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The Dust Settles: What DOL’s Move Means for 401(k) Sponsors

Just when the 401(k) frontier seemed to be getting a new sheriff , tougher advice standards, greater accountability, the DOL has quietly dropped its appeal defending the 2024 fiduciary rule. That regulation would have expanded fiduciary duty to rollover guidance and plan-menu advice, but with the DOL withdrawing its defense in the Fifth Circuit, the rule is effectively dead… at least for now.

For sponsors, that news could feel like a gunshot echoing through an empty town. Some may see relief, fewer regulatory constraints, more flexibility, less fear of litigation triggered by “one-time advice.” Others may sense danger: this isn’t clarity, it’s uncertainty. The frontier just shifted again.

What should plan sponsors do as the dust settles? Lean on solid fundamentals. Governance, documentation, independent plan oversight, these aren’t optional just because the rule died. Fiduciary duty under Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) still applies. A sound plan doesn’t depend on regulatory headlines, it depends on consistent discipline, documented process, and unwavering commitment to participants’ best interest.

So treat this moment not as a freedom from responsibility, but as a reminder why the true “action plan” must always come from you, not Washington. Because when regulators ride off (or change their minds), the town doesn’t fix itself. The 401(k) world keeps spinning. And a good fiduciary doesn’t wait for rules. He builds the rules himself , with governance, integrity and prudence.

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