401k Fiduciary Responsibility Checklist (Roles, Calendar, Investments Oversight)

A 401k fiduciary checklist includes acting solely in participants’ best interests under ERISA, following plan documents, documenting decisions, prudently selecting and monitoring investments, benchmarking plan fees, ensuring proper diversification, reviewing service providers, and maintaining an Investment Policy Statement (IPS) to support ongoing compliance and governance.
KEY
POINTS
  • Fiduciaries must always act in participants’ best interests.

  • Regular investment reviews help protect retirement savings.

  • Monitoring plan fees can improve participant outcomes.

  • Ongoing ERISA compliance helps avoid costly penalties.

  • Clear participant disclosures build transparency and trust.

  • Documented fiduciary decisions strengthen legal protection.

Managing a 401(k) plan means taking on legal responsibilities that go beyond routine administration.

The people responsible for overseeing the plan are expected to act in participants’ best interests and meet the fiduciary standards set by federal law.

A fiduciary responsibility checklist provides a practical way to review those obligations, keep key tasks on track, and support ongoing plan compliance.

Who Is a 401(k) Plan Fiduciary?

A 401(k) fiduciary is any person who, under the plan, exercises discretionary control over the plan

  • Management
  • Administration
  • Investments, or
  • Who gives investment advice for a fee.

Even if not officially designated, plan officials who make or implement discretionary decisions can incur fiduciary status.

Attorneys, accountants, and actuaries escape the designation when they’re acting solely in their professional, non-discretionary roles, giving legal advice, filing tax returns, and calculating actuarial projections.

But the moment any of them start exercising discretion over plan operations or assets, they are designated as a fiduciary.

Core Fiduciary Duties Under ERISA

Once a person is a fiduciary, ERISA imposes four fundamental duties.

1. Act solely in the interest of participants and beneficiaries

Fiduciaries must avoid conflicts of interest and self-dealing and must act prudently to maximize plan value for participants.

So, they must put participants’ interests first before anything.

2. Discharge duties with care, skill, prudence, and diligence

Fiduciaries must also make informed decisions through appropriate investigation and deliberation, not simply achieve good outcomes.

They should document decisions and the rationale behind them.

Courts will examine whether the fiduciary conducted a

  • Thorough review
  • Obtained advice when needed
  • Considered alternatives, and
  • Acted consistently with plan objectives.

3. Diversify plan investments

Plan assets should generally be spread across asset classes, industries, and securities so that a downturn in one area does not decimate the plan.

ERISA recognizes exceptions and provides safe harbors. So, fiduciaries avoid liability for investment losses when participants direct their own accounts.

If the plan does allow participant self-direction, fiduciaries still must offer a broad range of well-managed options and must prudently select and monitor those options.

4. Follow the plan documents and instruments

The written plan document and trust agreement govern plan operations, so fiduciaries must administer the plan according to those terms.

Let’s assume the plan document names an administrator or committee as fiduciary; that procedure must be followed.

However, fiduciaries cannot use the plan to violate ERISA or other law. Any discrepancy between the plan document and ERISA rules must be resolved in favor of ERISA.

Fiduciary Roles & Responsibilities Checklist

The following checklist breaks down fiduciary responsibilities by role.

Plan-specific items vary; small plans carry fewer compliance burdens, while large plans with more than 100 participants require independent audits and additional reporting.

Table 1. Fiduciary Roles and Responsibilities

Fiduciary Role Core Responsibilities Key Deliverables
Plan Sponsor / Committee
  • Oversee overall plan governance and fiduciary compliance.
  • Maintain plan documents, trust agreement, SPD, and SMMs.
  • Appoint and monitor fiduciaries and service providers.
  • Review investments, fees, and plan operations.
  • Ensure timely contributions, annual compliance testing, and regulatory filings.
  • Monitor plan expenses and implement corrective actions when necessary.
  • Plan Document & Trust Agreement
  • Summary Plan Description (SPD) & Summary of Material Modifications (SMM)
  • Committee Charter & Meeting Minutes
  • Investment Policy Statement (IPS)
  • Service Provider Evaluations / RFPs
  • Form 5500 Approval & Annual Reports
  • Fee Benchmarking Reports
Named Fiduciary
  • Exercise fiduciary authority over plan administration.
  • Execute plan amendments and service-provider contracts.
  • Oversee delegated fiduciaries and investment managers.
  • Review fee disclosures and monitor compliance with ERISA requirements.
  • Implement fiduciary aspects of plan changes or termination.
  • Executed Service Contracts
  • Plan Amendments
  • Delegation Policies
  • Investment Manager Agreements
  • Fee Disclosure Reviews
  • Oversight Documentation
Investment Fiduciary
  • Develop and maintain the Investment Policy Statement (IPS).
  • Select, monitor, and replace investment options using a prudent process.
  • Benchmark investment performance and fees.
  • Monitor QDIA/default investments and participant-directed options.
  • Document investment decisions and due diligence.
  • Investment Policy Statement (IPS)
  • Investment Review Reports
  • Performance & Benchmark Analyses
  • Due Diligence Files
  • Investment Committee Minutes
Recordkeeper / Third-Party Administrator (TPA)
  • Maintain participant records and process contributions.
  • Perform annual compliance testing.
  • Support Form 5500 preparation and plan audits.
  • Administer loans, withdrawals, distributions, and QDROs.
  • Deliver required participant disclosures and assist with compliance corrections.
  • Participant Records & Statements
  • Compliance Testing Reports
  • Form 5500 Support Files
  • Distribution & Loan Records
  • Participant Notices
  • Correction Documentation

