Employee Retention


Quick Definition

Employee retention is an organization's ability to keep its employees over time, usually expressed as the percentage of staff who remain through a defined period. Strong retention reduces turnover costs, preserves institutional knowledge, and reflects a workplace people don't want to leave.

What Is Employee Retention?

Employee retention is an organization's ability to keep its workforce intact over time. It's usually measured as a percentage — the share of employees who remain on staff through a defined period, most often a year. Retention is the inverse of turnover, but it's the more useful framing for HR and leadership teams because it focuses attention on the people you're trying to keep rather than the ones already out the door.

Retention reflects much more than compensation. It captures whether employee engagement, employee morale, career development, manager quality, and overall employee experience are strong enough that people choose to stay even when they have other options. A high retention rate is one of the clearest signals that an organization's culture, leadership, and rewards strategy are working in concert.

Why Employee Retention Matters

Retention is one of the highest-leverage metrics in HR because the costs of losing employees compound quickly. Replacing an employee typically costs between half and twice their annual salary once recruiting, onboarding, lost productivity, and ramp time are accounted for. For knowledge workers and senior roles, the multiplier runs higher. Beyond the dollars, every departure means lost institutional knowledge, disrupted team dynamics, and a temporary drop in output across the colleagues left behind.

Retention also signals something about the future. Companies with strong retention compound their advantage — institutional knowledge accumulates, teams build trust over time, and recruiting becomes easier because employees become referral engines. Companies with weak retention spend an outsized share of HR's budget and leadership's attention on a problem that recognition, development, and culture investments could have prevented upstream.

½–2× Replacing an employee typically costs between half and twice their annual salary, according to Gallup and SHRM benchmarks.

77% of employee turnover is preventable, according to the Work Institute's annual Retention Report.

How to Calculate Employee Retention Rate

The standard formula is straightforward:

Retention Rate = (Employees who stayed the entire period ÷ Employees at start of period) × 100

For example, if you started the year with 200 employees and 180 of those original employees were still with you at year-end, your annual retention rate is (180 ÷ 200) × 100 = 90%. Note the formula counts only the original cohort — new hires made during the period are excluded so the metric reflects whether you kept the people you already had.

Most organizations calculate retention annually, but quarterly or rolling 12-month measurements give a faster read. Segment the calculation by department, tenure band, manager, and role type to find where retention is strong and where it's leaking. A company-wide rate of 90% can hide a 60% rate inside a single high-turnover team.

How to Improve Employee Retention

Retention strategy works best when it addresses the full employee lifecycle rather than reacting to resignations. The highest-impact levers tend to fall into a handful of categories:

  1. Build a consistent employee recognition practice. Employees who feel seen and valued are far less likely to start a job search. Recognition is one of the lowest-cost, highest-return retention investments available.
  2. Pair recognition with a meaningful rewards program. Tangible rewards — gift cards, points-based systems, milestone gifts — reinforce the message that contributions matter. Even small rewards have an outsized impact on perceived appreciation.
  3. Invest in manager quality. The single biggest predictor of whether someone stays or leaves is their relationship with their direct manager. Train managers to give specific recognition, run effective quarterly check-ins, and develop their teams.
  4. Celebrate milestones. Work anniversaries, promotions, and years of service awards are critical retention moments. Tenure milestones in particular are when employees re-evaluate their commitment.
  5. Provide growth and development. Career stagnation is a leading cause of voluntary turnover. Clear development paths, internal mobility, and skill-building budgets keep employees invested in their future at your company.
  6. Listen and act on feedback. Use employee surveys and stay interviews to learn what's working and what's at risk. Acting on feedback closes the loop and reinforces that employees' voices matter.
  7. Get onboarding right. Employees who have a strong onboarding experience are significantly more likely to be with the company a year later. The first 90 days set the trajectory.

For practical ideas you can put into motion this week, see our guide to free and low-cost employee appreciation ideas and five proven engagement strategies.

Benefits of Strong Employee Retention

  • Lower hiring and training costs. Every employee you keep is a recruiting cycle, an onboarding investment, and a productivity ramp you don't have to fund again.
  • Preserved institutional knowledge. Long-tenured employees carry context, relationships, and process knowledge that take years to rebuild when they leave.
  • Stronger team performance. Stable teams build trust, communication patterns, and shared mental models that drive higher output than constantly reshuffled groups.
  • Better customer outcomes. Tenured employees deliver better service, build longer customer relationships, and have deeper product expertise.
  • A more attractive employer brand. Companies known for keeping their people attract better candidates, get more referrals, and spend less on recruiting marketing.
  • Higher engagement and morale. Retention and engagement reinforce each other — engaged employees stay, and stability fuels the culture that creates engagement.

Common Causes of Low Retention

  • Lack of recognition. Employees who feel invisible or taken for granted are among the most likely to leave. Inconsistent or generic recognition is nearly as damaging as no recognition at all.
  • Poor management. "People leave managers, not companies" is a cliché because it's accurate. Manager quality predicts retention more than almost any other variable.
  • Limited career growth. Employees who can't see a future at your company will start looking for one elsewhere. Stagnation drives more voluntary turnover than salary in most industries.
  • Compensation that lags the market. Pay isn't usually the top reason people leave, but pay that drifts meaningfully below market makes every other complaint feel sharper.
  • Burnout and overwork. Sustained workloads beyond a healthy threshold drive even committed employees to disengage and eventually exit.
  • Cultural misalignment. When values are stated but not lived — or when day-to-day decisions contradict the company's stated culture — high performers tend to leave first.
  • Weak onboarding. A rocky first 90 days creates retention risk that can persist for years. Many employees who eventually leave were quietly disengaged from week one.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is employee retention in simple terms?

Employee retention is an organization's ability to keep its people on staff over time. It's usually expressed as a percentage — the share of employees who stay through a given period — and reflects how well a company sustains a workplace people don't want to leave.

How do you calculate employee retention rate?

Divide the number of employees who stayed for the entire period by the number of employees at the start of the period, then multiply by 100. Formula: (Employees at end of period who were also there at start ÷ Employees at start of period) × 100. Most companies calculate this annually.

What is a good employee retention rate?

A retention rate of 90% or higher is widely considered strong, while rates below 70% typically signal a retention problem. Healthy benchmarks vary by industry — hospitality and retail run lower, while government and skilled trades tend to run higher. Compare to your industry average rather than to a universal number.

What is the difference between employee retention and employee turnover?

Retention measures who stays; turnover measures who leaves. They're inverse views of the same dynamic — a 90% retention rate means a 10% turnover rate. Retention is often the more useful framing because it focuses leadership attention on the people you're keeping rather than the ones already gone.

How does employee recognition affect retention?

Recognition is one of the most cost-effective drivers of retention. Gallup research consistently shows employees who feel recognized are significantly less likely to leave, and that the absence of recognition is among the top reasons people cite for quitting. Pairing consistent recognition with a meaningful rewards program reinforces the behaviors you most want to retain.

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