Your logistics company is growing. You've got 75 employees across warehousing and distribution. You're managing workers' compensation claims, negotiating health benefits, handling payroll across multiple states. Your PEO seems to handle all of it—which felt like a relief three years ago. But when the renewal notice arrived last month, the per-employee-per-month cost jumped another 18%.
You're not alone. Mid-size logistics and distribution companies have become prime targets for mega-PEOs like Vensure, ADP TotalSource, Paychex, TriNet, and Insperity. These platforms sell convenience: one vendor handles everything. But that convenience comes with a bundled premium that can cost $50,000 to $150,000 annually in unnecessary charges.
This article walks through what you're actually paying for, names three specific PEO alternatives that could save your logistics company 15–35% annually, and shows the math that most PEOs don't want you to see.
A mid-size PEO relationship looks simple from the outside: you pay a per-employee-per-month (PEPM) fee, and they handle HR, benefits, payroll, compliance, and workers' comp. The mega-PEO platforms (those serving 100,000+ employees nationally) have priced themselves for one thing: maximum operational efficiency at scale, not for your specific needs.
Here's the structure that creates the bloat:
| Cost Element | Mega-PEO (Vensure, ADP, Paychex) | Dedicated PEO | Unbundled Model |
|---|---|---|---|
| Base PEO Fee | $85–$150/emp/mo | $55–$95/emp/mo | $35–$60/emp/mo |
| Health Benefits Premium | $400–$550/emp/mo (PEO-selected plans) |
$380–$500/emp/mo (more choice) |
$350–$480/emp/mo (full shopping power) |
| Workers' Comp | $18–$32 per $100 payroll (state pool rates, bundled markup) |
$16–$28 per $100 payroll (direct quoting) |
$14–$24 per $100 payroll (shop independently) |
| Admin + Compliance | Included (one-size-fits-all) | Included (tailored) | $4–$8/emp/mo (or a la carte) |
| Payroll Processing | Included | Included | $25–$50/month standalone |
| Total Annual Cost (100 employees) | $700,000–$975,000 | $600,000–$820,000 | $520,000–$700,000 |
Ranges reflect regional variation, industry risk profiles, and employee demographics. Logistics/distribution sector typically runs 15–25% higher on workers' comp due to injury exposure.
For a 100-person logistics company, the difference between a mega-PEO and an unbundled model is $180,000 to $275,000 per year. That's real money—enough to hire an HR manager, upgrade benefits, or reinvest in technology.
PEOs don't itemize their fees the way traditional brokers do. You see a single PEPM number, and the PEO bundles everything underneath. This opacity is intentional—it makes price comparison impossible and locks you in.1
Here's what's actually baked into that mega-PEO bill:
Total bloat per employee per month: $71–$127
For a 75-person logistics company, that's $63,900 to $114,300 in annual waste—just to maintain the illusion of simplicity.
A dedicated-service PEO focuses on your industry and your size. Instead of serving 100,000 clients, they serve 500–2,000. They specialize. They know logistics.
How it works: You pay a lower base fee ($55–$95/emp/mo) because the firm has eliminated the bloat. They negotiate health plans with you rather than force you into a pre-selected menu. They also separate workers' comp—they either refer you to a captive broker or let you shop it independently and just handle the claims administration.
Real cost for a 75-person logistics company:
Pros: Industry expertise. Lower base fee. Negotiable benefits. Transparent pricing. Personalized support.
Cons: Less brand recognition. Smaller service team means slower response times during crises. Technology platform may be less polished.
Stop buying a PEO altogether. Instead, hire a fractional HR consultant ($4,000–$8,000/month) or use a platform like PEO4YOU for streamlined benefits management, and handle each component separately:
Real cost for a 100-person logistics company:
Pros: Maximum negotiating power. Full transparency. You control every vendor relationship. Easiest to customize.
Cons: Requires more internal HR bandwidth. You lose the "single vendor" safety net. Compliance is your responsibility.
If your logistics company has union representation (Teamsters, Longshore & Harbor Workers' Union, etc.), you likely already contribute to a Taft-Hartley health and welfare trust. These are extraordinarily efficient—no PEO markup, no middleman fees, negotiated directly by union leadership.3
For non-union logistics companies, some regions offer "captive group plans"—multi-employer group health and workers' comp pools where 50–500 similar-size companies share administrative costs.
