There is a benefits package sitting in an email somewhere in your company right now. An employee received it on their first day, skimmed it, and has not thought about it since. The gym subsidy is unclaimed. The EAP number has never been dialled. The wellness app has not been opened. This is not a failure of HR. It is a failure of relevance, ease of use, awareness and education.
Having a benefit and using one are not the same thing
South Africa’s workforce is carrying pressure that no amount of pizza Fridays or branded water bottles can address. 62% of South Africans report financial anxiety, according to the 2024 Momentum–Unisa Household Wellness Index and the South African Depression and Anxiety Group, links stress directly to rising rates of burnout and deteriorating physical health. Employees arrive at work carrying that weight. Benefits strategies that ignore it are ineffective and invisible.
The talent numbers make the urgency plain. 84% of large corporations and multinationals in South Africa are struggling to recruit skilled professionals, up from 79% just a year ago. Globally, 75% of employees in sub-Saharan Africa are either watching for or actively looking for a new job, a figure that dwarfs equivalent numbers in Europe and North America. In competitive sectors like ICT, finance, engineering and healthcare, retaining the people already on the payroll is the hardest part of the job.
YuLife’s 2026 Benefits Benchmark Report, compiled from over 400 HR leaders, confirms this shift in priorities. 61% of HR leaders name attracting and retaining talent as their top priority in 2026, displacing cost management, which dominated the agenda for three consecutive years. The question has changed. It is no longer can we afford good benefits? It is, are our benefits actually doing anything?
The South African context demands a different answer
Only 14% of South Africans are covered by medical aid, and premiums rose by 10.5% in 2025 alone, well above CPI. For many employees, particularly younger workers, medical aid coverage is the benefit they most need and least have. An employer who subsidises or contributes meaningfully to healthcare is solving a real problem. An employer who stocks the office fridge with healthy snacks is solving an aesthetic one.
Transport costs compound the pressure. Fuel prices have remained volatile, and for employees navigating hybrid to full-time office work models, the calculation of when to come into the office is increasingly a financial one. A hybrid work policy looks generous on paper and loses its value the moment the petrol price skyrockets and an employee cannot afford the commute it requires, or when electricity issues make productive home-based work unreliable without employer-supported infrastructure.
The employees asking for relief on these fronts are not demanding luxury. They are asking for stability.
The engagement gap is the real problem
Right now, 35% of HR leaders identify low ongoing engagement as their biggest frustration with their current benefits setup. Organisations invest in benefits packages and then watch those packages go unused, not from lack of need, but because the benefits on offer do not map to employees’ actual lives.
92% of HR leaders agree that rewards and incentives are the single most effective mechanism for keeping employees actively connected to their benefits. The same research shows 64% of employers have moved to more flexible lifestyle spending account models, recognising that a fixed menu of perks serves a fixed demographic. Quarterly funding structures are outperforming monthly models on utilisation, a small structural change producing measurable engagement uplift.
The pattern running through all of this is clear: benefits that integrate into daily life get used. Benefits that sit in a portal do not.
What a reset actually looks like
Redesigning a benefits strategy for the South African context starts with listening to what employees need, rather than defaulting to what benefits packages have traditionally offered. Financial wellbeing support with access to financial education, debt management tools, or even salary advance options, addresses an anxiety that is already present in most workplaces. Subsidised or employer-funded healthcare that extends access beyond the 14% currently covered is meaningful in a way that most perks simply are not.
Flexibility matters as much as the content of the benefit itself. An employee commuting three days a week from a load-shedding-affected suburb needs a different kind of support from an employee who has always worked from a central business district. One-size benefits are not just inefficient. They communicate a fundamental misunderstanding of who is actually doing the work.
A 2025 Bupa–YuLife study conducted by YouGov found that 65% of employees would be more likely to stay with an employer who offered better wellbeing benefits. Retention is not only a recruitment problem. It is a daily experience problem, one that plays out each time an employee opens their benefits package and finds nothing that speaks to their real life.
The organisations winning the talent competition in 2026 have understood something their competitors have not yet caught up to: meaningful support is not a premium offering. It is the new baseline.
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