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Section 125 FICA Savings: The Tax Strategy Most Employers Miss

You are already paying for employee health benefits. You are already withholding premiums from employee paychecks. But if those deductions are not running through a Section 125 cafeteria plan, you are overpaying on payroll taxes — and so are your employees.

A Section 125 plan is the only IRS-approved mechanism that allows employees to elect to pay for qualified benefits through pre-tax salary reductions.1 Every dollar that flows through the plan reduces taxable wages — which reduces FICA taxes for both the employer and the employee. At 7.65% each, that savings compounds fast.

Yet a surprising number of small and mid-size employers either do not have a Section 125 plan or have one that is improperly documented. The result: thousands of dollars in unnecessary payroll taxes every year.

Key Takeaways

  • FICA tax rate in 2026: 7.65% for both employer and employee (6.2% Social Security + 1.45% Medicare), applied to every dollar of taxable wages up to the $184,500 Social Security wage base.2
  • A Section 125 plan makes employee benefit contributions pre-tax, removing them from FICA-taxable wages and saving both parties 7.65% on every contributed dollar.1
  • For a 35-employee company where employees contribute an average of $3,600/year to health premiums, the employer saves approximately $9,639 annually in FICA taxes alone — with zero additional cost to implement.
  • Most employers recoup setup costs within 1 to 3 months — setup costs range from $500 to $2,000, while annual savings exceed that amount within 30 to 60 days for most employers.
  • Without a properly documented Section 125 plan, the IRS considers all premium deductions as post-tax56 — meaning you may be paying FICA taxes you do not owe.

The FICA Multiplier: How Section 125 Savings Actually Work

At Business Insurance Health and PEO4YOU, we call this The FICA Multiplier because the savings compound across every employee, every pay period, and every benefit dollar — without changing the benefits themselves.

Here is the math:

Section 125 FICA Savings Calculator: 35-Employee Company

Assumptions:

  • 35 employees enrolled in health coverage
  • Average employee premium contribution: $300/month ($3,600/year)
  • All contributions run through Section 125 pre-tax
  • FICA rate: 7.65% (employer share)2

Calculation:

  • Total employee contributions: 35 × $3,600 = $126,000/year
  • Employer FICA savings (7.65%): $126,000 × 0.0765 = $9,639/year
  • Employee FICA savings (7.65%): $126,000 × 0.0765 = $9,639/year (distributed across all employees)
  • Per-employee FICA savings: $3,600 × 0.0765 = $275.40/year each
  • Combined employer + employee annual savings: $19,278

Math verification:

  • 35 × $3,600 = $126,000 ✓
  • $126,000 × 0.0765 = $9,639 ✓
  • $9,639 × 2 = $19,278 ✓
  • $3,600 × 0.0765 = $275.40 ✓

That is $9,639 in employer savings from a plan that costs $500 to $2,000 to set up. The return on investment exceeds 400% in the first year — and the savings recur every year without additional cost.

Section 125 FICA savings breakdown showing 35 employees saving 19278 dollars annually in combined employer and employee payroll tax savings

What Qualifies Under Section 125

A Section 125 cafeteria plan can include pre-tax treatment for:1

  • Health plan premiums — the most common and highest-dollar component
  • Health Flexible Spending Accounts (FSA) — up to $3,400 in 2026, with $680 rollover3
  • Health Savings Accounts (HSA) — up to $4,400 individual / $8,750 family in 20264
  • Dependent Care Assistance — up to $7,500 per household in 2026 (increased from $5,000 by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, effective January 1, 2026)
  • Dental and vision premiums
  • Short-term and long-term disability premiums (with specific tax implications on benefit payments)
  • Adoption assistance

The broader the range of benefits run through the Section 125 plan, the greater the FICA savings for both employer and employee. Most employers start with health premiums (the largest dollar amount) and expand to include FSA, HSA, and dependent care over time.

Why Most Small Employers Get This Wrong

The compliance trap with Section 125 is not whether you offer pre-tax deductions — it is whether you have the proper plan document to support them. Under IRS regulations, a Section 125 plan must have:

  1. A written plan document that describes the benefits offered, eligibility rules, election procedures, and plan year
  2. Annual nondiscrimination testing to ensure the plan does not disproportionately favor highly compensated employees
  3. Proper election procedures — employees must make elections before the plan year begins (with qualifying life event exceptions)
  4. Timely distribution of Summary Plan Descriptions to all eligible employees

Here is where it gets dangerous: if an employer takes pre-tax deductions from employee paychecks without a properly documented Section 125 plan, the IRS can reclassify those deductions as post-tax — retroactively. That means the employer owes back FICA taxes on all reclassified amounts, plus penalties and interest.

At Business Insurance Health, we have reviewed Section 125 plans where the plan document was created in 2015 and never updated, where nondiscrimination testing was never performed, or where no written plan document existed at all. In every case, the employer was taking pre-tax deductions they were not legally entitled to take.

