Real Estate Industry

Employee Benefits ROI Calculator for Real Estate & Rental/Leasing

Industry-specific data: 22.1% avg turnover | $58,000 avg salary | 75% replacement cost

Avg Turnover Rate
22.1%
Avg Annual Salary
$58,000
Replacement Cost
75% of salary
Real estate, rental, and leasing companies face unique workforce challenges that make strategic benefits planning essential. With average turnover at 22.1% and replacement costs of 75% of the average $58,000 salary ($43,500 per departure), the cost of workforce instability hits particularly hard in an industry built on relationships and local market expertise. When a property manager, leasing agent, or real estate professional departs, they often take client relationships, market knowledge, and revenue-generating capacity with them. The real estate industry has a mixed workforce profile: W-2 employees in property management, leasing, and corporate roles alongside independent contractor agents. For W-2 employees, competitive benefits are essential for retention, especially as the industry competes with other professional services sectors for administrative, marketing, and management talent. Property managers, maintenance coordinators, and leasing specialists who can get better benefits at a competing property management company or in a different industry entirely will make that move. For property management companies specifically, the benefits equation includes a significant workers' compensation component. Maintenance staff, groundskeepers, and facilities workers face physical job demands that create workers' comp exposure. A PEO partnership can reduce these premiums while providing access to comprehensive benefits that attract and retain the property management professionals who keep buildings operating and tenants satisfied.
Expert Insight

"In real estate, the true cost of turnover includes tenant dissatisfaction, potential vacancy increases, and lost market knowledge. A property manager who knows every unit, every tenant, and every vendor is worth far more than their salary suggests. Investing in comprehensive benefits to keep that person is one of the highest-ROI decisions a property management company can make."

— PEO4YOU Benefits Strategy Team

Frequently Asked Questions: Real Estate Benefits ROI

What benefits matter most in real estate and property management?

Medical coverage, dental, and retirement plans are the foundation. For property management staff, disability and accident coverage are important given physical job demands. Flexible scheduling, professional development (license renewal support), and commission-friendly compensation structures also matter.

How do benefits help retain property managers?

Experienced property managers are in high demand. Companies offering comprehensive benefits (medical, retirement, professional development) see 30% lower turnover among property management staff. The cost of losing an experienced property manager — including tenant relationship disruption and potential vacancy increases — far exceeds benefits investment.

What about benefits for real estate agents on commission?

Independent contractor agents typically don't receive employer benefits, but W-2 agent models are growing. For W-2 agents, offering medical coverage and retirement plans is a powerful recruiting tool. For brokerages with IC agents, voluntary benefits and group-rate access can build loyalty.

What ROI can real estate companies expect?

Real estate companies typically see 200-350% ROI on benefits investments. The primary drivers are reduced turnover (especially among property managers and leasing staff), improved tenant satisfaction from staff continuity, and reduced vacancy rates from better property management.

Industry data sourced from BLS JOLTS, KFF 2024, SHRM Human Capital Benchmarking, and industry association reports.

This calculator is educational. Consult with a licensed benefits advisor for plan-specific projections.

Getting Started — Your Next Steps

Common Questions

What counts as ROI when it comes to employee benefits?
Benefits ROI includes measurable savings like reduced turnover costs, lower workers' comp premiums, and decreased absenteeism. It also includes harder-to-measure gains like better recruiting outcomes and improved employee morale. This tool focuses on the measurable savings so you get conservative, defensible numbers.
How quickly will I see a return on benefits investment?
Most businesses start seeing turnover reductions within 6-12 months of improving their benefits package. Workers' comp savings from PEO arrangements can be immediate. The full ROI typically materializes over 12-24 months as retention improvements compound.
Do I need to offer benefits to compete for employees?
In most industries, yes. Health coverage is consistently ranked as the most important benefit by job seekers. Companies without benefits typically pay 10-20% more in wages to attract the same talent, and still experience higher turnover rates.