
Post: HRIS Encryption: Comparing 8 Security Features That Determine Backup Integrity
HRIS backup encryption is not a binary — either you have it or you don’t. The actual security of your HR data backups depends on eight specific architectural features, and most HR teams have evaluated none of them.
Key Takeaways
- AES-256 encryption is the baseline, not the differentiator — the 7 features below it determine real security
- Key management architecture is the most underweighted factor in HRIS backup security evaluations
- Make.com OpsMap™ documents your backup data flows before encryption architecture decisions are made
- Automated backup verification testing catches encryption failures before a recovery event
- GDPR and HIPAA have specific encryption requirements — non-compliance creates regulatory exposure beyond security risk
Why Standard HRIS Encryption Claims Are Insufficient
Every HRIS vendor claims AES-256 encryption. This claim is technically accurate and practically insufficient. AES-256 describes the encryption algorithm applied to data. It says nothing about how encryption keys are managed, whether backups are tested, how encryption applies to data in transit vs. at rest, or whether your organization has any control over the key lifecycle.
HR data governance starts with understanding where your data actually goes — and the backup pipeline is often the most overlooked data flow in a governance audit. OpsMap™ documents every backup touchpoint before security architecture decisions are made.
Feature Comparison Table: 8 HRIS Backup Encryption Capabilities
| Feature | What It Means | Why It Matters | Vendor Transparency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Encryption algorithm (AES-256) | Data encrypted using 256-bit Advanced Encryption Standard | Baseline requirement; non-negotiable | Universally disclosed |
| Key management model | Who holds encryption keys: vendor, customer, or shared | Determines if vendor access to your data is possible | Rarely disclosed without direct inquiry |
| Customer-managed keys (CMK) | Organization controls the encryption keys, not the vendor | Required for certain HIPAA and GDPR configurations | Available in enterprise tiers only for most vendors |
| Encryption in transit | TLS 1.2+ encryption for all data movement | Protects backup data during transfer to offsite storage | Generally disclosed |
| Zero-knowledge architecture | Vendor cannot decrypt your data even with technical access | Strongest protection against vendor-side breach | Rare; requires explicit architectural verification |
| Key rotation policy | Frequency of automatic encryption key changes | Limits exposure window if a key is compromised | Inconsistently disclosed |
| Backup integrity verification | Automated testing that backups can actually be decrypted and restored | Without this, encryption may be intact but backups may be corrupted | Rarely included in standard tiers |
| Audit log of key access events | Record of every instance where encryption keys were accessed or used | Required for regulatory compliance and forensic investigation | Available in enterprise tiers; rarely disclosed proactively |
Choose This Feature Set If / Consider Alternatives If
Choose customer-managed keys (CMK) if your organization processes health-related HR data (HIPAA applicability), if you operate in a jurisdiction where data sovereignty requires encryption key residency, or if your security team has an explicit requirement that vendor employees cannot access HR data under any circumstances. CMK adds operational complexity — key loss means permanent data loss — but it is the appropriate architecture for high-sensitivity HR environments.
Consider vendor-managed keys if your primary concern is operational resilience rather than vendor access prevention. Vendor-managed keys eliminate the risk of customer-side key loss and are appropriate for organizations without specific regulatory requirements for key custody. The tradeoff: vendor support staff can technically access encrypted data during incident response.
Backup integrity verification is non-negotiable for any organization that treats backup recovery as a real business continuity mechanism. Encryption without verification testing is an untested assumption. Make.com OpsMap™ automates the scheduling and reporting of backup verification runs so the tests actually happen rather than being deferred indefinitely.
The Regulatory Dimension: What GDPR and HIPAA Actually Require
GDPR Article 32 requires “appropriate technical measures” including encryption — but the regulation delegates specifics to a risk assessment. In practice, GDPR supervisory authorities have taken enforcement action in cases where encryption was technically present but key management controls were inadequate. The relevant test is whether the encryption implementation would withstand a breach without enabling unauthorized access to personal data.
HIPAA requires encryption for PHI at rest and in transit, with documented rationale if encryption is not implemented (an “addressable” standard). For HR data that includes health information — FMLA records, disability accommodations, benefits enrollment — HIPAA encryption requirements apply to the HRIS backup infrastructure.
Expert Take
I ask every HRIS vendor one question about encryption that they never answer proactively: “Can your support staff decrypt my data?” The answer reveals the key management architecture better than any technical documentation. If the answer is yes under any circumstances, you have vendor-managed keys. If the answer is no — and they can prove it architecturally — you have customer-managed or zero-knowledge architecture. Most vendors have vendor-managed keys. That is an acceptable risk for many organizations. The problem is when HR teams assume they have stronger protection than they do because the vendor mentioned AES-256 in a sales deck.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between encryption at rest and encryption in transit for HRIS backups?
Encryption at rest protects data stored on disk — the backup files themselves. Encryption in transit protects data as it moves between systems — from the HRIS production environment to the backup storage location. Both are required for comprehensive backup security. Most vendors implement both, but transit encryption specifications (TLS version, cipher suite) are worth verifying explicitly.
Do automated backup integrity tests require downtime?
No. Modern backup integrity verification uses a separate test restoration environment that runs verification against a copy of the backup without affecting the production system. Make.com workflows schedule these tests during off-peak hours and deliver results to your security operations team automatically. No production downtime required.

