Evaluate total compensation and workplace benefits
Compare job offers beyond salary, understand health and retirement documents, value paid time and employer contributions, and protect benefits during enrollment and job changes.
Core truth
The highest salary is not automatically the strongest offer; employee costs, employer contributions, time, risk, and advancement can change the real value.
Part 1
Price the complete offer
Start with base pay, expected hours, overtime eligibility, reliable bonus or commission, and pay frequency. Add employer retirement contributions, health premium contributions, health savings contributions, paid leave, insurance, education support, and other benefits you would otherwise buy. Subtract employee premiums, commuting, parking, required equipment, and predictable unpaid time.
Convert benefits to annual dollars without treating uncertain promises as guaranteed. Equity, bonuses, and commissions need probability, vesting, performance, liquidity, and tax analysis. Flexible work can have financial value through reduced transportation or care costs, but it can also shift equipment and utility costs to the worker.
Put it into practice
Compare two offers in a table with guaranteed pay, probable variable pay, employer-paid benefits, employee costs, hours, commute, leave, vesting, and advancement—not salary alone.
Part 2
Read the governing benefit documents
For health coverage, review the Summary of Benefits and Coverage and the Summary Plan Description. For retirement, identify eligibility, contribution options, match formula, vesting schedule, investment menu, fees, loan rules, and distribution options. Save plan contacts and documents outside the employer account before leaving a job.
Benefits have enrollment windows and qualifying-life-event rules. Missing a deadline can delay coverage or contributions. Confirm beneficiaries, dependent eligibility, disability coverage, life insurance, and whether pretax elections can be changed during the year.
Common trap
Treating a match as fully owned on day one ignores vesting. Treating employer life or disability coverage as permanent ignores what happens when employment ends.
Part 3
Protect benefits during transitions
Before changing jobs, list final pay, unused leave rules, health coverage end date, continuation or Marketplace options, retirement account choices, stock or bonus deadlines, reimbursement claims, and any repayment obligation for signing or education benefits. Do not rush a retirement rollover because a salesperson creates urgency.
After starting, use the first pay statements to verify salary, tax withholding, benefit deductions, and retirement contributions. Errors are easier to correct with the offer letter, enrollment confirmation, and plan documents together.
- ◆Enrollment: confirm elections and effective dates.
- ◆Payday: reconcile deductions and employer contributions.
- ◆Life event or exit: preserve documents and calendar deadlines.
Primary sources
Verify and keep learning
The lesson is independently written in plain language and grounded in these public sources. Rules and limits can change; use the source for current details.
Knowledge check
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