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Work anniversary gifts: the complete guide for 2026

A practical guide to work anniversary and employee anniversary gifts: what makes them land, gifts by year, service awards, gifting remote teams, automating the program, and the maths that wins over finance.

Niels VandecasteeleNiels Vandecasteele
7 min read
Work anniversary gifts: the complete guide for 2026

Work anniversary gifts, also called employee anniversary gifts, recognise the time an employee has given your company. The ones that land are planned ahead, personal, and consistent year over year, not scrambled together at the last minute. Scale them to your company's pace, ship them to people wherever they work, automate the send, and the cost is a rounding error next to what it takes to replace someone.

A premium branded gift box prepared by Sunday

What a work anniversary gift is for

A work anniversary gift, sometimes called an employee anniversary gift or a service award, marks a milestone: one year, five, ten, twenty. It is a small, visible signal that the company noticed, and that the time someone has put in is worth something. Done right, it feeds pride and belonging. Done as an afterthought, it does the opposite.

Not every company has to run an anniversary program. But if recognition is part of your culture, it deserves to be done properly. Half-hearted recognition reads as worse than none at all.

  • 66% of employees would leave a job if they did not feel appreciated (Nectar, 2025).
  • ~48% more likely to report high retention with a recognition program (Terryberry, 2026).
  • 30–200%+ of salary is the typical cost to replace one employee (G&A Partners).

What most companies get wrong

The most common failure is simple: it is last-minute. The date arrives, nobody planned for it, and someone grabs whatever is in the cupboard. We have heard of anniversary gifts that were literally the spare tote bags left in a closet, or a handful of pens. That is not recognition. It tells the person exactly how much thought went in, which is none.

The fix is not a bigger budget. It is planning. Forecast how many people will hit a milestone over the next year. Prepare the boxes ahead of time. Decide what each milestone gets before the date, not on the day.

The closet-leftovers test. If your anniversary gift is whatever happens to be left in the supply closet, do not send it. Better to do nothing, or run a small, considered gift well, than to hand someone proof that you forgot. Give a bit less, but give better.

A premium branded gift box prepared by Sunday

A considered milestone box beats a last-minute gift pulled from the supply closet.

Work anniversary gifts by year

There is no single right ladder. The right one matches the pace of your company. A traditional company, where people stay for decades, fits the classic rhythm: recognise 1, 5, 10 and 20 years, with the gift growing as tenure grows. A fast-moving tech company, where two years is already long, can recognise every single year, and some start with a first gift the moment someone completes onboarding.

Company typeMilestones that fitFeel
Traditional, long tenure1, 5, 10, 20 yearsGifts escalate with years of service
Fast-moving / techEvery year, plus onboarding completeFrequent, lighter, always on time
Distributed / globalSame ladder, automated and shipped to homeConsistent regardless of location

5 year work anniversary gift

Five years is a real milestone in most companies, so the gift should feel like a step up from the earlier years. This is the moment for something premium and branded that the person keeps and uses, paired with a personal note. The note is what turns a product into recognition. Branded apparel and accessories work well here: you can design a gift like custom socks and preview it with our free sock mockup generator. For the full menu of options, see our guide to the best products for work anniversary gifts.

10 year work anniversary gift

Ten years deserves more than a bigger version of the five-year gift. Make it feel distinct: a premium item, a small selection to choose from, or a piece tied to a recognition story your company tells.

Service award gift ideas

The strongest service award programs have a story that builds over time. One team we know assigned an animal to each tenure band and gave an outfit to match. As people stacked up years, they moved up the animals, and it became a status symbol to be the mammoth, the dinosaur, or the rhino. Same idea, escalating reward, a narrative people actually wanted to climb. That is what a great program looks like: consistent, branded, and built to grow with the years rather than reset every time.

A branded recognition box ready to ship

Ship to the home, confirm the address, include a personal note. Automation handles the rest.

Gifts for remote employees

Remote and distributed teams are where anniversary programs quietly break. People get forgotten. In a large org, whole teams can get less attention than others simply because they are not in the room. The gift is also harder to land, because the company cannot just hand it over at a desk.