Cost structure: You pay health + workers' comp premiums directly to the trust or group, with overhead of 3–5% (vs. 18–28% for a mega-PEO).
Real cost for a 75-person logistics company in a captive group:
Pros: Extremely low overhead. Transparency. Long-term cost stability. Strong industry networks.
Cons: Limited availability (mainly union shops and established captive groups). Restricted plan options. Less flexibility on plan design.
Workers' compensation is the dominant cost driver for logistics, distribution, and warehousing. Warehouse and distribution class codes carry higher rates than office settings, with costs varying significantly by state, specific classification, and loss history.4
A mega-PEO doesn't care about optimization here. They take the standard rate, add 8–15%, and move on. But a dedicated logistics PEO or a group plan will:
In logistics, the workers' comp decision alone can swing your total PEO cost by $40,000–$80,000 per year. Mega-PEOs don't incentivize this optimization because they don't directly profit from better rates.
You should seriously explore alternatives if:
You should stay with your current PEO if:
Before you schedule a broker meeting, use this free tool to model 6-year cost scenarios under your current PEO renewal vs. three alternative strategies:
Compare your current PEO renewal against 5 alternative strategies over 6 years. No login required. No email gate. Free.
Like this tool? We built five more just like it — all free, all ungated. Explore all tools at Business Insurance Health.
Probably not, if you plan the transition correctly. Health benefits and payroll should be seamless if timed to a renewal date. Workers' comp transitions are usually invisible to employees. The bigger change employees might notice: faster account support and more plan choice. Many logistics companies see improved employee satisfaction after switching because they can offer plans tailored to the actual workforce (not a national template).
Read your service agreement carefully. Many PEO contracts allow you to terminate on a renewal date with 60–90 days' notice, with no penalty. If your contract has an early termination fee, that cost should still be factored into your 3-year savings projection. A $25,000 early exit fee is usually worth paying if the alternative saves you $80,000+ annually. A broker or PEO4YOU can help negotiate this.
No, but it requires discipline. The risk isn't financial—it's operational. If you hire a fractional HR consultant or use a dedicated-service PEO, your compliance risk is actually lower because you have expert oversight. The risk is only real if you try to manage HR yourself with no expertise. For 75+ employees, a part-time HR manager ($50K–$60K/year) is standard and worth the investment.
Ask for a fully itemized quote that breaks out: (1) base PEO fee, (2) health benefits premium, (3) workers' comp rate and markup, (4) payroll processing, and (5) any surcharges. Cross-reference workers' comp rates with two independent brokers. If the dedicated PEO's workers' comp quote is materially higher than direct quotes, that's a red flag—they may be hiding an undisclosed markup. Transparency is the key differentiator between good PEOs and bloated ones.
To ground this in reality, here's a case study based on a typical mid-size logistics company with 80 employees, $6 million in annual payroll, and a loss history in the 95th percentile (slightly above average):5
Current mega-PEO arrangement:
Alternative arrangement (dedicated-service PEO + unbundled workers' comp):
Three-year savings: $374,400 (17.8% total reduction)
That's enough to hire a dedicated HR manager (with room to spare), upgrade the employee benefits package, and still come out ahead.
If this article resonates with your situation, here's a practical roadmap:
Mega-PEOs market themselves as the safe choice: one vendor, one relationship, one price. But that safety comes at a premium—18–28% of your total costs go to bloat that has nothing to do with your employees or your business.
Logistics companies have discovered better alternatives: dedicated PEOs that understand your workers' comp exposure, unbundled benefits with maximum negotiating power, and captive group plans that align your costs directly with your risk profile. The math works. The savings are real. And your employees don't have to feel like a number at a call center.
The only people who benefit from you staying are the mega-PEO shareholders. Start a review. Do the math. You might be surprised at what you find.
Sam Newland, CFP® is a Certified Financial Planner and employee benefits strategist at PEO4YOU with 13+ years of experience helping logistics, warehousing, and distribution companies optimize their PEO arrangements and employee benefits. Sam has guided companies ranging from 25 to 2,000+ employees through PEO transitions, unbundled benefit evaluations, and multi-employer trust arrangements.
For more PEO analysis and cost comparisons, visit PEO4YOU and Business Insurance Health.
Methodology: This article draws on publicly available data from NAPEO, the American Trucking Associations, the Kaiser Family Foundation, and direct experience advising logistics employers on PEO strategies.
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