Employee Financial Well-being is more than a personal concern; it's a workforce issue. Employees struggling with budgeting and spending often experience higher levels of financial stress, which can affect focus, engagement, and overall well-being.
For employers, EAP providers, and PEOs, supporting healthy spending habits is not simply a "nice-to-have." It can be an important component of a broader Financial Well-being strategy.
Key Takeaways
- Spending habits can influence employee financial stress and overall Financial Well-being.
- Financial education and coaching can help employees make informed spending decisions.
- Better spending awareness may support stronger financial confidence.
- Employers can incorporate spending education into broader Financial Well-being initiatives.
- Spending behavior can affect benefits engagement and long-term financial goals.
Why Spending Habits Matter for Your Workforce
Financial stress often begins long before a missed bill or mounting debt balance.
Day-to-day spending habits can influence an employee's ability to build savings, manage unexpected expenses, and navigate financial challenges with confidence. When employees feel overwhelmed by their finances, the effects can extend beyond their personal lives.
Research and industry observations suggest that spending challenges may contribute to broader workplace concerns, including:
- Increased financial stress that can affect focus and productivity¹
- Absenteeism and workplace distractions linked to financial concerns²
- Delayed medical care due to affordability concerns
- Higher out-of-pocket expenses resulting from poor financial planning
- Less-informed benefits decisions that may lead to underutilization of available resources
As employers, EAPs, and PEOs evaluate ways to support employee Financial Well-being, spending education represents an opportunity to address a common root cause of financial stress rather than simply responding to its symptoms.
Internal Link Opportunity: Link to one of the launch articles
The Cost of Employee Financial Stress (example article)
Spending Habits Are Part of Financial Well-being
Employees who struggle with spending may also face challenges related to debt management, emergency savings, retirement planning, or credit health. That's why many organizations are incorporating spending education into their Financial Well-being initiatives.
Helping employees understand how spending choices affect their overall financial picture can support better decision-making and greater confidence over time.
Internal Link Opportunity:
What Is Employee Financial Wellness? (example article)
5 Ways Employers Can Support Healthy Spending Habits
1. Build Awareness of Current Financial Habits
Many employees don't have a clear, realistic picture of where their money goes each month. Without this baseline, budgeting efforts can struggle.
How you can help:
- Offer a simple digital tool or worksheet for assessing monthly income versus expenditures.
- Run a short workshop or educational module through your EAP or benefits portal focused on spending awareness.
- Include sessions that explore the connection between spending habits, financial stress, and workplace well-being.
2. Prioritize Essential Spending and Reduce Reactive Purchases
Employees under financial pressure may be more likely to make reactive purchases or rely on high-interest borrowing, which can undermine financial stability.
How you can help:
- Provide educational content on needs versus wants and mindful spending decisions.
- Through your benefits communication, encourage employees to build even a modest financial cushion to help reduce reliance on high-interest debt.
- Use Money Coaching sessions to help employees anticipate irregular expenses and plan ahead.
3. Encourage Use of Tax-Advantaged Accounts and Smart Benefits Decisions
Benefit elections, HSAs, FSAs, and employer-sponsored savings programs are often connected to spending behavior, yet many employees do not fully understand how to maximize these opportunities.
How you can help:
- During your benefits enrollment period, highlight how HSAs and FSAs can affect monthly spending and tax savings.
- Use benefits communications to explain how different spending decisions can influence long-term financial outcomes.
- Provide real-world examples that help employees understand available options: “If you spend $X on healthcare this year, here’s how using HSA or benefit plan A vs. B impacts your net spending.”
Looking for ways to reduce employee financial stress?
Learn how personalized Money Coaching and educational guidance can help employees navigate spending challenges and other financial priorities.
Internal Link Opportunity: Link to a launch article
Financial Wellness Programs: A Guide for Employers
4. Support Behavior Change Through Micro-Learning and Money Coaching
Changing spending habits takes more than a one-time email or flyer. Sustained support increases the chance of real change.
