Glossary

PEO, payroll, and HR glossary

100 terms that come up when buyers compare PEOs — co-employment, CPEO, NCCI, workers comp mod handling, ACA mandate, paid leave laws, and more. Plain-English definitions written for buyers, not insiders.

PEO mechanics

Administrative Services Organization (ASO)

A service model where a provider handles HR administration without entering co-employment — the client remains the sole legal employer.

Auto-renewal clause

A contract provision that automatically extends the agreement unless terminated within a specific window.

Cancellation notice

The required written notice period before terminating a PEO agreement.

Certified Professional Employer Organization (CPEO)

A PEO certified by the IRS, which transfers federal employment tax liability from the client to the PEO.

Client Service Agreement (CSA)

The contract that defines the PEO-client relationship — co-employment scope, fees, liabilities, termination.

Co-employment

A legal arrangement where a PEO and a client business share specific employer responsibilities for the same workforce.

Data portability

The ability to export employee data, payroll history, and HR records when leaving a PEO.

Employer Services Assurance Corporation (ESAC)

A third-party accreditation body for PEOs that verifies financial stability, ethical conduct, and operational standards.

Employer of Record (EOR)

A service that legally employs workers on behalf of a client business — typically used for international hiring or contractor-to-employee conversions.

Human Resources Information System (HRIS)

The software platform used to manage employee data, payroll, benefits enrollment, time tracking, and HR processes.

Human Resources Outsourcing (HRO)

An umbrella term for outsourcing some or all HR functions to a third party, ranging from payroll-only to comprehensive PEO arrangements.

National Association of Professional Employer Organizations (NAPEO)

The PEO industry trade association — defines industry standards and publishes economic research on PEO outcomes.

PEO implementation / transition

The process of moving an existing business onto a PEO's payroll, benefits, and HR systems.

Per Employee Per Month (PEPM)

The standard pricing unit for PEO services — total monthly cost divided by total employees.

Professional Employer Organization (PEO)

A company that enters into a co-employment relationship with a client business to handle payroll, benefits, workers comp, and HR compliance.

Small Business Efficiency Act (SBEA)

A 2014 federal law that created the IRS Certified PEO program and shifted federal employment tax liability to the CPEO.

Workforce management

Software and processes for scheduling, time tracking, attendance, and labor cost management.

Payroll & tax

Workers compensation

Employee benefits

401(k) plan

A tax-advantaged employer-sponsored retirement savings plan that allows employees to defer wages on a pre-tax or Roth basis.

ACA Employer Shared Responsibility

The ACA section that imposes penalties on Applicable Large Employers (50+ FTE) for failing to offer compliant coverage.

Affordable Care Act (ACA)

The 2010 federal health reform law that established the employer mandate, exchanges, and various coverage requirements.

Benefit waiting period

The period after hire before a new employee becomes eligible for benefits — capped at 90 days under ACA.

Benefits broker

A licensed professional who helps employers select and manage benefits plans.

COBRA

A federal law giving employees the option to continue group health coverage at their own cost after employment ends.

COBRA administration

The process of providing required notices, processing elections, and managing premium billing for COBRA continuation coverage.

Cafeteria plan (Section 125)

An IRS-approved arrangement that allows employees to pay for certain benefits with pre-tax dollars.

Employee Assistance Program (EAP)

A confidential employee benefit providing short-term counseling and referrals for personal or work-related issues.

Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA)

A 1974 federal law that sets minimum standards for most voluntary pension and health plans in private industry.

Employer mandate

The ACA requirement that applicable large employers offer affordable health coverage to full-time employees or pay penalties.

Flexible Spending Account (FSA)

A pre-tax account for qualified medical expenses, with annual contribution limits and use-it-or-lose-it rules.

Fringe benefits

Non-wage compensation provided to employees in addition to base salary.

Group health insurance

Health insurance purchased by an employer to cover its employees, typically at lower per-employee cost than individual policies.

Health Reimbursement Arrangement (HRA)

An employer-funded plan that reimburses employees for qualified medical expenses.

Health Savings Account (HSA)

A tax-advantaged account paired with a high-deductible health plan, used for qualified medical expenses.

