Helping Employees Get the Most Out of Their Health Benefits
You can provide the most generous benefits package in the world, but if employees don’t understand how to use it, it won’t have the impact you hoped for. Across Canada, many employees leave valuable health and wellness resources untapped simply because they don’t know what’s available or how to access it. For business owners and HR professionals, educating employees about their benefits isn’t just a nice extra—it’s an essential step toward creating a healthier, more loyal, and more productive workforce.
When Benefits Go Unused, Everyone Misses Out
Offering benefits is a major investment. Extended health coverage, dental care, paramedical services, and wellness allowances all come with costs to the company. When employees fail to take advantage of these resources, it’s not only a missed opportunity for them—it’s also a lost return on investment for the organization.
Imagine a scenario: an employee suffers ongoing back pain but doesn’t realize physiotherapy is covered under your plan. They avoid treatment, their pain worsens, and productivity drops. Months later, a preventable issue becomes a bigger concern that impacts both their well‑being and your team’s efficiency. This is what happens when benefits are underused—they don’t provide the intended health, morale, or retention impact.
Educating employees ensures they view benefits not as fine print in a handbook but as tools to support their daily lives. A team that knows how to access preventative health care, mental health services, and family coverage options is a team that stays healthier and feels more valued.
Why Health Benefits Education Can Be Challenging
Despite the clear value, helping employees understand health benefits often comes with hurdles.
Information overload on day one: New hires receive a mountain of onboarding materials. By the time they get to the benefits booklet, attention and energy are running low.
Confusing terminology: Words like “deductible,” “co‑insurance,” or “coordination of benefits” are not part of everyday language. Without translation into plain English, many employees tune out.
Irregular communication: Many organizations only discuss benefits once a year during open enrollment. Without reminders or ongoing conversations, details fade quickly.
Reactive awareness: Employees often learn about benefits only when a medical issue arises. By then, stress and urgency can make it harder to absorb new information.
Turning Health Benefits into Everyday Value
Clear and consistent communication helps employees view their benefits as practical tools rather than abstract policies. Here are strategies to bring health benefits to life:
Break information into small, digestible pieces
Instead of a single benefits session, share one feature at a time. For instance, start with paramedical coverage one month, mental health supports the next, and vision care later. This keeps information approachable and memorable.
Use relatable examples
Paint a picture of real-life use. “If your child needs braces, our dental plan can cover 50% of the cost up to $2,000” is easier to grasp than a page of percentages and annual maximums. Stories connect the benefit to employees’ daily lives.
Incorporate wellness education into your culture
Lunch‑and‑learns, wellness newsletters, or quick “Did you know?” messages in internal chats can keep health resources top of mind. The goal is to normalize talking about benefits as part of workplace well‑being.
Highlight preventative care
Preventative services—like annual eye exams, physiotherapy after minor strains, or mental health counselling—often save employees and employers from bigger issues down the road. When staff understand that benefits support staying healthy, not just reacting to illness, they’re more likely to use them proactively.
Offer multiple ways to learn
Some employees prefer reading a guide, others learn best through short videos, and some want to ask questions in a small group session. A mix of formats ensures the message reaches everyone.
Measuring the Impact of Your Efforts
It’s important to know whether your education efforts are working. Instead of guessing, consider these approaches:
Track utilization rates for paramedical services, wellness allowances, and mental health support. An increase often reflects better awareness.
Monitor enrollment levels for optional coverage, such as enrolling in optional critical illness protection.
Collect employee feedback via short surveys to gauge confidence in understanding their benefits.
Watch for retention improvements and fewer sick days, as engaged employees tend to stay longer and take a more proactive approach to their health.
Even small increases in understanding can create noticeable improvements in morale and the return on your benefits investment.
When employees know their benefits, they feel supported. When they use those benefits, they’re healthier, happier, and more productive. And when they see their workplace investing in their well‑being, loyalty naturally grows.
Helping employees understand their health benefits is an ongoing effort, not a single presentation. If your organization hasn’t revisited how benefits are communicated, this is a perfect time to start. A clear, proactive education strategy can turn an underused expense into a meaningful tool for engagement and wellness.
We can help you create a tailored communication strategy to educate your team, improve benefit utilization, and strengthen employee loyalty.