And given the state of wages, 2025 does not look promising. According to software company BambooHR, 50% of employees are struggling to make ends meet, with 60% paying off debt that, on average, consumes 30% of their paycheck. Moreover, raises have shrunk, dropping from a 6.2% increase in 2022 to 3.6% in 2024. BambooHR estimates that two in five salaried employees didn’t receive raises last year.
These numbers don’t bode well for workers or employers, argues Anita Grantham, head of HR at BambooHR. She acknowledges that due to above-average wage increases in 2021 and 2022 and benefit expansions, companies’ budgets may feel smaller and smaller, especially as employers try to anticipate the economic landscape under a new administration. However, Granthman stresses now is not the time to risk losing talent.
“The cost of talent replacement is high — employers always sacrifice more with the cost of turnover,” she says. “If you keep an employee with you, it increases their value. You’re not out there hiring, recruiting, onboarding and training. My biggest piece of advice to leaders is to know and understand the marriage between compensation and performance.”
Replacing workers costs up to two times a former employee’s salary, according to management consulting company Gallup. This doesn’t necessarily factor in what employers lose in productivity and overall team performance when someone exits the company. Grantham urges employers to be aware of the current state of compensation as they strategize their next steps.
Here are four compensation trends to track in 2025.
