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Benefits Coordination

Benefits that compete in the U.S. without losing control of cost.

Orbiss helps international employers evaluate, design, benchmark, and renew U.S. benefits programs that support hiring, retention, compliance, and budget discipline.

PEO Evaluation & Benchmarking

Compare PEO providers, plan quality, administration, pricing, employee experience, and long-term fit before you commit or renew.

Benefits Strategy & Design

Build a competitive U.S. benefits package around healthcare, retirement, ancillary benefits, PTO expectations, and your global compensation philosophy.

Renewal Review & Cost Analysis

Review renewal increases, plan changes, employee impact, provider options, and cost drivers before accepting the next-year package.

Benefits Transition Support

Coordinate plan changes, PEO transitions, payroll impact, employee communication, and implementation steps with fewer surprises.

WHY IT MATTERS

U.S. benefits are not just an HR decision.

For international employers, U.S. benefits affect recruiting, retention, payroll cost, employee experience, compliance, and cash planning. A plan that looks simple at launch can become expensive or misaligned as the team grows.

Orbiss helps companies evaluate benefits as a business decision. We compare options, challenge renewal increases, and help design a benefits setup that supports both your employees and your budget.

50
Full-time equivalent employee threshold tied to ACA employer rules
7.65%
Employer-side Social Security and Medicare tax rate before wage-base limits
$6,450
2026 annual federal limit for individual qualified health reimbursement expenses
12
Months of employee experience shaped by each renewal decision
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

U.S. employee benefits are complex, costly, and very different from what most international companies are used to.

  • U.S. employers must manage statutory obligations tied to payroll and employment, including Social Security and Medicare contributions, unemployment insurance, and workers’ compensation.

    Other benefits, such as health insurance, retirement plans, paid vacation, life insurance, disability coverage, and commuter benefits, may be optional at the federal level but expected in the market or required under specific state or local rules.

  • Under the Affordable Care Act, Applicable Large Employers generally include employers with at least 50 full-time employees, including full-time equivalent employees, in the prior year. ALEs can face penalties if they do not offer affordable minimum essential coverage to full-time employees.

    Smaller employers may not be federally required to offer health insurance, but competitive health coverage is often critical for recruiting and retaining U.S. employees.

  • A PEO should be evaluated on more than headline pricing. Companies should review health plan quality, employee support, payroll integration, compliance administration, renewal history, ancillary benefits, reporting, customer service, and exit flexibility.

    The right PEO depends on team size, hiring plans, states of employment, budget, and how much administrative support the company needs.

  • A company may consider leaving a PEO when costs increase materially, internal HR capacity grows, employee needs change, reporting becomes limited, or the company wants more control over benefits and payroll.

    A transition should be planned carefully because payroll, benefits, workers’ compensation, employee communication, and compliance responsibilities all need to move cleanly.

  • Employers should budget beyond base salary. Fully loaded U.S. employment cost can include employer payroll taxes, workers’ compensation, health insurance contributions, retirement match, ancillary benefits, payroll administration, and state-specific requirements.

    The right budget depends on location, employee demographics, contribution strategy, and how competitive the company wants to be in the U.S. talent market.

  • There is no federal law requiring private employers to provide paid vacation. However, PTO is a strong market expectation for professional roles, and many states or cities have separate paid sick leave or paid family leave requirements.

    International employers should distinguish between legal minimums and what is needed to compete for talent.

  • A 401(k) is an employer-sponsored retirement plan that allows employees to contribute part of their compensation, often with employer matching.

    Federal law does not require every employer to offer a 401(k), but several states have retirement program rules for employers that do not offer a qualified plan. A 401(k) can also be important for recruiting and retention.

GET IN TOUCH

Let's talk about your U.S. expansion

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