# ERISA Bond vs Fiduciary Insurance: Key Differences
Source: https://planprovider.pro/blog/erisa-bond-vs-fiduciary-insurance

> Learn the difference between an ERISA bond vs fiduciary insurance, what each covers, who needs them, and how to choose the right protection.

January 18, 2026

ERISA bonds and fiduciary insurance sound similar, but they protect against different risks—and one is often required by law. Here’s how they work, what they cover, and how to decide what your plan needs.

ERISA bond vs fiduciary insurance is a common point of confusion for plan sponsors and HR teams—especially when you’re onboarding a new retirement plan provider, preparing for an audit, or reviewing your risk management checklist. They are **not** interchangeable. One is generally a legal requirement for many ERISA-covered plans, while the other is optional coverage that can help protect fiduciaries and the organization from certain claims.

Below is a practical, plain-English guide to what each one does, what it doesn’t do, and how to decide what’s appropriate for your plan.

## What is an ERISA bond (and why it exists)

An **ERISA fidelity bond** (commonly called an “ERISA bond”) is designed to protect the **plan**—meaning participants and beneficiaries—against losses caused by fraud or dishonesty by people who handle plan funds. In many cases, ERISA requires this bond for individuals who “handle” plan assets.

Think of an ERISA bond as protection for the plan if someone steals or misuses plan money.

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**Who is protected?** The plan (participants/beneficiaries).

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**What is covered?** Losses due to fraud or dishonesty by bonded persons who handle plan funds.

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**Is it required?** Often, yes—depending on whether your plan is subject to ERISA and who handles assets.

If you want a deeper primer on requirements and purchasing, see [What Is An ERISA Bond And How To Buy One?](/blog/what-is-erisa-bond) and our directory of [ERISA bond providers](/erisa-bonds).

For primary source guidance, the U.S. Department of Labor provides an overview of ERISA’s bonding rules through EBSA: [EBSA fact sheet on fidelity bonding](https://www.dol.gov/agencies/ebsa/about-ebsa/our-activities/resource-center/fact-sheets/fidelity-bonding).

## What is fiduciary liability insurance (and what it covers)

**Fiduciary liability insurance** is intended to protect the **fiduciaries and the organization** from certain claims alleging breaches of fiduciary duty. In plain terms, it can help cover defense costs and potential settlements/judgments if the plan sponsor, committee members, or other fiduciaries are accused of mismanaging the plan.

This coverage is about allegations of **bad decisions** (or alleged bad decisions)—not theft.

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**Who is protected?** Typically the plan sponsor, fiduciary committee members, and other covered fiduciaries (depending on the policy).

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**What is covered?** Claims alleging fiduciary breach (for example, imprudent investment selection, excessive fees, disclosure failures), subject to policy terms and exclusions.

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**Is it required?** Generally, no. It’s optional risk management coverage.

Because policies vary widely, it’s important to review definitions, exclusions, and who counts as an insured. Many plan sponsors coordinate these discussions with counsel and their advisor. If you’re evaluating support partners, see [How To Hire A Retirement Plan Advisor](/blog/hire-retirement-plan-advisor) and our directory of [401(k) financial advisors](/plan-advisors/401k). You may also want to involve [ERISA attorneys](/erisa-attorneys) when reviewing fiduciary roles and insurance terms.

## ERISA bond vs fiduciary insurance: the simplest comparison

If you only remember one thing, remember this: **an ERISA bond protects the plan from theft; fiduciary insurance protects fiduciaries from claims.**

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**ERISA bond** = protects the plan from fraud/dishonesty by people handling plan assets.

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**Fiduciary insurance** = helps protect fiduciaries/organization from lawsuits alleging fiduciary breaches.

## Common misconceptions (and how to avoid them)

These are the mistakes that most often create compliance gaps or unpleasant surprises at claim time:

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**“We have fiduciary insurance, so we don’t need an ERISA bond.”** Not necessarily. Many plans still must meet ERISA’s bonding requirement even if they carry fiduciary insurance.

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**“The ERISA bond protects our committee members.”** Typically no. The bond generally protects the plan, not individual fiduciaries, and it focuses on fraud/dishonesty—not fiduciary decision-making.

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**“Our service provider’s coverage automatically covers us.”** Sometimes a provider may have its own coverage, but that doesn’t automatically satisfy your plan’s bonding requirement or provide fiduciary liability coverage for your organization.

## How ERISA bonding and insurance show up during audits and Form 5500 filing

Bonding can become especially visible during annual reporting and audit readiness. Many plans disclose fidelity bonding information as part of their annual filing, and auditors often request bond documentation as part of standard audit procedures.

If your plan is large enough to require an audit, you’ll want your bond documentation organized and current. Helpful resources include:

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[What Is a 401(k) Audit and When Do I Need One?](/blog/what-is-401k-audit)

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[What Is Needed for a 401(k) Audit and Where Do I Find It?](/blog/what-is-needed-for-401k-audit)

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[What is a Form 5500?](/blog/what-is-form-5500)

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[The High Cost of Non-Compliance: Penalties for Late or Rejected Form 5500 Audits](/blog/cost-and-penalties-for-late-or-rejected-form-5500-audits)

If you’re looking for an auditor, you can browse specialized firms here: [401(k) auditors](/auditors/401k), [403(b) auditors](/auditors/403b), [defined benefit plan auditors](/auditors/defined-benefit), [ESOP auditors](/auditors/esop), [health & welfare plan auditors](/auditors/health-welfare), or [all auditors](/auditors).

For regulatory background on Form 5500 reporting, you can reference the Department of Labor’s Form 5500 resources: [DOL/EBSA reporting and filing (Form 5500)](https://www.dol.gov/agencies/ebsa/employers-and-advisers/plan-administration-and-compliance/reporting-and-filing).

## How to decide what your plan needs (a practical checklist)

Many organizations benefit from having **both** an ERISA bond (to satisfy ERISA requirements and protect the plan from theft) and fiduciary liability insurance (to help protect fiduciaries from certain claims). Here’s a practical way to approach the decision:

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**Confirm whether your plan is ERISA-covered** and whether anyone in your organization “handles” plan funds (for example, ability to initiate transfers or access plan bank accounts).

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**Verify your current ERISA bond amount** and that it names the plan appropriately and covers the right people. (Bonding rules can be technical; align with your broker and plan professionals.)

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**Review fiduciary roles** (committee structure, investment decision process, delegation to advisors) and assess your litigation and claims exposure.

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**Evaluate fiduciary liability insurance terms**, focusing on:

Who is an insured (company, committee members, officers, employees)

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Defense costs (inside or outside limits)

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Key exclusions and definitions (especially around fees, prohibited transactions, and prior acts)

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Coordination with other policies (like D&O insurance)

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**Document your decision** in committee minutes or internal records—especially if you choose not to purchase fiduciary coverage.

## Conclusion: they solve different problems

ERISA bond vs fiduciary insurance isn’t an either/or choice. An ERISA bond is commonly a compliance requirement meant to protect the plan from fraud or dishonesty. Fiduciary liability insurance is optional coverage that can help protect fiduciaries and the organization from claims alleging fiduciary breaches.

If you’re unsure whether your bond is adequate or whether fiduciary insurance fits your risk profile, consider coordinating with a qualified advisor and counsel. You can start by reviewing [our ERISA bond guide](/blog/what-is-erisa-bond), comparing options through [ERISA bond providers](/erisa-bonds), and exploring support partners like [401(k) financial advisors](/plan-advisors/401k) and [ERISA attorneys](/erisa-attorneys).

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