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Choosing to make your health a priority in the new year is a popular resolution for many. However, health can take on various forms that you may not be factoring into your resolutions.

How Many Sick Days Should You Give?

Posted On
4/5/2016
By
Stefan Schumacher

According to the U.S. Department of Labor, the average number of paid sick days is 8 for any employee of at least a year and 11 for an employee with 25 years' experience with the company.

how many sick days should you give - woman in front of a computer with tea and tissues feeling ill

SurePayroll recently surveyed small business owners nationwide, asking them how many paid sick days they give employees. Here's what they said:

  • Less than 5 days: 80 (30% of respondents)
  • 5 days: 42 (15.7% of respondents)
  • 6 - 10 days: 37 (13.9% of respondents)
  • Unlimited: 23 (8.6% of respondents)
  • No sick days, only paid time off: 85 (31.8% of respondents)

Still, for many companies, it is a vexing question, with practical, moral and financial implications: How many paid sick days should you give employees?

On one hand, from a financial standpoint, an employer is under no obligation to provide paid sick days. Companies subject to the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) are required to provide up to 12 weeks unpaid leave for certain medical situations to employees and their immediate family.

However, other than that provision, a company may under law decline to provide paid sick leave and certainly may frown on workers who frequently take unpaid sick days.

Respondents to the SurePayroll survey said that they do face serious challenges when it comes to paid sick time:

"Need someone to fill in for the sick employee at an extra cost and still pay the employee that is sick, is like paying double time for half the work. Additionally, the business may suffer during that time because of decreased productivity that can affect consumer opinion of the company."

Because a company can play a hard line on a sick days policy certainly doesn't mean it is wise policy. Who wants to work for a company that offers no paid sick pay? Then there is the question of health and the spillover financial effects. According to CNN Money, the flu season is a prime example:

The U.S. Department of Labor deems that while providing sick days may seem expensive for employers, not giving them is also costly. The Centers for Disease Control estimates that even a typical flu season costs businesses about $10.4 billion in direct costs for hospitalizations and outpatient visits for adults. And that doesn't even include the cost of lost productivity and sales that comes along with the disease.

So, therefore, providing paid sick days will keep some sick employees away from your healthy employees and limit the number of employees who miss days due to sickness. Some companies have gone so far as to implement an unlimited sick days policy.

Employers have recognized this undeniable fact and nearly 80 percent of full-time employees and 25 percent of part-time employees get paid sick days.

In addition, several U.S. cities require private companies to offer paid sick leave, including San Francisco, Milwaukee Washington DC and Seattle and one state, Connecticut.

But for the vast majority of companies that aren't required to provide paid sick days, it's up to you to decide on a sick days policy. Some choose to simply give a set amount of paid time off, to be used at the employees' discretion.

For your company, whether to offer paid sick days is a question that depends on the size of your company, the type of jobs involved, and the tone you want to set as an employer. That is a question that must be carefully weighed and reviewed regularly.

Read More: How Much Vacation Time Should Employees Receive?

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