Workday Benefits is sold per worker per year (PEPY) but the real cost lives in carrier integrations, ACA tracking, and the seat-count assumptions Workday makes when projecting your renewal. We benchmark, restructure, and negotiate Workday Benefits engagements across mid-market and enterprise — fixed fee or gain share, no savings, no fee.
Workday Benefits is rarely sold standalone — it lives inside an HCM bundle and gets re-priced when HCM does. That means the Benefits negotiation is really a bundle negotiation, and the levers that work are the ones that decouple Benefits from the assumptions Workday makes during a Core HCM uplift. We focus on PEPY benchmarks, carrier integration scope, ACA compliance scope, eligibility tracking, and the open enrollment lockstep with Payroll.
Workday auto-prices Benefits as a percentage of HCM PEPY. We force a standalone benchmark and negotiate it independently — typically 12-18% lower than the bundled allocation.
Each carrier feed is an implementation line item. We audit which feeds are bidirectional, which are one-way, and which can collapse into a single EDI 834 — eliminating duplicate professional services fees.
Workday's ACA SKU is often added by default. For organizations under 250 ALEs or with existing third-party ACA tooling, we either eliminate it or right-size the scope.
Workday's professional services org bills annually for OE configuration. We restructure to flat-rate, multi-year, with version uplifts included — capping a line item that creeps 8-12% yearly.
Dependent counts and eligibility events drive hidden true-up math. We rewrite the methodology so it tracks worker count only, not dependent counts.
A three-year term with 3% annual caps and downward true-down rights is achievable on Benefits where it is rarely achievable on HCM Core. We use that asymmetry as leverage.
Scoped deliverables. Predictable cost. You know the fee before we start. Benchmarks, redline strategy, and live deal support across every Benefits SKU and carrier integration line item.
Zero upfront cost. Our fee is a percentage of verified, documented Benefits savings over baseline. No savings, no fee. Aligned incentives, end-to-end.
The carrier integration audit alone saved us $190K in year-one professional services. We didn't even realize Workday was charging maintenance on feeds that hadn't moved data in eighteen months.
Yes, even when they renew on the same date. Bundled pricing hides a Benefits PEPY that's often above market. Separating the benchmark forces Workday's deal desk to defend the Benefits line on its own merits — and that's where the discount lives.
Two layers: a one-time implementation fee per carrier feed (usually $8K-$25K) and an annual maintenance line per feed (usually $2K-$6K). The maintenance line is the one most clients miss — it shows up quietly in year two and persists even if the feed is dormant.
It depends on your ALE count, current third-party tooling, and whether your payroll provider already issues 1095-Cs. For roughly 40% of the engagements we see, the ACA SKU is redundant and can be eliminated or substantially scoped down at renewal.
Workday's PS org bills annually for OE configuration and testing. We restructure to a multi-year flat rate with version uplifts included — this caps a line that otherwise compounds 8-12% per year and frequently overruns scope.
Yes. In that scenario the negotiation is really about whether Benefits should be in the Workday contract at all, or whether it's contributing to shelfware. We've eliminated Workday Benefits entirely for clients where third-party platforms own the workflow.
Benefits engagements typically price between 18-25% of first-year savings, capped. The baseline is your current Benefits PEPY plus carrier and PS spend. If we deliver zero savings, you owe nothing.
Monthly intelligence on Workday pricing, renewal tactics, and module-specific benchmarks. Used by Workday customers in 32 countries.