Match the platform to your stage. Pre-seed to seed (under 15 employees): Gusto is the clear default. It costs under $130/month for a 15-person team, sets up in days, and handles the basics. You do not need Rippling's automation at this stage because you are onboarding one person at a time. Seed to Series A (15-50 employees): continue on Gusto if your benefits structure is simple, or move to Rippling if you are hiring frequently and want automated enrollment. Series A to B (50-200 employees): Rippling's automation becomes genuinely valuable as hiring velocity increases and benefit structures become more complex. Series C+ (200+ employees): evaluate whether Rippling still handles your complexity or whether a dedicated platform like Benefitfocus is needed.
Speed of implementation matters more for startups than feature completeness. Gusto can be live in under a week. Rippling takes 2-3 weeks for full benefits setup. Benefitfocus takes 3-6 months. When you are mid-fundraise and need to start offering competitive benefits immediately, implementation speed outweighs feature depth. Start with Gusto, plan your migration to Rippling for when it is justified by headcount and hiring velocity.
Benefits quality is a hiring weapon for startups. When a candidate compares your startup's benefits to Google's, the gap matters. TriNet's PEO gives access to enterprise-grade insurance plans that close this gap — HSA-compatible high-deductible plans, low-deductible PPO options, comprehensive mental health coverage, and fertility benefits. Standalone benefits platforms (Gusto, Rippling) let your broker shop the market, but the plans available to small groups are inherently less competitive than PEO large-group plans. If benefits quality drives your decision, evaluate the PEO path alongside standalone software.
Total compensation visibility matters for startup recruiting. Rippling can display benefits value alongside equity vesting in employee portals — showing candidates the full compensation picture, not just salary. Gusto shows benefits but not equity integration. For startups where equity is 20-40% of total compensation, the ability to present a unified total compensation view during recruiting and retention conversations has real value.
Plan for the benefits infrastructure you will need in 18 months, not just today. Startups that adopt Gusto at 15 employees often outgrow it at 50-75 employees as benefit structures become more complex (multiple plan tiers, HSA employer contributions, supplemental benefits). Migrating benefits platforms mid-year disrupts employees and creates compliance risk. If your hiring plan projects 50+ employees within 18 months, consider starting with Rippling even if it is more than you need today — the migration cost you avoid later is worth the extra per-employee cost now.
Broker quality matters as much as platform quality. Your insurance broker negotiates plan rates, manages carrier relationships, and guides employees through plan selection during open enrollment. The best benefits platform in the world delivers poor results with a bad broker. Ask your broker what technology they support (most work with Gusto and Rippling), whether they specialize in your industry (tech brokers understand the benefits expectations of Silicon Valley hires), and whether they provide plan benchmarking data (showing how your benefits compare to peer startups at your stage).