Two things solve most of it. Ship to the home address, so distance is not a barrier. And use a redeem page so the employee confirms or chooses their own address and picks their size for any sized item. HR data goes stale the moment someone moves, and a wrong address means a failed delivery and wasted shipping that nobody wants to pay for. Letting the person confirm details removes that risk and gives them a little agency in the moment.

How to automate the program

For distributed teams, automation is the whole answer. Set the anniversaries up in your HRIS, define which gift each tenure band receives, and let the send fire automatically through the platform. No spreadsheet, no monthly scramble, nobody forgotten. For the step-by-step setup, read how to automate work anniversary gifts.

The worry people raise is that automation feels impersonal. In practice it does the opposite of the real failure. The real failure is being forgotten. An automated gift with a personal note, that the person can redeem and size themselves, lands as personal precisely because it actually arrives, on time, every time.

  • Trigger anniversaries from the HRIS so the data drives the program.
  • Map each tenure band to a defined gift in advance.
  • Send a redeem link so people confirm address and size.
  • Include a personal note every time.

Branded merchandise people actually want to wear and use

Recognition people actually want. Brands like Deel build branded merch into their employee programs.

How to measure it

Be honest about this. Appreciation is a soft KPI. You cannot cleanly prove that someone stayed because of an anniversary gift. It is part of culture and pride, and those resist neat attribution.

What you can track tells you plenty. Do people like the items. How many photos come back. How often gifts get shared on social, and the views and goodwill that generates. Whether people actually wear the merch to the office. Sunday's platform is built to measure the impact of merchandise, so you can see engagement rather than guess at it. Use a few of these signals to show traction, and leave it there.

The maths that wins finance

When HR or finance pushes back, the argument is not sentiment, it is arithmetic. A 50 to 100 euro gift for someone hitting one or five years is an incredibly small share of that person's total wage cost. It is a rounding error next to the cost of replacing them, which runs from a third of salary to well over a full year for senior roles. Plenty of line items cost far more and do far less for morale. So do not over-engineer the business case. Show a few KPIs that prove traction, point to the cost of the alternative, and let the numbers speak.

How Sunday delivers

Sunday is merch infrastructure, not a supplier. We design the gifts in your brand, hold stock, and ship to people in 200+ countries, with the anniversary program automated against your HRIS and a redeem page handling address and size. Merch, in your brand, live in 30 seconds. It is the same engine that runs welcome kits and recognition boxes for brands like Deel, HubSpot and Personio. Explore the catalog or see how it works.

Keep reading: the work anniversary series

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Frequently asked questions

What are the best work anniversary gifts?
Premium, branded items people keep and use, sent with a personal note. Scale the gift to the milestone, and run it as a consistent program rather than a one-off. The worst gift is whatever was left in the supply closet.
Which work anniversaries should we celebrate?
It depends on your pace. Traditional companies do 1, 5, 10 and 20 years. Fast-moving companies can recognise every year, sometimes starting at onboarding completion. Pick the milestones that mean something in your culture and stay consistent.
What is a good 5 year work anniversary gift?
Something that feels like a step up: a premium branded item or a considered box rather than a single small piece, paired with a personal note.
How do you give anniversary gifts to remote employees?
Ship to the home address and use a redeem page so the employee confirms their address and picks their size. That avoids failed deliveries from stale HR data and gives the person agency in the moment.
Does automating anniversary gifts make them impersonal?
No. The real failure is forgetting people. An automated gift with a personal note that the recipient redeems and sizes themselves lands as personal because it actually arrives, on time, every time.
How do you measure a work anniversary program?
Appreciation is a soft KPI. Track whether people like and wear the items, how many photos come back, and social shares and views. Use a few signals to show traction rather than building a heavy business case.
Are work anniversary gifts worth the cost?
Yes. A 50 to 100 euro gift is a tiny fraction of someone's wage cost and far less than replacing them, which can cost from a third of salary to more than a full year. It is cheap insurance for morale and retention.

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