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Shortfall in support from employers to grieving employees

Published Jan 28, 2026

A new report by Empathy indicates a significant lack of employer support to employees when they are grieving. The report highlighted that as the UK has an ageing population there are now more people caring for ageing parents whilst simultaneously supporting their immediate families.

The consequence is that an increasing proportion of UK employees are carrying a significant burden when a loved one dies. This cohort of employees have to balance months of administrative, legal, financial and emotional strain from a bereavement with attempting to stay productive at work.

Empathy’s findings show employers struggle to keep pace with the increase in bereavement related pressures. The report shows a gap between what employees need and what their employer provides. This misalignment is undermining employee wellbeing, productivity, and retention.

Employer risks

Employees now expect meaningful support from their employers following a bereavement.

The Empathy data shows that 48% of employees that have experienced a loss would leave their job if the support from their employer was inadequate. This figure is highest amongst younger generations with 57% of Millennials and 74% of Gen Z saying they would leave if they deemed the support inadequate.

The findings show that 92% of employee placed a high value on bereavement related employee benefits.

23% of employees said the level of bereavement related benefits would influence their decision when considering a potential new employer. 100% of Gen Z employees placed a high value on bereavement-related employee benefits. The data indicates the wellbeing expectations younger workers now expect from their employers.

The breakdown of the most valuable benefits when considering an employer was:

  • 23% bereavement support

  • 17% parental leave

  • 11% Employee Assistance Programme (EAP) and counselling services

  • 5% gym membership and fitness benefits

Impact and cost to employers of inadequate bereavement support

The data shows the significant and long-lasting impact of bereavement on employees.

In the first 12 months after a bereavement, 30% of employees still regularly struggle to concentrate at work. Furthermore, 27% of employees acknowledged that they were less productive.

The most impacted generational group are millennials. 37% regularly struggled to concentrate and 35% had lower productivity. Furthermore 16% of the cohort were frequently missing work in the months after losing a loved one.

The findings indicate that a Bereavement Policy alone is insufficient and employers need to offer more to grieving employees.

Employer options might include

  • Holding Manager and Employee 121s to identify the support the employee needs

  • Giving access to an EAP (employee assistance programme)

  • Paying for counselling sessions (or paying for time off to attend appointments)

  • Paying for access to financial advice (or paying for time off to attend appointments)

  • Temporarily adjusting workings hours or days

The research shows a current need for employers to be ready to step in with bereavement support that is both practical and people focused.

Sourced by: Gavin Parrott