The Fiduciary Rule is Gone (Again): Why Your Retirement Safety Net Just Shrank
A court ruling means one-time IRA rollover recommendations are no longer automatically considered fiduciary advice, and retirement savers must once again protect their own backs. Here's how to do it.
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For several years, the Department of Labor's (DOL) fiduciary rule has existed in various stages of legal limbo — finalized, challenged, paused and revised.
In mid-March, that uncertainty came to an end when a federal court in Texas vacated the Biden administration's Retirement Security Rule.
While this might sound like deep-in-the-weeds regulatory "legalese," the implications for the average consumer are very real. By ending broader fiduciary protections for consumers, the court effectively shifted the burden of protection from the government and directly onto the shoulders of individual investors.
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What was the intent of the Retirement Security Rule?
The rule, finalized in April 2024, sought to broaden who qualifies as a fiduciary under ERISA. The goal was to ensure that if you're getting one-time advice on moving your life savings — such as an IRA rollover from a 401(k) — the professional across the table is legally required to act with "prudence and loyalty."
Historically, fiduciary status depended on an ongoing relationship. The Biden-era rule attempted to replace that with a "trust and confidence" standard, arguing that retirement savers deserve protection even during one-time advice.
About Adviser Intel
The author of this article is a participant in Kiplinger's Adviser Intel program, a curated network of trusted financial professionals who share expert insights on wealth building and preservation. Contributors, including fiduciary financial planners, wealth managers, CEOs and attorneys, provide actionable advice about retirement planning, estate planning, tax strategies and more. Experts are invited to contribute and do not pay to be included, so you can trust their advice is honest and valuable.
Why fiduciary might not be quite what it seems
From a practical standpoint, the court decision restores the status quo: The 1975 ERISA "five-part test" remains the governing standard. However, one-time rollover recommendations are not automatically considered fiduciary advice. Here's what that means for your wallet:
- The rollover trap. Moving money out of a workplace plan is often the biggest financial decision of a person's life. Without this rule, an adviser can recommend a rollover that benefits them more than your bottom line without technically breaking DOL rules.
- Annuity conflicts. Recommendations for annuity purchases — which often involve high fees and long-term commitments — no longer fall under a mandatory fiduciary standard for one-time advice.
- The clarity gap. Two different advisers can offer similar guidance under very different legal standards depending on their licensing and compensation. This creates a "fog" in which the burden falls on you to understand the level of protection you're receiving.
- Regulatory uncertainty. When the rules change every few years, it increases consumer confusion. You can no longer assume that a professional title carries a specific legal obligation.
How to protect your nest egg
In this environment, you can't rely on the law to ensure your adviser is putting you first. You must be the primary advocate for your own retirement.
- Demand transparency. Ask any professional point-blank if they're acting as a fiduciary, which requires that they act in your best interest, for the specific recommendation they're making, especially for a one-time rollover — and get it in writing.
- Focus on the why. Don't just accept a recommendation of what to do. Ask for a written explanation of the alternatives considered and why the suggested path is best for your specific tax and retirement goals. Ask how they're compensated based on this recommendation.
- Seek consistency. Look for advisers who already operate with a fiduciary mindset — documenting their rationale and disclosing conflicts — regardless of what the current court ruling says.
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The bottom line
Courts can vacate rules and administrations can rewrite them, but the adviser-client relationship ultimately rests on credibility, competence and care.
Your retirement doesn't have time for the regulatory pendulum to swing back and forth. Now more than ever, consumers need to do their own due diligence.
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Mike Palmer has over 25 years of experience helping successful people make smart decisions about money. He is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and is a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER® professional. Mr. Palmer is a member of several professional organizations, including the National Association of Personal Financial Advisors (NAPFA) and past member of the TIAA-CREF Board of Advisors.