An Employee Assistance Program is one of the most underutilized benefits most companies offer — not because employees don't need it, but because they don't trust it. A poorly written EAP policy, or no policy at all, leaves employees uncertain about what the program covers, who can see their information, and whether using it will mark them as a problem. This page gives you a complete, editable Employee Assistance Program policy template that answers those questions clearly and creates the foundation for an EAP that employees actually use. A well-documented EAP policy also integrates the program into your broader HR framework — connecting it to substance abuse, mental health, performance management, and disciplinary policies in a coherent way.
An Employee Assistance Program (EAP) policy formally defines the EAP benefit — what services it provides, who is eligible, how to access it, and what confidentiality protections apply. It also establishes the relationship between the EAP and other HR processes, including whether EAP referral is a component of disciplinary or performance management procedures.
Without a documented EAP policy, programs often fail for a predictable reason: employees assume that using the EAP will flag them to their manager or HR. A manufacturing company offered an EAP for years with minimal utilization. When they surveyed employees, 73% said they didn't use it because they weren't sure it was confidential. After publishing a clear policy with explicit confidentiality protections and holding brief information sessions at each facility, utilization tripled in six months. The policy itself — not the benefit — was the barrier.
An effective EAP policy removes confusion and builds trust by being specific about what the program does and doesn't share. Required sections include:
Employee Assistance Program (EAP) Policy
Effective Date: [DATE]
Approved by: [NAME / TITLE]
Policy Owner: [HR DEPARTMENT / TITLE]
Review Date: [DATE]
Version: [1.0]
Policy Brief and Purpose
[COMPANY NAME] is committed to supporting the health, wellbeing, and productivity of our employees. This Employee Assistance Program policy establishes the standards and procedures governing [COMPANY NAME]'s EAP benefit, including who is eligible, what services are available, how to access the program, and what confidentiality protections apply. The goal is to ensure that employees are aware of and trust the EAP as a confidential, professional resource for navigating personal, family, and workplace challenges.
Scope
This policy applies to all full-time and part-time employees of [COMPANY NAME] [at all locations / at the following locations: SPECIFY]. Household family members of eligible employees are also covered for [the full range of services / specific services as defined in the EAP contract]. [Contractors and temporary workers are / are not] eligible for EAP services under this policy.
Policy Elements
1. Program Description
[COMPANY NAME]'s EAP is administered by [EAP PROVIDER NAME]. The program provides confidential counseling, assessment, short-term treatment, and referral services for a wide range of personal, family, and workplace concerns. The EAP is designed to help employees address challenges before they affect work performance, health, or wellbeing.
2. Services Available
The EAP provides support for:
Each eligible employee receives [X] free counseling sessions per issue [/ per year] with a licensed EAP counselor. If ongoing treatment is recommended beyond EAP sessions, the EAP counselor will coordinate a referral to community resources, and applicable health insurance coverage will apply.
3. Access
The EAP is available [24 hours a day, 7 days a week]. Employees may access the EAP by:
First contact with the EAP does not require a referral from HR or a manager.
4. Confidentiality
The EAP is a confidential benefit. [COMPANY NAME] will not receive information about an employee's reason for contacting the EAP, the nature of issues discussed, or the outcome of EAP counseling sessions.
The only information [COMPANY NAME] may receive is:
EAP confidentiality is governed by applicable federal and state mental health privacy laws. Confidentiality may be overridden only in the following limited circumstances:
Employees considering the EAP should know that their manager and HR department will not know they called, what they discussed, or whether they continued with counseling.
5. Voluntary and Formal Referrals
Voluntary Self-Referral
Employees who contact the EAP on their own initiative — before a performance or conduct concern is raised — are making a voluntary self-referral. All information from voluntary self-referrals is fully confidential. [COMPANY NAME] receives no information about voluntary contacts.
Formal (Management) Referral
In some cases, a manager or HR may recommend that an employee contact the EAP as part of a performance improvement process, disciplinary procedure, or substance abuse policy response. This is called a formal or mandatory referral. In formal referral cases:
6. Integration with Other HR Policies
The EAP integrates with other [COMPANY NAME] policies as follows:
7. Cost
EAP services are provided at no cost to eligible employees for the initial [X] sessions per issue. Costs for services beyond EAP-covered sessions, or for services not included in the EAP contract, are the employee's responsibility and may be covered by applicable health insurance.
