
The New Retention Strategy: Why Benefits Are Beating Perks in 2026
October 19, 2025Inclusion isn’t just policy — it’s planning.
Most organizations believe they’re offering a fairly comprehensive benefits plan. But when you look closer, a pattern emerges: employees with disabilities often face barriers that others don’t see — coverage gaps, limited access to specialists, or benefits that don’t reflect the real cost or frequency of the care they rely on. A recent multi-year Canadian study found that employees with disabilities stay with an employer 11 years on average — significantly longer than their peers. That’s an extraordinary retention opportunity. But it also comes with a clear message: when companies do inclusion well, people commit. When they don’t, the consequences show up everywhere — turnover, burnout, and a disengaged workforce.
In other words: inclusion isn’t just a cultural goal. It’s a planning decision.
Below, we break down where benefits plans fall short, why it matters, and how employers can build a system where every employee can thrive.
1. The Real Gaps in Care And Why They Matter
2. Why Inclusion Is a Business Strategy, Not a Line Item
3. What an Inclusive Benefits Plan Actually Looks Like
Forward-thinking organizations are shifting from “standard” plan design to tailored, inclusive coverage. That can include:
- Better mental-health access: Increased paramedical maximums, virtual therapy options, and broader practitioner lists.
- Improved mobility and assistive device support: Including meaningful coverage for wheelchairs, braces, hearing aids, vision aids, and adaptive equipment, not minimum mandatory amounts.
- Support for chronic and episodic conditions: Coverage that reflects ongoing need, not one-time events. This may include extended physiotherapy, occupational therapy, or specialist care.
- Flexible spending dollars: Health spending accounts and wellness spending accounts allow employees to direct funds where they matter most.
4. How Employers Can Start Closing the Gaps
An inclusive benefits plan is a competitive advantage.
Employees with disabilities are among the most committed, experienced, and consistent contributors in the workforce. When organizations design benefits with accessibility and equity in mind, they unlock stronger retention, better morale, and a culture where every employee can participate fully. Inclusion doesn’t happen by accident. It happens through planning.
If you want help reviewing your plan design and identifying where hidden gaps may be affecting your team, Pelorus can guide you through the process.




