PEO for Union Employers: CBA Compliance, Multi-Employer Plans, and Liability

Quick Answer

Union employers need PEOs built for CBA compliance, multi-employer pension plan administration, grievance handling, and union dues remittance. Only 5–10 PEOs (ADP TotalSource, Insperity, CoAdvantage, Paychex Employer Services) have meaningful union-employer practices. Standard commercial PEOs either decline union accounts or require pension administration outside the PEO — which loses most of the economic case.

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CBA
Compliance under co-employment is the threshold issue
Multi-ER
Pension plan contribution administration
5–10
PEOs with meaningful union-employer practices
850+
Companies matched to PEO fit

Why Union Employers Need a PEO Built for Union Operations

Standard PEO infrastructure assumes a non-union workforce. The benefits structure runs through the PEO master plan; workers' comp comes through the PEO pool; payroll runs on the PEO's standard cadence and deduction logic. Union operations break those assumptions.

Union employees often participate in multi-employer pension plans (MEPPs) through their collective bargaining unit. The PEO must accurately calculate, withhold, and remit contributions to MEPPs — and report them according to plan rules. Standard PEOs don't support MEPP contribution administration; specialized PEOs do.

Union workers may have vacation, holiday, and apprenticeship funds administered through the union, separate from the PEO. Contributions go to the fund, not retained as accrued PTO on the PEO's books. Most PEO HRIS platforms don't natively handle this; PEOs with union experience have built workarounds.

Grievance procedures sit at the co-employment liability boundary. When a grievance involves PEO-handled functions (payroll error, benefits eligibility, ACA reporting), the PEO must participate in the grievance response — but liability for the underlying issue depends on the CSA.

CBA Compliance Under Co-Employment

The collective bargaining agreement is the controlling document for most union workforce decisions. Under co-employment, the PEO must operate within the CBA's constraints for:

  • Wage rates and scheduled increases — Payroll must reflect CBA-mandated rates and step increases. PEO HRIS must handle multi-rate scenarios (apprentice rates, journeyman rates, shift differentials).
  • Benefits structure — CBA may specify health plan tier, prescription coverage levels, or vision/dental benefits that diverge from the PEO master plan. Either the client carves out benefits (loses master-plan economics) or finds a PEO that can match CBA-specified benefits.
  • Hours and overtime — CBA may specify overtime triggers that differ from FLSA (daily overtime, weekly thresholds, double-time on holidays). PEO payroll must enforce CBA rules.
  • Grievance and arbitration procedures — Specified timelines and steps. PEO must support compliance.
  • Union dues and assessments — Calculation and remittance to the union, typically with reporting requirements.

Multi-Employer Pension Plan Contribution Administration

MEPPs are the most operationally complex piece. Each contributing employer must:

  • Calculate contributions per CBA formula (often $/hour worked or % of gross wages)
  • Report contribution amounts to the fund with required detail (hours, eligible wages, employee identifiers)
  • Remit funds on the schedule specified by the plan (typically monthly)
  • Submit annual contribution reconciliation
  • Handle pension protection act compliance and zone-status implications (endangered/critical/critical-and-declining plans have different employer obligations)

PEOs that don't support MEPP administration either decline union accounts or require the client to handle pension administration outside the PEO — which loses much of the PEO economic case.

Based on our placement experience, the PEOs that consistently deliver for union employers:

  • ADP TotalSource: Largest union-employer PEO book by client count. Built infrastructure for MEPP administration, CBA-compliant payroll, and grievance support.
  • Insperity: Strong union-employer practice with construction-trade focus (electrical, plumbing, sheet metal). Active relationships with major trade-union benefit funds.
  • CoAdvantage: Specialized union shop in construction. Less national scale but deep CBA compliance for clients in their footprint.
  • Paychex Employer Services: Mid-market construction union employers. Solid MEPP administration; less benefits depth.

For each, request references from union-employer clients specifically. The "we can do unions" assertion in a sales pitch is meaningless without operational proof.

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Why PEO Metrics for union employers

CBA-aware
Scoring includes CBA compatibility
5–10
PEOs with union-employer practices we benchmark
850+
Companies matched to PEO fit
100%
Free, independent matching
How we calculate these numbers: see methodology

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Chris DeCarolis
Chris DeCarolis
Senior PEO Advisor

A Florida 220 General Lines licensed insurance professional (G038859), Chris DeCarolis brings 18+ years of PEO and group benefits expertise to PEO Metrics as Senior PEO Advisor. His placements span the full operational spectrum — from 10-person agencies to multi-state enterprises with 1,000+ employees. Chris is a graduate of Brown University.

FL 220 License (G038859) 18+ Years Experience Brown University

References & Sources

Government and industry sources referenced throughout this guide:

PEO for union employers — common questions

Can a PEO administer contributions to a multi-employer pension plan? +
Some PEOs can; most cannot. ADP TotalSource, Insperity, CoAdvantage, and Paychex Employer Services have built MEPP administration capability. Smaller and budget PEOs typically cannot — they either decline union accounts or require the client to handle pension administration outside the PEO (which loses most of the PEO economic case).
Does a PEO replace the union's grievance procedure? +
No. The grievance procedure specified in the CBA continues to apply. The PEO participates in grievance response for PEO-handled functions (payroll error, benefits eligibility, ACA reporting) but the union's grievance procedure is the controlling process.
Can the PEO master plan benefits work alongside CBA-specified benefits? +
Sometimes. If the CBA specifies a benefits floor (minimum coverage levels) the master plan exceeds, the master plan can satisfy the CBA. If the CBA specifies particular carriers, plan designs, or contribution levels that the master plan doesn't match, you typically need to carve out benefits — which loses master-plan economics. Some PEOs offer hybrid configurations.
How are union dues handled under co-employment? +
The PEO calculates dues per the CBA formula (typically % of gross or flat per-pay-period), withholds from payroll, and remits to the union with required reporting. Standard PEOs support this; verify the specific dues calculation and reporting requirements in the implementation phase.
What's the typical PEPM premium for a union-employer account? +
Union-employer accounts typically run 10–25% higher than standard non-union accounts at the same PEPM tier — to cover the additional operational complexity. Premium-tier PEOs handling unions ($150–$200 PEPM range) are typically the right fit; budget tier ($85–$110 PEPM) rarely has the operational depth.

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