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Zoom is scaling back paid parental leave, while Deloitte is trimming PTO and other offers for select workers.
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Many employers have reduced perks like gym discounts to rein in costs.
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Once a few large employers take action, “it legitimizes that action for everyone else,” said Google’s former human resources chief.
Cuts to workplace allowances came first. Paid time may be another.
In the latest sign that employers are shifting their power, at least two high-profile names are reducing highly popular benefit differentials. Zoom has reduced the number of weeks of paid parental leave this year, while Deloitte plans to do the same — and more — for select groups of workers starting in January.
The changes could be an early sign of a broader shift: In a tight labor market, even high-value benefits could be on the chopping block. Workers have fewer options for job-hopping, and once a few marquee employers make bold moves, others may be willing to follow.
“It legitimizes that action for everyone else,” said Laszlo Buck, a former human resources chief at Google who mentors startup founders.
For example, he said, with the adoption of DEI policies in recent years and the rollback and return-to-office push.
While Zoom and Deloitte may be outliers today, “they can become precedent-setters,” said Bobby Thomson, professor of applied behavioral sciences at Pepperdine Graziadio Business School.
At Zoom, birth parents now get 18 weeks of paid parental leave, down from 22 to 24, and non-birth parents get 10 weeks, down from 16, a spokesperson for the video-conferencing company confirmed to Business Insider.
Deloitte’s reduced parental leave benefits will primarily affect those working in support roles such as administrative services, information technology, and finance. The Big Four consulting firm also plans to roll back or cut annual PTO, pension plans, and IVF funding for some of those people, Business Insider recently reported.
The changes are notable given that paid parental leave, vacation time, and disability leave are among the most valued workplace benefits, according to a 2026 MetLife survey of 2,550 full-time U.S. workers.
While many employers do not offer any paid parental leave, more than three-quarters of respondents cited paid leave as a “must” in general.
Cuts to paid time off can be especially challenging for workers with caregiving responsibilities, Thomason said.
Zoom declined to comment. A Deloitte spokesperson previously told Business Insider that its U.S. business is updating its talent mix to better reflect the diverse skills of employees and the work they do for clients.