For Employees · May 1, 2026

Section 125 for Home Health Caregivers — Wage Guide

By David Newman — Referral Partner, Section 125 Savings · San Pedro, CA
Published May 1, 2026

Home health caregivers earning $26-34K qualify for Section 125 — automatic ~$72/paycheck raise at zero employer cost. Section to share with your home-care employer.

IRS Section 125 — Federal Law Since 1978
No New Insurance Required
No Changes to Current Benefits
ACA · ERISA · COBRA · HIPAA Compliant
Live in 30–60 Days

Home health caregivers, hospice aides, and home care assistants typically earn $26,000-$34,000/year — squarely in the Section 125 eligibility sweet spot. If your employer enrolls in Section 125 Preventive Care, you take home approximately $72 more per paycheck (~$863/year) automatically, plus you gain access to 24/7 telemedicine for your household, 400+ free generic medications, dental savings up to 60%, and mental health counseling. Zero out-of-pocket cost to you.

If your employer doesn't currently offer the Preventive Care variant, this page is the one to share with them. Most home-care franchises and agencies (Visiting Angels, Home Instead, Comfort Keepers, BrightStar Care, Right at Home) qualify for the program structure. The math for the agency: $681.60/W-2 caregiver/year in net FICA savings + Workers' Comp reduction at the home-health 5% rate. For a 75-caregiver agency, ~$78,000/year combined annual savings. The retention math is also meaningful: industry-average turnover is 60-90% annually, and the Section 125 paycheck raise + wellness benefits package is one of the cleanest retention investments at zero employer cost.

How the math works (in 90 seconds)

For every enrolled W-2 employee earning $25,000+/year and covered under an ACA-compliant group health plan:

  • Pre-tax salary reduction: $1,200/month · $14,400/year
  • Employer FICA savings (7.65%): $1,101.60/year
  • Less program admin fee ($35/mo): −$420/year
  • Net employer savings: $681.60/employee/year
  • Employee net take-home raise: +$71.96/paycheck (~$863/year)
  • Workers' Comp reduction: 30–60% real-world at next audit cycle

A 50-employee company nets $34,080/year in net FICA + industry-specific WC reduction. Run the calculator → for your specific number.

Run your number

See What You'd Save

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Minimum 10 W-2 employees  ·  $25K+ salary  ·  ACA-compliant health coverage required
Verified by CBIZ & HitesmanLaw  ·  Zero cost  ·  Zero obligation

⚖️ Federally Funded  ·  Zero Cost  ·  IRS Law Since 1978

Affinity Hospice (multi-state hospice, CFO is a CPA who commissioned the CBIZ review himself) saves $140K+/year using exactly this structure. The same math applies to home-care agencies of similar caregiver headcount. If you're a caregiver, hand this page to your owner or HR director — they can book the free 15-minute analysis call to see the exact agency-side savings figure.

Verified compliant — May 2025 + August 2025

The Section 125 Preventive Care program described above was independently reviewed in 2025 by:

  • HitesmanLaw P.A. (May 5, 2025) — 8-page formal legal opinion from Darcy L. Hitesman, J.D., a Super Lawyer-rated ERISA attorney with 35+ years in IRC § 125 practice, AV-rated since 1998, co-author of the national ERISA compliance manual. Concludes the program "satisfies applicable IRS requirements."
  • CBIZ Advisors LLC (August 22, 2025) — top-7 U.S. accounting firm, 135,000+ clients. Independent review confirms compliance with IRC §§ 125, 105, 106, ERISA, ACA, and COBRA when operated per its provisions.
  • $500,000 insurance-backed legal protection per enrolled employer + $10,000 per employee participant.

Read the full compliance authority page → · IRS.gov — Cafeteria Plans (Section 125) · 26 U.S. Code § 125

A real result from a real company

Affinity Hospice — multi-state hospice care, CFO Ariel Joudai (CPA) commissioned the CBIZ review — saves $140,000+/year through this exact program structure. Read the full case study →

This isn't a projection — it's reported, on the public record, from operators whose own CPAs and attorneys reviewed the documentation before signing. Browse the full case study set →

How to verify it yourself

Three primary sources, all public:

  1. IRS.gov — Cafeteria Plans — the law in the IRS's own words.
  2. 26 U.S. Code § 125 — the federal statute itself.
  3. The Hitesman opinion + CBIZ review — both share-able PDFs, available on your free 15-minute analysis call.

