The shift from salary-only appraisals to total rewards
Your appraisal isn't just about your CTC. It's about your total rewards. For most of the last two decades, performance appraisals in India followed a predictable script: the manager reviewed the employee's performance rating, HR communicated the percentage increment, and the conversation ended there. Salary was the story, and everything else, health cover, leave policy, wellness programs, flexible working, was treated as background.
That model is increasingly disconnected from what employees actually weigh when deciding whether to stay or leave. According to a 2025 appraisal trends survey of over 5,000 Indian employees, 85% of employees, including those who received hikes of 15% to 20% or above, are still planning to switch jobs. For those choosing to stay, flexibility and work-life balance were a key factor alongside salary and benefits. The number is striking because it tells you that even well-compensated employees are evaluating something beyond the increment percentage.
What they are evaluating is the total rewards picture: salary, yes, but also the quality and breadth of employee benefits, the security that employee health insurance provides their families, the flexibility built into how they work, and whether the organization genuinely invests in their wellbeing. For HR leaders at SMEs, the appraisal conversation is the single highest-leverage moment to communicate that full picture clearly and deliberately.
Why employee benefits matter in appraisals
1. The total rewards perspective
Total rewards is the framework through which progressive HR teams evaluate and communicate the full value of employment. It combines fixed pay, variable pay, and all employee benefits into a single picture of what an employee receives in exchange for their contribution. When HR teams bring total rewards into the appraisal conversation, they give employees an accurate view of what the organization actually spends on them, which is almost always significantly more than the CTC figure alone suggests.
For an employee on a Rs12 lakh annual CTC at an SME, the addition of group health insurance covering the family, an OPD benefit, an EAP, and flexible working options may represent Rs1.5 to Rs2 lakh in additional value annually. That is a material number, and most employees never hear it articulated.
2. Rising healthcare costs make employee health insurance more valuable than ever
The financial context for employee health insurance in India in 2026 makes the appraisal conversation more urgent than it has ever been. According to Deloitte India's Talent Outlook 2025, the average salary hike across corporate India is projected at 8.8%, while medical inflation in India stands at approximately 13 to 14% per year, the highest in Asia, ahead of China, Indonesia, and most Southeast Asian markets.
As per the Press Information Bureau, out-of-pocket expenditure accounted for approximately 39.4% of total health expenditure in India in 2021-22, even after decades of government-backed insurance expansion. For an employee without employer-provided employee medical insurance, a single hospitalization in a private metro hospital can consume multiple months of salary.
This gap is what makes employee health benefits one of the most practically valuable things an employer can offer. Group health insurance covers hospitalizations, surgeries, and increasingly OPD and mental health treatment at a fraction of the cost an individual policy would require. When HR makes this explicit in the appraisal conversation, it changes how employees calculate the real value of staying.
3. Employee expectations are changing, especially among younger workers
According to SHRM's 2025 Employee Benefits Survey, health-related benefits remained a top priority in 2025, with 88% of employers listing them as extremely important or very important for their workforces. Flexible working benefits and family care benefits also ranked consistently high.
In the Indian context, younger employees entering the workforce in the post-pandemic period have a different hierarchy of needs. They have seen what a healthcare crisis looks like without adequate cover. They value mental health support and flexible working at a level that previous generations did not. Attrition trends in India's tech and startup sectors reflect this shift: attrition rates in India's tech and startup sectors fell to 17.1% in 2025, down from 17.7% in 2024 and 18.7% in 2023, indicating that a competitive salary is no longer the only draw.
4. Employee benefits directly impact retention and loyalty
Employee benefits insurance, wellness programs, flexible work policies, and financial security benefits create a structural attachment to the employer that a salary increment alone cannot replicate. An employee who knows their family's medical expenses are covered, whose mental health support is accessible through their employer, and whose compensation package flexes with their life circumstances is significantly less likely to leave for a competing offer of a marginally higher salary.
