Insight from Agility EOR have found traditional employee benefits packages are no longer enough to attract and retain talent. Instead, flexibility, time off, and well-being are become defining factors in employment decisions. This shift signals a structural change in how ‘total reward’ is defined in 2026, with employees increasingly prioritising lifestyle and mental health considerations over purely financial incentives.
A CIPD supports across the UK supports this trend, finding that more than one million employees have left roles due to a lack of flexible working arrangements, cementing flexibility as a core retention driver rather than a discretionary benefit.
Agility’s own experience with candidate and employer conversations over the past year reinforces this change, with flexibility and personal well-being consistently outweighing traditional compensation in job decision-making.
Agility’s research of 78,150 remote workers shows that:
- More than half (53 per cent) say flexible scheduling improves work-life balance
- A third (33.1 per cent) report increased productivity from remote work
- Around a fifth (19.6 per cent) identify flexibility as the most important form of employer support
Together, these findings highlight a workforce that increasingly sees flexibility not as an add-on but as a baseline expectation.
Before the pandemic, a competitive benefits package typically included statutory leave, private healthcare, and a car allowance. Today, these are widely regarded as standard rather than differentiating features. Instead, candidates are seeking more personalised, lifestyle-aligned benefits that support caregiving responsibilities, mental health, and work-life balance.
Typical 2026 benefit trends include:
- Fully remote or remote-first roles
- Flexible hours are often ranked above bonus structures
- Work-from-anywhere allowances
- A 25 per cent increase above statutory minimums for annual leave
- Buy-and-sell leave schemes, with candidates trading salary for additional time off
- Carer leave and eldercare support
- Expanded family flexibility policies
Agility has also observed a growing willingness among candidates to accept lower salaries in exchange for stronger flexibility, autonomy, and time-off provisions.
“Increasingly, we’re seeing candidates treat benefits as core compensation, not extras,” said Scott Winter, HR at Agility. “Flexibility is now a dealbreaker. Employers relying on outdated benefit structures risk losing strong candidates, even when the salary is competitive. However, the future is more adaptable packages, not necessarily a bigger package.”
