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The 9 Financial Wellness Tools Every Mid-Size Company Should Offer (And Why)

The 9 Financial Wellness Tools Every Mid-Size Company Should Offer (And Why)
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Your benefits package looks good on paper. Health insurance, 401(k), maybe an FSA. But here’s the reality: your employees don’t care about benefits that don’t solve their actual problems.

Seventy-seven percent of employees live paycheck to paycheck. That number doesn’t change just because your company offers a 401(k). What changes their life is access to earned pay when they need it, or a way to build savings without thinking about it.

That’s where financial wellness tools come in. The nine tools below represent the most impactful investments you can make in your people — and they all integrate seamlessly into your payroll system with zero additional HR workload.

Last updated: July 2026

1. Earned Wage Access (EWA)

What it does

Employees access wages they’ve already earned, on-demand, without waiting for payday.

Why it matters

An unexpected car repair or medical bill doesn’t wait for payday. Without EWA, employees turn to payday loans (400%+ APR), credit cards, or internal loans that HR has to manage. With EWA, they tap their own money instantly.

The impact

Reduces absenteeism, eliminates payday loan debt, and gives employees peace of mind. Free for employees (standard 2-day ACH withdrawal), zero cost to your company.

2. Paycards

What it does

Replaces paper checks with a branded debit card. Instant access to pay, thousands of fee-free ATMs, online and in-store shopping.

Why it matters

Paper checks get lost in the mail, stolen, or delayed in bad weather. Unbanked employees have nowhere to cash them. Paycards eliminate all of that friction.

The impact

Employees get paid instantly, check-cashing fees disappear, and you cut admin costs from physical check distribution.

3. Automated Savings

What it does

Employees set a savings goal; a portion of every paycheck deposits automatically into a savings or investment account.

Why it matters

Willpower fails. But automated savings works. Employees see their savings grow without thinking about it — perfect for vacations, emergencies, or down payments.

The impact

Builds financial stability, reduces financial stress, improves morale. Zero cost to the employer, zero cost to the employee.

4. Buy-Now-Pay-Later via Payroll Deductions

What it does

Employees split larger purchases across multiple paychecks, interest-free, with automatic deductions.

Why it matters

A $400 laptop for your kid’s school year shouldn’t require a high-interest loan. Payroll BNPL lets employees make responsible purchases without credit checks or hidden fees.

The impact

Improves employee morale, reduces financial stress, and differentiates your benefits from competitors.

5. 401(k) Retirement Plans

What it does

Employees save for retirement with pre-tax contributions, employer matching (optional), and professional investment management.

Why it matters

Retirement security is table stakes. Employees without 401(k) plans feel like their employer doesn’t care about their future.

The impact

Strengthens recruiting (candidates actively seek companies with retirement benefits), improves retention, and shows long-term investment in your team.

6. Flexible Spending Accounts (FSA) & Health Savings Accounts (HSA)

What it does

Employees save pre-tax dollars for medical expenses, dependent care, or healthcare costs.

Why it matters

Healthcare costs are unpredictable. FSAs and HSAs let employees put aside pre-tax money for the expenses they know are coming — and they get the tax savings.

The impact

Reduces taxable income for employees, simplifies compliance for you, and integrates seamlessly with payroll.

7. Income Verification (24/7)

What it does

Employees access employment and income verification letters instantly, 24/7, directly from their Netchex profile.

Why it matters

Loan approvals, apartment applications, and background checks all require income verification. Without instant access, employees miss deadlines or wait days for HR to respond.

The impact

Eliminates an entire category of HR admin work. Employees get faster loan and housing approvals. You reduce HR workload.

8. Employee Discounts

What it does

Exclusive discounts on dining, travel, retail, and entertainment through a curated discount network.

Why it matters

Everyday savings add up. Employees feel valued when they see real discounts on purchases they’re already making.

The impact

Boosts engagement, shows employees they’re valued beyond the paycheck, and strengthens company culture.

9. Life, Disability, and Supplemental Insurance

What it does

Affordable protection for employees and their families, with premiums deducted automatically from payroll.

Why it matters

Life happens. Illness, injury, or loss of income can derail a family financially. Supplemental insurance gives employees peace of mind.

The impact

Strengthens recruitment and retention, reduces financial stress, and shows you care about employee stability.

Implementation Roadmap: Where to Start

Phase 1 (Month 1): Launch earned wage access and paycards. These two tools solve the most immediate financial stress and have the highest adoption rates.

Phase 2 (Month 2–3): Add automated savings and buy-now-pay-later. These reinforce the “financial confidence” narrative and require minimal employee education.

Phase 3 (Month 4+): Layer in 401(k), FSA/HSA, insurance, and other benefits as needs and budget allow.

You don’t have to launch everything at once. Start with the two tools that solve the biggest problems for your workforce, then expand.

How Much Does This Cost?

Here’s the good news: most financial wellness tools are zero cost to the employer.

  • Earned Wage Access: Zero cost
  • Paycards: Zero cost
  • Automated Savings: Zero cost
  • Buy-Now-Pay-Later: Zero cost
  • Income Verification: Zero cost
  • Employee Discounts: Low monthly fee ($50–200/month)
  • 401(k), FSA/HSA, Insurance: One-time setup fees + monthly per-employee fees (varies by provider)

Total cost for a 300-person company? Roughly $100–300/month for discounts, plus variable costs for retirement and insurance. Compare that to the cost of replacing even one employee due to turnover ($5,000–$15,000), and the ROI is obvious.

Frequently Asked Questions

Ready to Build a Complete Financial Wellness Strategy?

All nine tools integrate seamlessly with Netchex payroll. Get guidance on which tools to launch first and how to maximize adoption. Request a demo

This guide reflects publicly available product information and independent reviewer data (G2, Capterra, Trustpilot, Yelp, Better Business Bureau, Reddit, Software Advice, GetApp) as of 2026. Feature availability and pricing may vary by plan. Contact Netchex for current details.

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