How employee benefits influence performance appraisals
1. Improves productivity
Employees who are financially secure and physically healthy are better able to focus. According to the 2025 India Workplace Wellness Report, when an employee isn't worried about their next EMI or a sudden medical bill, their focus at work increases by 3x. Employee health benefits and financial wellness tools directly reduce the background anxiety that erodes concentration and output.
2. Reduces absenteeism
Preventive care access, OPD benefits, and mental health support reduce the frequency and duration of illness-related absences. Employees with comprehensive employee health insurance are more likely to seek early treatment before conditions escalate into hospitalizations that require extended leave. This is a direct and measurable link between benefits quality and operational continuity.
3. Boosts employee engagement
Employees who feel their employer genuinely invests in their wellbeing report higher engagement, stronger loyalty to the organization, and greater willingness to go beyond minimum requirements in their roles. Company benefits that extend to dependents, that cover mental health, and that provide genuine flexibility communicate organizational values in a way that motivates performance more durably than a one-time bonus.
4. Aligns rewards with performance
When employee benefits are structured to reward tenure and performance, they create a direct behavioral link between contribution and recognition. Higher sum insured as employees reach senior levels, additional wellness allowances tied to performance milestones, or ESOPs that vest over a defined period all align the employee's financial and health security with the organization's growth trajectory.
Types of employee benefits to discuss during appraisals
Health and insurance benefits
Employee insurance is the cornerstone of any meaningful benefits conversation. This includes group health insurance covering inpatient hospitalization, maternity, and increasingly OPD, preventive health checkups, dental, and vision. For employers, employee health benefits insurance through a group policy is significantly more cost-effective than individual policies and provides broader coverage without individual medical underwriting.
During the appraisal, HR should communicate the actual premium value of the group policy the organization pays, the sum insured the employee and their family are covered for, the network of hospitals available, and any specific riders or top-ups the company provides.
Financial benefits
This category includes performance bonuses, ESOPs for eligible employees, provident fund contributions beyond the statutory minimum, and flexible benefits plans that allow employees to structure their CTC around their personal tax and expense priorities. For SMEs specifically, flexible benefits plans and the Pazcard platform are becoming important tools for allowing employees to optimize their benefits without adding administrative complexity for HR.
Wellness and lifestyle benefits
Mental health support through Employee Assistance Programs (EAPs) or therapy access, fitness subsidies, preventive health checkup allowances, and nutrition or wellness programs belong in this category. According to the 2025 India Workplace Wellness Report, 86% of employees in India struggle with mental health, and nearly half report high anxiety. Offering visible, accessible mental health support through employee benefits is no longer optional for organizations that want to retain their best people.
Work-life balance benefits
Flexible working hours, work-from-home options, additional leave beyond statutory minimums, and childcare or elder care support are benefits that employees evaluate heavily during appraisals but rarely hear discussed explicitly. HR teams that proactively communicate these as components of the total rewards package give employees a more complete and accurate picture of what the organization provides.
How to include employee benefits in performance appraisal conversations
1. Start with a total compensation breakdown
Before the conversation moves to increment percentages, show the employee their complete total compensation figure. This means CTC plus the annual premium value of their group health insurance plus any wellness allowance, OPD benefit, mental health coverage, and other company benefits.
For an employee earning Rs10 lakh CTC whose group health insurance premium is Rs40,000 annually, whose preventive health checkup is worth Rs5,000, and whose EAP is worth Rs8,000, the real total compensation is closer to Rs10.53 lakh. That framing matters, especially when the salary increment being offered is modest.
2. Personalize the employee benefits discussion
Not every employee values the same benefits at the same life stage. A 26-year-old single employee may prioritize learning allowances and flexible working. A 34-year-old employee with young children may value maternity and parental benefits and family floater health coverage above everything else. A 45-year-old employee may prioritize adequate sum insured, parent coverage, and critical illness protection.
HR teams that take three minutes before an appraisal to review an employee's demographic profile and benefits utilization pattern can have a dramatically more relevant conversation than one that runs through a standard checklist. This is where employee benefits administration tools that surface utilization data become genuinely useful.
