Human Interest headquartered in San Francisco offers their cloud-based 401k administation platform for employers featuring flexible plan design and a dedicated account manager.
$124
per month
Rippling
Score 8.5 out of 10
N/A
Rippling gives businesses one place to run HR, IT, and Finance. It brings together all of the workforce systems that are normally scattered across a company, like payroll, expenses, benefits, and computers. This enables users to manage and automate every part of the employee lifecycle in a single system. For example, when onboarding a new employee, Rippling can take a new hire from anywhere in the world and set up their payroll, corporate card, computer, benefits, and even third-party…
$8
starting price per user, per month
Pricing
Human Interest
Rippling
Editions & Modules
Essentials
$120 + $4 per eligible employee
per month
Complete
$150 + $6 per eligible employee
per month
Concierge
$180 + $8 per eligible employee
per month
Recommended
$8.00
starting price per user, per month
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Human Interest
Rippling
Free Trial
No
No
Free/Freemium Version
No
No
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
Yes
Entry-level Setup Fee
$499 one-time fee
No setup fee
Additional Details
Human Interest offers three products, for a choice of 401(k) or 403(b) that fits an organization's needs. All plans offer an all-in-one, no touch 401(k) to make it easy for employers to run and for employees to save. All plans have a setup fee of $499.
*Human Interest's average employee expense is 0.57%, compared to a 1.64% average for small 401(k) plans. Source: 401(k) Averages Book, 18th Edition.
For additional pricing details visit the Rippling pricing page.
My payroll and 401(k) plan were formerly with SunTrust (now Truist). I believe they outsourced and white labeled the plan administration. It was inexpensive and a great value. The integration was effective. The user interface was nowhere near as nice as Human Interest, both …
Answered this in the previous question! Ui UX is better at the guideline, and the guideline does a better job of educating customers on how to use their product for basic financial wealth and retirement planning education. Human interest does better with their customer …
We did not evaluate many other options because Human Interest was so good. Guideline seems similar though, but Human Interest has a more intuitive portal.
I've used Alight in the past for benefits management, onboarding, and health initiatives. It's not the worst thing in the world, but I found the UI cumbersome and the functionality that mattered to be hidden under layers of menus. Also, I ended up needing about 3 logins just to …