High-deductible health plan (HDHP)

A health plan with higher deductibles than traditional plans, paired with HSA eligibility.

Long-term disability insurance (LTD)

Insurance that replaces a portion of income for extended disability periods, often through retirement age.

Multiple Employer Plan (MEP)

A retirement plan that covers employees of more than one unrelated employer — common in PEO 401(k) arrangements.

Open enrollment

The annual period when employees can elect, change, or drop benefits coverage for the upcoming plan year.

Paid time off (PTO)

Employer-provided paid leave that bundles vacation, sick, and personal time into a single bank.

Pooled Employer Plan (PEP)

A retirement plan covering unrelated employers, enabled by the SECURE Act of 2019.

Qualifying life event

A life change that allows employees to make benefits changes outside of open enrollment.

Self-insured health plan

A health plan where the employer pays claims directly (often with stop-loss insurance) rather than paying premiums to an insurer.

Short-term disability insurance (STD)

Insurance that replaces a portion of income when an employee is unable to work due to non-work-related illness or injury.

Stop-loss insurance

Insurance that caps an employer's claim exposure on a self-insured health plan — specific (per claim) and aggregate (annual total).

Total rewards

The full value of compensation including wages, benefits, paid time off, equity, and non-cash perks.

Voluntary benefits

Benefits offered by an employer that employees pay for themselves through payroll deduction.

HR & compliance

Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)

A federal law prohibiting discrimination against qualified individuals with disabilities and requiring reasonable accommodations.

Background check

Pre-employment screening of criminal history, employment verification, education, and references.

Davis-Bacon Act

A 1931 federal law requiring prevailing wages on federally-funded construction projects.

EEO-1 Report

An annual federal report on workforce demographics required from employers with 100+ employees.

Employee handbook

A written document outlining workplace policies, procedures, and expectations for employees.

Employee separation

The end of the employment relationship — termination, resignation, retirement, or layoff.

Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA)

The federal law establishing minimum wage, overtime, recordkeeping, and child labor standards for most US employers.

Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)

A federal law giving eligible employees up to 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave per year for specified family and medical reasons.

Form I-9 (Employment Eligibility Verification)

A federal form every employer must complete for every new hire to verify identity and employment authorization.

HIPAA

The federal law setting privacy and security standards for protected health information.

HR compliance audit

A systematic review of HR policies, practices, and records to identify legal or regulatory exposure.

Harassment prevention training

Required training in many states on identifying and preventing workplace harassment.

Minimum wage

The lowest hourly wage an employer can pay employees by law — federal, state, or local, whichever is highest.

Multi-state employer

An employer with employees working in more than one US state — triggers state-by-state compliance obligations.

Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)

The federal agency that sets and enforces workplace safety standards for most US private-sector employers.

Onboarding

The process of integrating a new employee into the organization — paperwork, orientation, training, role transition.

Overtime pay

Pay at 1.5× the regular rate for hours worked over 40 in a workweek, required for non-exempt employees under FLSA.

Paid family and medical leave

State-administered programs that provide partial wage replacement during family or medical leave — separate from federal FMLA.

Paid sick leave

State or local laws requiring employers to provide paid time off for employees' or family members' health needs.

Pay equity

Federal and state laws requiring equal pay for similar work regardless of sex, race, or other protected characteristics.

Predictive scheduling law

Local laws requiring employers to provide advance notice of work schedules and predictable hours for hourly workers.

Remote employee

An employee working from a location other than the employer's primary location — typically a home office.

Salary history ban

State or local laws prohibiting employers from asking job applicants about their prior salary.

Severance pay

Payments made to employees upon termination, typically beyond what is legally required.

Tip credit

A wage-and-hour mechanism allowing employers to pay tipped employees a lower cash wage, with tips making up the difference to minimum wage.

WARN Act

A federal law requiring 60 days advance notice of large-scale layoffs and plant closures.

Wage and hour law

Federal and state laws governing minimum wage, overtime, recordkeeping, child labor, and meal/rest breaks.

Wrongful termination

A termination that violates state or federal law — typically due to discrimination, retaliation, or public-policy violations.

CG
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