How you can help:
- Offer a series of short educational modules focused on spending and budgeting via your EAP or benefits portal: “Week 1: Track spending,” “Week 2: Understand bills,” etc.
- Use coaching sessions and periodic check-ins to encourage progress.
- Consider interactive challenges or engagement activities that help reinforce positive habits (e.g., “30-day spend-less challenge”).
MSA Member perspective:
“I’ve noticed significant improvements with my budgeting habits and reduced financial stress in the past year! I’m gradually reaching my financial goals with great coaching and accountability.”
5. Connect Financial Health to Workplace Well-being
Employees who feel more financially stable may be better positioned to focus on work, engage with benefits, and navigate everyday challenges.
How you can help:
- As part of your EAP/benefits communications, reinforce the connection between Financial Well-being, stress reduction, and overall well-being.
- Share educational content that highlights the value of healthy spending habits.
- Position financial education as part of a larger employee support strategy.
How Employers, EAPs, and PEOs Can Incorporate Spending Education
Spending education can be integrated into a broader Financial Well-being strategy in several ways.
Organizations may consider:
- Launching spending-focused educational campaigns.
- Providing access to budgeting tools and resources, such as a spending-tracking template.
- Offering personalized financial coaching.
- Incorporating spending education into EAP programming.
- Embed interactive modules in your benefits platform: quick videos, quizzes, and prompts.
- Creating year-round opportunities for financial learning and support.
Internal Link Opportunities: Replace with a launch article
- How Financial Wellness Fits Into an EAP
- Financial Wellness for PEOs
- How Financial Coaching Supports Employee Benefits
Potential Benefits for Employers
Organizations that support employee Financial Well-being initiatives may experience benefits such as:
- Increased employee confidence
- Reduced financial stress
- Greater awareness of available resources
- Improved engagement with benefits and support programs
- A workforce that feels supported during financial challenges
Supporting healthy spending habits is ultimately about helping employees build confidence and make informed financial decisions. As an employer or EAP provider, you’re in a position to guide that transformation. Investing in education today means a stronger workforce tomorrow.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why do spending habits matter for employee Financial Well-being?
Spending habits influence an employee's ability to manage expenses, build savings, and navigate financial challenges, all of which contribute to overall Financial Well-being.
How can employers support healthy spending habits?
Employers can provide financial education, Money Coaching opportunities, budgeting resources, and ongoing communication that helps promote informed financial decisions.
What role does financial coaching play in spending behavior?
Financial coaching can help employees understand spending patterns, identify opportunities for improvement, and develop realistic action plans aligned with their individual goals.
Can spending education help reduce financial stress?
Financial education may help employees better understand their finances and make informed decisions, which can contribute to greater financial confidence.
Next Steps for Employers, EAPs, and PEOs
- Evaluate how spending education fits into your Financial Well-being strategy.
- Review available employee financial education resources.
- Consider opportunities for personalized financial coaching.
- Reinforce healthy spending habits through ongoing communication.
- Connect spending education to broader Financial Well-being initiatives.
Take the Next Step
Interested in supporting employee Financial Well-being through educational guidance and personalized Money Coaching?
MSA’s outcomes data shows how personalized support can translate into meaningful progress. MSA members with high financial stress reported a 122% average reduction in worrying about being able to meet monthly living expenses.3
Schedule a conversation with our team to learn how MSA helps employers, EAPs, and PEOs support employees at each stage of their financial journey.
1 “Stress and Productivity: What the Numbers Say.” business.com, n.d. Accessed 9 June 2026. business.com/articles/stress-and-productivity-what-the-numbers-say
2 “22 Workplace Absenteeism Statistics For A Reality Check 2026.” Soocial, n.d. Accessed 9 June 2026. soocial.com/workplace-absenteeism-statistics
3 My Secure Advantage, Inc., January 2025. Based on self-reported data from MSA members with high financial stress, from 1/1/23 - 12/31/24.
Post a comment