In a world where remote work, localization and flexibility dominate the conversation, it’s easy to assume that traditional long-term assignments (LTAs) are losing relevance. Yet at AIRINC, we continue to see the opposite. The long-term assignment remains one of the most strategic tools in global mobility but how it’s designed, delivered, and justified is evolving.
AIRINC has been advising mobility leaders for years, and the same question keeps resurfacing: How do we balance cost with experience, structure with flexibility, and business needs with talent goals? These topics are explored in AIRINC’s newly launched 2025 Long-Term Assignment Survey. Before we look ahead, it’s worth revisiting what makes LTAs such a powerful model and how they must evolve to stay relevant.
A long-term assignment is a relocation lasting one to five years, typically involving a full package of benefits — housing, cost-of-living allowances, tax support, education, and repatriation planning. It’s the most comprehensive form of international mobility and, when executed well, it supports both company strategy and employee development.
For many organizations, LTAs seed leadership pipelines, transfer critical skills, and build global capability. Despite new models like permanent transfers or commuter arrangements, LTAs still play a crucial role in deploying talent where it’s needed most.
At AIRINC, we see that LTAs remain a benchmark for mobility sophistication. They test every element of a program — from policy design to operational excellence — and the data we collect shows they’re often the truest measure of how effective a company’s mobility strategy really is. Companies may experiment with leaner or more localized approaches, but long-term assignments endure because they deliver something no short-term or virtual model can: deep, sustained impact.
LTAs build global leaders. There’s no substitute for immersing key talent in another market for several years. They enable strategic business expansion. Whether it’s opening a new office, transferring knowledge, or stabilizing a new region, LTAs are how companies operationalize their strategy. They shape culture. Employees who return from LTAs bring back perspective, resilience, and networks that strengthen their organizations.
We’re hearing clients ask how to make these assignments more sustainable not just financially, but environmentally and personally. The future of LTAs will be defined by how well companies respond to those pressures.
The traditional “one-size-fits-all” approach is fading. Organizations are increasingly segmenting their policies to reflect different talent populations and purposes. For example:
We see clients adopting modular policy frameworks that let them adjust benefits by level or circumstance. This flexibility supports equity, manages cost, and gives the mobility function more strategic control.
Technology and analytics are also reshaping program management. Data-driven insights — like those we deliver at AIRINC — allow companies to benchmark against peers and identify where they may be over- or under-investing in their LTA programs.
The global mobility environment is more complex than ever. Inflation, housing volatility, and tax shifts have put renewed focus on cost management. At the same time, employees expect more personalization and transparency.
Leading companies are asking sharper questions to navigate this complexity:
There’s no universal answer, but there is a shared opportunity: to re-examine LTAs through the lens of today’s realities. AIRINC’s latest survey aims to capture the changes to LTAs in the current global mobility landscape.
The 2025 Long-Term Assignment Survey is now open, and we’re inviting organizations worldwide to participate. This is your chance to help define how long-term assignments are evolving — from compensation strategies to policy segmentation.
Including:
Participate in AIRINC’s 2025 Long-Term Assignment Survey today and help shape the future of global mobility.