3. Link employee benefits to performance
Make explicit to employees how their benefits package is connected to their contribution level and tenure. If senior employees receive a higher sum insured, additional wellness allowance, or top-up insurance, communicate that during the appraisal. If ESOPs vest based on tenure milestones, walk the employee through where they stand and what they are on track to receive. Connecting benefits to performance and tenure converts them from a background perk into a forward-looking retention mechanism.
4. Educate employees on the value they already have
Many employees undervalue their employee health benefits simply because they have never been shown what they are actually worth. A 2025 survey of HR leaders confirms that benefit utilization in most Indian SMEs is significantly lower than it should be, largely because employees are unaware of what is available to them. The appraisal is the highest-attention moment HR has with an individual employee. Use it to explain what the OPD benefit covers, how to access the EAP, what the cashless hospital network looks like, and how to use the preventive checkup benefit.
5. Use data and insights
Employee benefits administration platforms generate utilization data that HR teams rarely use strategically. Before appraisal season, review which benefits are underutilized across the organization and build that into the conversation. If the EAP has low usage, explain it explicitly during appraisals. If OPD claims are low despite an OPD benefit, walk employees through how to access it. If wellness program participation is dropping, discuss it as part of the wellbeing conversation. Benefits that are utilized retain employees. Benefits that are ignored do not.
How HR teams can structure benefits-led appraisals
Build a total rewards statement
A total rewards statement is a single document that presents every component of an employee's compensation clearly: fixed salary, variable pay, employer PF contribution, group health insurance premium, wellness allowance, OPD benefit, EAP value, and any other company benefits. Creating this before appraisal season gives HR teams a ready reference and gives employees a tangible, complete picture of what the organization spends on them.
Integrate benefits into appraisal templates
Most appraisal templates in Indian SMEs have fields for performance rating, increment percentage, and promotion decision. Adding a benefits review section, even a simple checkbox confirming that benefits were discussed and the total rewards statement was shared, ensures the conversation happens consistently across the organization rather than only in the teams where managers happen to think of it.
Train managers to discuss employee benefits effectively
The appraisal conversation happens at the manager level, not the HR level, in most SMEs. Managers who are not trained to discuss benefits will either skip the conversation or get it wrong. A 30-minute manager briefing before appraisal season covering how to communicate the total rewards figure, what the group health policy covers, and how to answer common employee questions about benefits removes the bottleneck.
Use technology platforms to simplify employee benefits administration
Manual employee benefits administration creates errors, delays, and opacity that undermine the conversation HR is trying to have. Platforms like Pazcare that consolidate benefits data, track utilization, generate employee-facing summaries, and integrate with HR systems make the appraisal conversation significantly easier to structure and more credible when needed.
How Pazcare helps companies leverage employee benefits
For HR teams at SMEs managing employee benefits without a dedicated benefits function, Pazcare provides the infrastructure to do this well.
- The Pazcard flexible benefits platform allows employers to offer employees a structured, customizable benefits wallet that can be used across health, wellness, and lifestyle categories. Employees choose how to allocate their benefits budget within the boundaries the employer sets, increasing utilization and perceived value without increasing cost.
- Pazcare's simplified employee benefits insurance management means HR teams can administer group health insurance, OPD benefits, and top-up coverage from a single platform rather than managing multiple insurer relationships and spreadsheets. Every renewal, endorsement, and claim is tracked in one place, which means HR goes into the appraisal conversation with accurate, current data rather than approximate figures.
- Real-time insights into benefits usage help HR identify which benefits are driving utilization and which are invisible to employees, the data that makes the appraisal conversation specific and credible rather than generic. For an HR leader at a 150-person SME who needs to have 150 appraisal conversations, that data infrastructure is the difference between a benefits conversation that lands and one that gets skipped.
- Pazcare helps HRs connect benefits with performance and retention by making the total rewards picture visible, navigable, and communicable in a format that works for the employee on the other side of the table, not just for the CFO reviewing the benefits budget.
Looking to build an employee benefits program that your people actually understand and use?
Pazcare helps SMEs design, administer, and communicate employee benefits that employees value and HR teams can manage without a dedicated benefits team. Talk to us to see how your benefits stack compares to what the market offers.
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