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Domestic Partner Benefits

Employers compensate employees through more than just wages and salary by providing benefits such as health insurance and dental care. The traditional benefits structure includes an employee’s opposite-sex spouse and children. An ever-growing number of employers, including the majority of Fortune 500 companies, further extend these benefits to GLBT employees and their families by including an employee's same-sex partner and the partner's children.

Domestic partners are two individuals who are in a long-term committed relationship and are responsible for each other's financial and emotional well-being. Employers can create their own definitions of "domestic partner" for the purposes of benefits eligibility, although they increasingly allow government-based recognition of same-sex relationships to satisfy their requirements. Typically, employers require that the partners are emotionally and financially interdependent, do not have a different domestic partner or spouse, have reached the age of consent and are not related.

History of Partner Benefits

In growing numbers, both public and private employers across the country recognize partner benefits as an inexpensive option to attract and retain the best employees and to promote fairness and equality in the workplace.

  • In 1982, the Village Voice, a weekly New York newspaper, became the first employer to offer domestic partner benefits to its employees’ same-sex partners. 
  • By 1990, nearly two dozen U.S. employers offered "spousal equivalent" benefits to their employees’ same-sex partners.
  • By 2006, a majority of the Fortune 500 largest U.S. corporations provide health insurance for domestic partners of employees.

Partner benefits and the law

No laws prohibit a private-sector employer from offering partner health benefits, but federal and state laws do affect certain other benefits and the taxation of health and retirement benefits. Laws such as the federal Defense of Marriage Act of 1996 and constitutional amendments at the state level have been interpreted to prohibit partner benefits for public employees. Various federal and state laws affect the taxation of health insurance benefits, including Flexible Spending Accounts, Health Reimbursement Accounts or Health Savings Accounts, as well as family and medical leave and Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA) benefits continuation.

Types of benefits & Spousal equivalency

Employers should evaluate their entire employee benefits packages for consistent treatment of partners as compared to spouses. In particular, employers should examine the following benefits, all of which can be extended to same-sex partners:

  • Health benefits (medical, dental, vision, dependent coverage and COBRA benefits continuation)
  • Other benefits (FMLA, bereavement leave, relocation/travel assistance, education and tuition assistance, adoption assistance, credit union membership, disability and life insurance, and employee discounts)
  • Retirement benefits (retiree healthcare, pension plans and 401k's)
  • Inclusion of partners in business events