8. Program Quality and Evaluation
[COMPANY NAME] reviews aggregate EAP utilization data annually to assess program quality, identify underserved employee populations, and ensure the EAP provider is meeting contractual performance standards. This review involves only de-identified aggregate data. Individual employees' EAP usage is never reviewed by [COMPANY NAME] leadership or HR.
Employee Responsibilities
Manager and HR Responsibilities
Disciplinary Action
[COMPANY NAME] will not take adverse action against any employee solely for using the EAP voluntarily. Adverse action may occur for underlying performance or conduct issues that led to an EAP referral, but EAP participation itself is not grounds for discipline. Managers who breach EAP confidentiality or use EAP information in unauthorized employment decisions are subject to disciplinary action.
Disclaimer
This template is a starting point and does not constitute legal advice. EAP confidentiality protections interact with federal and state mental health privacy laws that vary by jurisdiction. Consult an employment attorney and your EAP provider before finalizing this policy.
Start by reviewing your actual EAP contract to ensure the services and session limits described in this policy exactly match what your provider delivers. Overpromising services in the policy and underdelivering in practice destroys program trust faster than any other factor. For healthcare organizations with clinical staff, add a section on Employee Health resources that distinguishes EAP counseling from occupational health evaluations — these serve different purposes and employees frequently confuse them. For organizations with union-represented employees, confirm that EAP provisions don't conflict with any CBA language on disciplinary procedures or leaves of absence. Small companies contracting with EAP providers for the first time should specifically negotiate for robust crisis support services — this is the service type most likely to make a material difference in employee safety outcomes.
Q: What should an Employee Assistance Program policy include?
A: A complete EAP policy covers program description, eligibility, services available with session limits, access procedures, explicit confidentiality protections, the distinction between voluntary and formal referrals, integration with other HR policies, cost to employees, and the program evaluation process. It must name the EAP provider and access information.
Q: Is an Employee Assistance Program legally required?
A: No federal law requires employers to offer an EAP. However, the ADA's requirement to provide reasonable accommodations for mental health and substance use disorders — and the DOT's requirement for Substance Abuse Professional evaluation and return-to-duty process for regulated employees — make an EAP a practical necessity rather than a luxury for most mid-size and larger employers.
Q: How often should an EAP policy be updated?
A: Review it annually, and immediately when the EAP provider changes, services are added or removed, or session limits are modified under the contract. Update the integration provisions whenever connected policies — drug and alcohol, disciplinary, FMLA — are materially revised.
Q: What happens if an employee violates the EAP confidentiality expectation?
A: EAP confidentiality is primarily a provider obligation, not an employee obligation. If a manager or HR representative uses EAP information in an unauthorized employment decision, that individual is subject to disciplinary action. If the EAP provider breaches confidentiality without legal justification, the organization should escalate the complaint through the EAP contract's dispute resolution process.
Q: How do you communicate the EAP to employees?
A: Cover it in new hire onboarding with the specific phone number and portal URL. Include it in the annual benefits summary. Post access information in break rooms and common areas. Train managers to mention it proactively during one-on-ones when employees appear to be struggling — not only during formal disciplinary situations.
Q: Can an EAP policy be customized per department?
A: The core policy should be consistent. For departments with unique stressors — emergency services, clinical care, sales — you may want department-specific communication materials highlighting the EAP resources most relevant to those teams. The formal referral procedure should be consistent across all departments.
Q: What is the difference between a voluntary referral and a formal referral?
A: A voluntary referral is when an employee contacts the EAP on their own initiative. All information is fully confidential. A formal referral is when a manager or HR initiates the referral as part of a performance or disciplinary process. In a formal referral, the employee's consent allows the EAP to confirm participation — but not the content of sessions — to HR. The distinction matters enormously for confidentiality and trust.
Q: Does EAP participation protect an employee from being fired?
A: No. EAP participation does not stay disciplinary proceedings or create an obligation to keep an employee employed. It is one factor that may be considered in the overall process, and it demonstrates the employer's good faith in offering support. Employees should understand that participating in the EAP does not immunize them against termination for the conduct or performance issues that led to the referral.