Most businesses spend more time evaluating their office lease than their PEO contract. That’s a mistake — PEO agreements typically run one to three years, carry exit costs, and touch every part of how your employees get paid and covered. Knowing what to ask upfront can prevent a lot of problems downstream.
Here are the questions worth asking before you sign anything.
What Is the All-In Cost Per Employee?
Headline rates — usually expressed as a percentage of payroll or a per-employee-per-month fee — rarely tell the full story. Ask the PEO to provide a complete cost breakdown, including benefits administration, workers’ comp, HR platform fees, and any per-transaction charges. Then ask them to walk you through a scenario where you add a new hire or run an off-cycle payroll. What does that actually cost?
Providers who hesitate to answer this question clearly are telling you something important.
Who Is the Benefits Carrier, and What Are the Network Restrictions?
PEOs offer group health benefits under master policies — which means your employees are on the PEO’s plan, not a plan you own. Before you sign, confirm the carrier, check whether your employees’ current doctors are in-network, and understand what happens to benefits coverage during the transition and at termination.
For businesses with employees in multiple states, network coverage is especially important. A plan that works well in New York may have thin coverage elsewhere.
What Does the Contract Term Look Like — and What Are the Exit Costs?
Most PEO contracts run 12 months with automatic renewal. Some include early termination fees. Others have extended notice periods — 60 or 90 days — that can effectively lock you in longer than the stated term.
Ask specifically: What is the notice period to terminate? Are there any fees for leaving before the term ends? What is the transition process for payroll records and benefits data?
How Is Workers’ Compensation Handled?
Workers’ comp is one of the least transparent parts of a PEO relationship. PEOs typically purchase coverage on a master policy basis and allocate costs to clients — but the markup between what they pay and what they charge you isn’t always visible.
Ask for your workers’ comp rate by classification code. If your workforce is low-risk and your claims history is clean, verify that the blended rate reflects that. This is an area where independent review frequently turns up savings.
What Level of HR Support Is Actually Included?
‘Dedicated HR support’ means different things at different PEOs. Some provide a named HR business partner who knows your account. Others route you to a general call center. Ask what the support model looks like day-to-day — and ask to speak with someone on that team before you sign.
What Happens If You Want to Switch PEOs Later?
Understanding the process upfront — including how your payroll history, benefits records, and HRIS data will be migrated — helps you evaluate providers fairly. The best PEOs make this conversation easy. If a provider is reluctant to discuss what happens when you leave, that’s worth factoring into your evaluation.
Let’s talk through it.
If you’d like an independent perspective on your options — no pitch, no pressure — that’s exactly what ForwardPEO is here for.