacing an employee can cost about 30% of annual pay. While caregiver leave will not eliminate turnover, it can lower the risk that employees leave because of caregiving responsibilities.

How employers can implement caregiver leave

Employers considering caregiver leave often start by integrating it into their existing leave or paid time off structures.

Common approaches include offering a defined number of paid leave days per year, allowing caregiving use of banked personal time off or layering caregiver leave on top of state paid family leave programs.

Best practices include:

  • Defining caregiving broadly to cover children, parents, spouses, domestic partners and other dependents.
  • Coordinating caregiver leave with FMLA and state programs to avoid duplication and ensure compliance.
  • Setting clear eligibility and documentation standards while keeping the process simple for employees.
  • Training managers to handle workload planning and employee conversations.

Overcoming administrative and operational challenges

Administration remains one of the biggest barriers to expanding caregiver leave. Challenges include coordinating multiple leave programs, maintaining multistate compliance and managing staffing as leave usage increases.

To address these issues, many employers are:

  • Outsourcing leave administration to specialized vendors.
  • Standardizing policies and systems across locations.
  • Using technology to support routine leave management.
  • Monitoring utilization to ensure caregiver leave is accessible and free of stigma.

The takeaway

As caregiving responsibilities continue to affect a growing share of the workforce, caregiver leave is emerging as a practical, targeted benefit that supports employees while helping employers attract and retain talent in a competitive labor market.

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The Importance of Reconciling Your Employee Benefits

Employee benefits are one of the largest and most complex expenses many employers manage — and they also include strict fiduciary obligations.

Yet many organizations assume that once open enrollment ends and payroll deductions are set, everything will continue to run smoothly. In reality, enrollment changes, life events, terminations, plan switches and billing delays routinely create discrepancies that can quietly cost both employers and employees money.

That’s why it’s important for employers to conduct regular reconciliations of their benefits offerings to confirm that:

  • Employees are enrolled in the plans they chose,
  • Payroll deductions reflect the correct coverage tier and contribution amount, and
  • Carrier billings are accurate.

Key areas of the benefits reconciliation process

Gather information — Reconciliation begins with assembling accurate, matching data for the same coverage period. Employers typically need carrier invoices, payroll deduction reports and enrollment records from their HR or benefits administration system.

Using data from different periods can create discrepancies, so timing matters.

Compare enrollment and invoices — Employers should compare the list of employees and dependents on carrier invoices with internal enrollment records. This step helps identify common issues such as terminated employees still being billed, active employees missing from invoices or dependents incorrectly listed. It also confirms that employees are enrolled in the correct plans.

Verify payroll deduction amounts — Next, payroll deductions should be reviewed in comparison against plan rates and contribution structures.

This includes checking employee-only versus family tiers, employer subsidies and any midyear changes triggered by qualifying life events. Even small per pay period errors can add up over time if left uncorrected.

Investigate issues — Discrepancies are common and do not necessarily indicate a system failure. New hires may not yet appear on invoices, plan changes may not have been processed in time or terminations may have missed the carrier cutoff date.

Each issue should be investigated, corrected and communicated to the appropriate party — whether that is payroll, HR or the carrier.

Document findings and resolutions — Finally, employers should document findings and resolutions. This may involve adjusting future payroll deductions, requesting invoice credits or corrections from carriers or updating enrollment records.

Clear documentation creates an audit trail and helps prevent recurring errors.

Reconciliation protects firms and staff

Regular reconciliation protects budgets by preventing “premium leakage” — paying for coverage that no longer applies or deducting insufficient amounts from employee paychecks.

For example, if an employee is terminated and not removed from enrollment in a timely manner, the company will be held financially responsible for paying 100% of benefit premiums. Reconciliation would catch this issue.

Reconciliations also help mitigate potential legal issues and reduce the risk of employee dissatisfaction when errors surface months later and large corrections are required. From a governance perspective, reconciliation supports data integrity and financial accuracy across HR, payroll and finance functions.

Best practices for employers

Conduct regular audits — Monthly reconciliation is widely considered a best practice, especially for medical, dental and vision plans.

Use automation wisely — Many employers now use payroll or benefits administration tools that automate comparisons between enrollment, deductions and invoices, reducing manual work and improving accuracy.

Consider third-party support — There are vendors that specialize in benefits reconciliation and invoice auditing. These services can be valuable for organizations with multiple carriers, frequent employee changes or limited internal resources.

Include COBRA and other benefits — Reconciliation should extend beyond active employee plans. Employers should also confirm that COBRA participants are billed correctly and that voluntary and ancillary benefits are handled with the same discipline.

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How Health Insurers Are Trying to Rein in Costs Without Cutting Value

Employers are grappling with another year of steep increases in group health plan premiums due to medical cost inflation, higher utilization and rising drug prices.

At the same time, health insurers can no longer shift additional costs to employers and employees through higher deductibles or narrower networks.

Instead, many insurers are pursuing structural changes designed to control long-term costs while improving care quality and member experience.

Interviews with health plan executives and recent industry reporting point to a common theme: reducing avoidable care, simplifying administration and investing earlier in health to prevent expensive problems later.

Employers and their staff can benefit from these strategies, which are increasingly being built into plan design, provider networks and care management programs that influence both premiums and employees’ out-of-pocket costs.