While fiduciary responsibilities define who is accountable for specific aspects of plan governance, effective compliance also depends on when those responsibilities are performed.

The following calendar provides a high-level overview of the key compliance activities typically performed throughout the plan year.

Table 2. Annual Fiduciary Compliance Calendar

When Key Activities
Per Payroll
  • Deposit employee and employer contributions.
  • Reconcile payroll and contribution records.
Quarterly
  • Hold fiduciary committee meetings.
  • Review investment performance and fees.
  • Review participant activity and recordkeeper reports.
  • Issue participant account statements.
Annually
  • Perform compliance testing.
  • Review the Investment Policy Statement (IPS).
  • Benchmark plan fees and services.
  • Review ERISA fidelity bond coverage.
  • File Form 5500 and complete the plan audit (if required).
  • Distribute required participant notices and the Summary Annual Report (SAR), if applicable.
Every 3–5 Years
  • Conduct a competitive RFP/RFQ for key service providers.
  • Benchmark provider fees and services.
As Needed
  • Adopt plan amendments and update the SPD/SMM.
  • Replace investment options.
  • Correct operational or compliance failures.
  • Renew contracts and respond to regulatory changes.

Compliance Calendar (Key deadlines for a calendar-year plan)

January:    Issue Form 1099-R to distributees; begin ADP/ACP test preparation
February:   Continue testing; identify any preliminary failures
March 15:   ADP/ACP corrective distributions deadline (excess deferrals)
April:      Q1 participant statements due; review prior year 5500 status
May–June:   Independent audit fieldwork (large plans)
July:       Quarterly participant statements; review contribution deposits
July 31:    Form 5500 due (calendar-year plans; extend to October 15 if needed)
August:     Begin open enrollment planning; prepare safe harbor notice for following year
September:  SAR distribution deadline (9 months after year-end)
October 15: Form 5500 extended due date; Form 8955-SSA due
October–November: Safe harbor notice distribution (30–90 days before year-end)
November–December: Top-heavy determination; year-end deferral changes; plan amendments
December 31: Last day for certain corrections; final 5500 data reconciliation

The investment fiduciary, whether an internal investment committee, an external investment consultant, or an ERISA investment manager, carries responsibility for

  • Selecting
  • Monitoring, and
  • When necessary, replacing the plan’s investment options.

Table 3: Investment Fiduciary Responsibilities (Selection, Monitoring & Governance)