Ready to see your number?

Run the calculator above for an instant net-savings estimate, or book the free 15-minute analysis with the tax specialist for the exact number — no pitch, just math.


Content reviewed by Virginia Fish, CPA — tax and employer benefits specialist with 10+ years in financial reporting and payroll tax strategy.

FAQ

Yes. The plan administrator integrates with whatever payroll system your agency uses (most home-care agencies use ADP, Paychex, Gusto, or specialty home-care payroll systems). Setup is at the payroll-system level; no changes to your timekeeping or scheduling apps.
Each agency that's a separate W-2 employer enrolls separately. You'd be enrolled at whichever agency offers the program. PRN/per-diem staff with annualized W-2 earnings crossing $25K qualify at participating employers.
The Preventive Care wellness layer requires participants to have ACA-compliant group health coverage (your employer's plan, or via your spouse). Medi-Cal/Medicaid coverage doesn't satisfy the requirement on its own. Most home-care agencies offer group health insurance to qualifying employees — check with HR.
First payroll cycle after the agency's go-live (typically 6-8 weeks from when they sign the agreement). The wellness platform onboarding rolls out over the first 30 days post-launch.
Legal & Accounting Proof

Verified by the Best in the Country

Skepticism is the right response. We don't ask you to take our word for it — we bring institutional proof that convinced CPAs, CFOs, attorneys, and insurance brokers to enroll their own companies.

Darcy L. Hitesman, J.D.

HitesmanLaw P.A. · Minneapolis, MN

35+ years as an Employee Benefits attorney specializing in IRC Section 125, ERISA, HIPAA, and the ACA. Her May 5, 2025 opinion letter concludes: “In this firm's opinion, the Program described satisfies applicable IRS requirements.”

She specifically reviewed the IRS Chief Counsel Advice memoranda on "double-dip" arrangements — the exact schemes the IRS has flagged — and concluded this program is built differently and compliantly.

Named a Super Lawyer every year since 2000. AV-rated (highest possible rating) in Martindale-Hubbell since 1998.
Co-author: ERISA Compliance for Health & Welfare Plans (Thomson Reuters/EBIA) — the national compliance standard manual since 1999.
Member, Technical Advisory Group — Employers Council on Flexible Compensation. She helps set the industry standards for Section 125 plans nationally.

CBIZ Advisors LLC

Top-7 U.S. Accounting Firm · Cleveland, OH · 135,000+ Clients

CBIZ independently reviewed the program against IRC §§ 125, 105, and 106, plus ERISA, ACA, and COBRA requirements. Their August 22, 2025 letter concludes: “If operated per its provisions, the Program appears to satisfy the requirements of ERISA, the ACA, and COBRA as well.”

This review was commissioned by Affinity Hospice's CEO before enrolling his nationwide organization — and the CFO (himself a CPA) shared the letter publicly in his testimonial.

Top-7 U.S. accounting firm. 10,000+ employees across 100+ offices. Serves 135,000+ clients nationally.
Review covers: IRC §125 cafeteria plan, §105/106 wellness benefit rules, ERISA plan asset treatment, ACA integration, and COBRA obligations.
$500,000 legal protection per enrolled employer · $10,000 per employee participant · Insurance-backed.
🏛️

Direct From the U.S. Government

Section 125 has been in the Internal Revenue Code since 1978. Congress wrote it there specifically to encourage employers to fund preventive healthcare for American workers. This is not a loophole — it is the precise, intended use of a 47-year-old federal law, grounded in IRS Revenue Ruling 69-154, the specific published ruling supporting the benefit payment structure.

→ Verify on IRS.gov — Section 125 Cafeteria Plans ↗

Content reviewed by Virginia Fish, CPA — tax and employer benefits specialist with 10+ years in financial reporting and payroll tax strategy.

Zero Cost · Zero Obligation · 15 Minutes

Find Out Your Number.
Free. No Pitch. Just Math.

Verified: CBIZ Advisors LLC (Aug 2025) · HitesmanLaw P.A. (May 2025)
$500K legal protection per enrolled employer · IRS Section 125 · Federal law since 1978