Preventive and personalized care

A central focus for many insurers is expanding preventive care and making it easier for enrollees to engage with their providers before health issues worsen. Executives at plans such as Humana and Highmark Wholecare, in a recent roundtable with the news website Becker’s Payer Issues, emphasized coordinated care models that connect primary care, specialists and support services around the individual.

These models rely on data and digital tools to identify care gaps early, such as missed screenings or unmanaged chronic conditions. Members may receive targeted reminders, care manager outreach or digital coaching to stay on track. For employers, this approach can translate into:

  • Fewer high-cost claims tied to late-stage disease
  • Fewer avoidable hospitalizations
  • Fewer emergency department visits

Employees benefit from clearer guidance, easier navigation of benefits and more proactive outreach instead of reacting to health issues once they become serious and costly.

Cost containment through innovation and collaboration

Insurers are increasingly rethinking how care is paid for and delivered. Many are expanding value-based payment arrangements that reward providers for keeping patients healthy rather than paying for higher volumes of services.

Under these arrangements, insurers and providers share data and align financial incentives around outcomes and the total cost of care.

Plans are also using predictive analytics and artificial intelligence to identify members at higher risk of complications and intervene earlier through care coordination, remote monitoring or alternative sites of care.

For employers, this can help slow medical cost growth over time without eroding access to care for their employees.

Administrative efficiency and transparency

Health plans are investing in modernized claims systems, real-time eligibility and claim validation and more streamlined prior authorization for routine or evidence-based care.

Some plans are reducing or reforming prior authorization requirements where data shows little value, while using technology to make remaining reviews faster and more predictable. Insurers are also working to improve transparency around costs and benefits, helping members better understand service costs and coverage before care is delivered.

For employers, lower administrative costs can help moderate premium growth and reduce HR workload tied to billing disputes and employee questions. Employees may benefit from fewer delays, clearer explanations of benefits and less confusion when accessing care.

What this means for employers

While no single initiative will eliminate health care cost pressure, insurers argue that combining preventive care, value-based payment and administrative simplification offers a more durable path forward.

Employers evaluating plan options may want to work with us to assess how their carriers are implementing these or similar strategies and how they measure success.

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Voluntary Benefits Lawsuits Add Fiduciary Concerns for Employers

Plaintiff’s lawyers are breaking new ground by suing employers for allegedly failing in their fiduciary duties to manage their voluntary benefit plans, including dental, vision, accident insurance, critical illness, cancer and hospital indemnity benefits.

These class action lawsuits typically allege that employers exercise sufficient control over these plans to trigger fiduciary duties under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) and that those duties were breached. Once ERISA applies, employers can face claims tied not just to plan design, but to the prudence of benefit selection and monitoring.

If these lawsuits gain traction, they may open a new category of potential liability tied to benefit offerings that many employers have historically overlooked.

At the center of the litigation is the claim that certain voluntary benefit arrangements are not exempt from ERISA, either because they fail to meet the voluntary plan safe harbor or because employers exercise sufficient control to trigger fiduciary duties.

Five areas drawing scrutiny

Four recent class action lawsuits filed against large employers include similar allegations that the employers and their benefits brokers breached ERISA fiduciary duties by allowing excessive commissions, failing to monitor insurers and brokers and engaging in conflicted arrangements within employer-sponsored voluntary benefits programs.

Each of these companies was sued by an employees’ union benefit or welfare plan:

  • United Airlines
  • Laboratory Corporation of America
  • Community Health Systems
  • Allied Universal

Key areas of alleged exposure include:

1. Benefits selection processes — Employers are being accused of failing to run competitive requests for proposals, benchmark offerings or document why certain carriers or products were chosen. A casual selection process that keeps the same plan each year can be portrayed as imprudent once fiduciary standards apply.

2.  Contracts — Agreements with insurers, brokers and enrollment vendors are under the microscope. Vague terms, unclear delegation of responsibilities or contracts that fail to spell out fiduciary status can make it harder for employers to defend their role as plan sponsors.

3. Broker and vendor compensation provisions — Embedded commissions, overrides and incentive payments are a central theme in the lawsuits. Plaintiffs argue that employers failed to monitor compensation levels or allowed conflicted arrangements that inflated employee premiums.

4. Premium levels — Even when employees pay the full cost, plaintiffs contend that employers must ensure premiums are reasonable relative to the benefits provided. A lack of benchmarking can be framed as a breach of the duty of prudence.

5. Insurance product loss ratios — Loss ratios are being used as a proxy for value. Low ratios may be cited as evidence that plans were overpriced or structured to favor intermediaries rather than participants.

Steps employers can take

While none of these cases has been decided on the merits, they send the message that voluntary benefits are no longer viewed as litigation-proof. Employers and HR leaders may want to consider:

  • Confirming whether each voluntary benefit arrangement is intended to be ERISA-covered or exempt — and documenting that determination.
  • Reviewing contracts to clarify fiduciary roles, responsibilities and delegation.
  • Increasing transparency around broker and vendor compensation, including commissions and incentives.
  • Benchmarking premiums and insurer loss ratios against the broader market.
  • Documenting benefit selection decisions and the rationale behind them.
  • Strengthening employee decision support and education to demonstrate a focus on participant outcomes.

Voluntary benefits may remain optional for employees, but the lawsuits suggest fiduciary oversight is becoming less optional for employers. Employers that pay closer attention now to ensure compliance with any applicable fiduciary duties can reduce their risk of becoming the next test case.