Proposal would have employers disclose 401(k) account fees


Los Angeles Times

If you have a 401(k) account, it soon might get easier to figure out how much you’re paying in fees.

Under a rule proposed by the U.S. Labor Department on Tuesday, an employer that sponsors a 401(k) plan would have to provide a side-by-side comparison of the expenses and historical returns of the plan’s investment options. Employees often have to piece together that information from multiple documents.

“It’ll help eliminate confusion in the sense that people will have the information they need, the basic information in a usable format to make decisions about how to invest for their retirement,” said Bradford P. Campbell, assistant secretary for the Labor Department’s Employee Benefits Security Administration.

Companies also would have to tell participants every quarter how much they are paying in 401(k) administrative costs — information that many employers don’t provide.

The proposal follows criticism by lawmakers and others who say it can be impossible to figure out how much an account holder is paying in fees.

In 2006, the Los Angeles Times reported that hidden fees were quietly eating into the nest eggs of millions of workers with 401(k) accounts.