Area Core Responsibilities Key Deliverables / Documentation
Investment Policy Statement (IPS)
  • Draft, maintain, and periodically update the IPS.
  • Define investment objectives, risk tolerance, and strategy (asset allocation, glide paths, etc.).
  • Establish criteria for selecting, monitoring, and replacing investments.
  • Identify fiduciaries and establish review schedules.
  • Ensure investments remain aligned with plan objectives and participant needs.
  • Written Investment Policy Statement (IPS)
  • IPS review and amendment history
  • Investment objectives and guidelines
  • Fiduciary roles and responsibilities outline
Manager & Fund Selection
  • Conduct structured selection process (RFP/RFQ).
  • Evaluate funds based on strategy, performance, fees, and operations.
  • Compare options using scorecards and benchmarks.
  • Document rationale for selections and changes.
  • Ensure consistency with IPS requirements.
  • RFP/RFQ documentation
  • Evaluation scorecards
  • Selection reports and summaries
  • Committee meeting minutes documenting decisions
Due Diligence & Benchmarking
  • Collect fund prospectuses, performance history, and peer data.
  • Compare returns, risk metrics, and benchmarks.
  • Evaluate consistency with investment style and objectives.
  • Assess fees relative to peers and market standards.
  • Identify red flags such as style drift or underperformance.
  • Due diligence files
  • Benchmark comparison reports
  • Performance and risk analysis reports
  • Peer group comparison data
Ongoing Monitoring
  • Review investment performance at least quarterly.
  • Track results versus benchmarks and peer medians.
  • Monitor manager, strategy, and fee changes.
  • Assess fund stability and operational risks.
  • Maintain continuous oversight documentation.
  • Quarterly investment review reports
  • Performance dashboards
  • Monitoring reports and alerts
  • Committee meeting minutes
Rebalancing
  • Rebalance portfolios to maintain target allocations.
  • Apply threshold- or time-based rebalancing rules.
  • Avoid market timing and excessive trading.
  • Ensure alignment with IPS allocation strategy.
  • Rebalancing reports
  • Transaction records
  • Allocation drift analysis
  • IPS compliance documentation
Replacement Triggers
  • Define objective criteria for replacing funds.
  • Evaluate underperformance or benchmark deviation.
  • Review expense increases or strategy changes.
  • Approve replacements through the committee process.
  • Document rationale for all changes.
  • Fund replacement criteria document
  • Performance exception reports
  • Committee minutes approving changes
  • Transition plans and records
Plan Defaults & Participant-Directed Investments (QDIA / 404(c))
  • Offer at least three diversified core investment options.
  • Select and monitor the Qualified Default Investment Alternative (QDIA).
  • Provide required participant notices.
  • Ensure compliance with ERISA 404(c).
  • Review default investment performance regularly.
  • QDIA designation records
  • Participant notice documentation
  • Investment lineup compliance review
  • 404(c) compliance evidence
Documentation & Governance
  • Maintain complete records of all investment decisions.
  • Document rationale for selections, monitoring, and changes.
  • Preserve committee meeting minutes and reports.
  • Demonstrate a prudent investment process over time.
  • Maintain audit-ready recordkeeping.
  • Committee meeting minutes
  • Investment decision logs
  • Historical performance archives
  • Due diligence and governance files

Table 4: Recordkeeper / Third-Party Administrator (TPA) Responsibilities

Area Core Responsibilities Key Deliverables
Recordkeeping & Data
  • Maintain participant records (balances, enrollments, loans).
  • Track contributions and investment activity.
  • Update participant account information.
  • Participant database.
  • Quarterly statements.
  • Transaction records.
Contribution Processing
  • Process payroll deferrals and employer contributions.
  • Allocate contributions to participant accounts.
  • Monitor deposit timing compliance.
  • Contribution reports.
  • Payroll reconciliation files.
Compliance Testing (TPA Function)
  • Perform annual nondiscrimination testing (ADP/ACP, 410(b), Top Heavy).
  • Calculate corrections for failed tests.
  • Support plan qualification requirements.
  • Testing reports.
  • Correction calculations.
  • Compliance worksheets.
Form 5500 & Reporting Support
  • Prepare data for Form 5500 filing.
  • Coordinate audit support (if required).
  • Assist with regulatory reporting.
  • Form 5500 package.
  • Audit support files.
Distributions & Transactions
  • Process loans, withdrawals, QDROs, and hardship requests.
  • Ensure compliance with plan rules and IRS limits.
  • Distribution records.
  • Loan schedules.
  • QDRO files.
Participant Notices
  • Deliver required disclosures (SPD, SMM, SAR, notices).
  • Track communication delivery.
  • Notice logs.
  • Disclosure records.
Fees & Billing
  • Invoice plan sponsor for services.
  • Allocate recordkeeping fees (if applicable).
  • Provide billing transparency.
  • Invoices.
  • Fee summaries.
Corrections & Support
  • Assist with operational corrections (EPCRS).
  • Support filing of IRS corrections (e.g., Form 5330 if needed).
  • Escalate plan errors.
  • Correction files.
  • EPCRS documentation.

401(k) Fiduciary Checklist

Yes. Plan design decisions (like match formula or plan termination) are settlor functions. Fiduciaries only apply and administer those decisions.

Usually no. They are fiduciaries only if they exercise discretion; routine administrative work is not fiduciary activity.

Sometimes. They are fiduciaries if they are named in the plan or control plan management or investments.

Yes, insurance is allowed. But ERISA does not allow elimination of fiduciary liability, and indemnification is limited.

Use documented processes, prudent oversight, safe harbors (404(c), QDIA), delegation (3(38) manager), fee monitoring, and ERISA bonding.

Fiduciaries can be liable for another’s breach if they knowingly participate or fail to correct it.

Fiduciaries must ensure fees are reasonable and disclosed, and that plan assets are not used for employer expenses.

Fiduciaries can be personally liable for losses from breaches and may face removal or lawsuits under ERISA.

References:

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