Section 125 Through a PEO: The Compliance Advantage

When a company joins a PEO through PEO4YOU, the Section 125 plan is built into the PEO's master plan. This means:

  • The plan document is maintained and updated by the PEO — no need for the employer to hire a benefits attorney to draft or update it
  • Nondiscrimination testing is handled by the PEO as part of annual compliance
  • Election procedures are embedded in the onboarding portal — employees make their elections during enrollment, and the system enforces the IRS rules automatically
  • The PEO assumes compliance risk for proper plan administration under the co-employment arrangement

This is particularly valuable for employers transitioning from a standalone plan where compliance may have been inconsistent. The PEO essentially "resets" the Section 125 compliance to current standards, and the Taft-Hartley multiemployer trust structure provides additional regulatory protections.

Comparison of DIY Section 125 plan compliance costs versus PEO managed Section 125 showing zero additional cost through PEO

Scaling the Savings: From 25 to 200 Employees

Company Size Annual Employee Contributions Employer FICA Savings Combined Savings
25 employees $90,000 $6,885 $13,770
50 employees $180,000 $13,770 $27,540
100 employees $360,000 $27,540 $55,080
200 employees $720,000 $55,080 $110,160

Assumes average employee contribution of $3,600/year ($300/month) and FICA rate of 7.65%. Actual savings vary based on employee contribution levels, wage distribution relative to the $184,500 Social Security wage base, and benefit elections.

“Most employers are already paying for health benefits. Section 125 does not change what you pay — it changes how you pay, and that changes what the IRS takes. It is the simplest tax savings strategy that a significant share of small employers still do not use.”

— BIH benefits analysis team

For companies exploring broader benefits cost reduction strategies, see how PEO cost analysis works and how Taft-Hartley health plans combine with Section 125 to maximize tax-advantaged savings.

📊 STRESS TEST YOUR BENEFITS STRATEGY

Test how your benefits structure — including Section 125 FICA savings — holds up under different scenarios. Use the Business Insurance Stress Test below — no login required, no email gate, free.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a Section 125 plan if I already offer health benefits?

If employees contribute any portion of their health premiums through payroll deduction and you want those deductions to be pre-tax, yes — a Section 125 plan document is legally required. Without it, the IRS considers all deductions post-tax, and both you and your employees pay unnecessary FICA taxes.1

Can a Section 125 plan be set up mid-year?

Yes, with limitations. A short plan year can be established mid-year to begin pre-tax treatment immediately. However, employees can only change elections mid-year if they experience a qualifying life event (marriage, birth, loss of other coverage, etc.). Annual open enrollment would then align with the new plan year start date.

Does Section 125 reduce Social Security benefits for employees?

Technically, yes — pre-tax deductions reduce the wages reported for Social Security purposes, which could marginally reduce future Social Security benefits. However, the immediate tax savings of 7.65% on every contributed dollar typically far outweighs the marginal future benefit reduction, especially for employees under the $184,500 wage base.2

How much does it cost to set up a Section 125 plan?

Standalone setup through a benefits attorney or third-party administrator typically costs $500 to $2,000, with annual compliance and testing costs of $500 to $1,000. Through a PEO, the Section 125 plan is included in the PEO’s administration at no additional cost.

What happens if my Section 125 plan fails nondiscrimination testing?

If the plan disproportionately benefits highly compensated employees, the excess benefits for those employees become taxable. The plan itself is not disqualified, but the HCEs lose their pre-tax treatment. This is why annual testing is critical — it identifies and corrects imbalances before they create tax liability.

📊 BENCHMARK YOUR BENEFITS STRUCTURE

Plan Quality & HRA Analyzer at businessinsurance.health

See how your current plan design — including tax optimization through Section 125 — compares to institutional benchmarks from the KFF Employer Health Benefits Survey.

No login required. No email gate. Free.

References

  1. Internal Revenue Service. “FAQs for Government Entities Regarding Cafeteria Plans.” irs.gov. “A section 125 plan is the only means by which an employer can offer employees a choice between taxable and nontaxable benefits.”
  2. Internal Revenue Service. “Topic No. 751, Social Security and Medicare Withholding Rates.” irs.gov. Social Security: 6.2% employer + 6.2% employee; Medicare: 1.45% + 1.45%. SS wage base 2026: $184,500.
  3. Internal Revenue Service. “Revenue Procedure 2025-32: 2026 FSA Contribution Limits.” irs.gov. Health FSA: $3,400; Rollover: $680.
  4. Internal Revenue Service. “Revenue Procedure 2025-19: HSA Contribution Limits for 2026.” irs.gov. Self-only: $4,400; Family: $8,750.
  5. Investopedia. “Section 125 Plan (Cafeteria Plan): How Does It Work?” October 2025. investopedia.com.
  6. ADP. “Section 125 Cafeteria Plan.” October 2025. adp.com. “These deductions not only decrease the employee’s taxable income, but also reduce the employer’s payroll tax liabilities.”

This article is for educational purposes and does not constitute tax or legal advice. Section 125 plan design and compliance requirements are complex. Consult your tax advisor or benefits attorney for guidance specific to your company.


About the Author

Sam Newland, CFP® is the Founder and President of Business Insurance Health and PEO4YOU. Contact: [email protected] | 857-255-9394

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