# Free Form 5500 Search + Plan Health Reports
Source: https://planprovider.pro/blog/free-form-5500-search-database

> Use our free Form 5500 search and plan health reports to benchmark plan fees, participation, and compliance signals using public filings.

May 13, 2026

We’re excited to launch our free Form 5500 search tool and plan health reports—built to help plan sponsors and providers learn from public filings. Quickly find plans, review key metrics, and spot potential opportunities to improve plan outcomes and reduce compliance risk.

If you’ve ever tried to use Form 5500 data to benchmark your retirement plan, you already know the problem: the information is public, but it isn’t always easy to search, compare, or turn into action. That’s why we built a [free Form 5500 search tool and free plan health reports](https://planprovider.pro/companies)—so plan sponsors (and the providers who support them) can quickly find plans, understand what the filings suggest, and make smarter next-step decisions.

Below is a practical guide to what’s included, how to use it, and how it can support both plan governance and business development.

## What is a Form 5500 search (and why it matters)?

**Form 5500** is the annual reporting form many ERISA-covered benefit plans file. It’s a core compliance document and one of the best sources of standardized plan information—like plan size, service providers, and whether an audit was required.

If you want a quick refresher on the basics, see our guide: [What is a Form 5500?](/blog/what-is-form-5500)

For the official source of filings and background, you can also reference the U.S. Department of Labor’s Form 5500 resources at [DOL/EBSA Form 5500 fact sheet](https://www.dol.gov/agencies/ebsa/about-ebsa/our-activities/resource-center/fact-sheets/form-5500) and the EFAST2 filing system information at [EFast2 (DOL)](https://www.efast.dol.gov/).

## Announcing our free Form 5500 search tool

Our **free Form 5500 search** is designed to help you find plans and quickly access the most useful signals from publicly available filings—without having to comb through raw PDFs or spreadsheets.

**What you can do with the free plan search:**

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**Search for a plan** using common identifiers (for example, plan name and sponsor/company name).

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**See high-level plan details** pulled from filings so you can orient quickly.

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**Navigate to a plan health report** to translate filing data into decision-friendly metrics and flags.

This tool pairs especially well with good governance hygiene—like staying ahead of deadlines and understanding when an audit is required. If you’re evaluating audit needs, start here: [What Is a 401(k) Audit and When Do I Need One?](/blog/what-is-401k-audit)

## What’s inside the free Plan Health Reports

Once you find a plan, the **plan health report** helps turn Form 5500 information into a more readable snapshot. Think of it as a structured way to review what the filing suggests about plan scale, activity, and potential compliance touchpoints.

**Plan health reports highlight key features such as:**

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**Plan overview** (basic plan and sponsor identifiers from filings)

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**Plan size and trend signals** (e.g., participant counts and general scale indicators)

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**Service provider visibility** (who appears in the filing as key providers, where available)

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**Audit signals** (whether the filing indicates an audit was required)

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**Compliance context** (helpful cues that can prompt follow-up questions internally or with your advisor)

**Important note:** A plan health report is not a legal opinion and it’s not a substitute for reviewing your plan documents, trust statements, or working with qualified professionals. It’s a fast way to spot topics worth investigating.

If your plan does require an audit (or you’re close to the threshold), these resources can help you prepare:

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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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[Browse vetted 401(k) auditors](/auditors/401k) (or explore [all auditors](/auditors))

## How plan sponsors can use Form 5500 search + health reports

For plan sponsors, HR teams, and business owners, the best use of Form 5500 data is to **ask better questions** and **document prudent oversight**. Here are practical ways to use the tool year-round:

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**Benchmark your plan against peers**
Use comparable plans as a reference point for plan scale and structure. This can support your annual review with a [401(k) financial advisor](/plan-advisors/401k) or help you evaluate whether your current setup still fits.

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**Spot potential compliance risk early**
Filings can surface audit-related indicators or other cues that merit a closer look. If you’re worried about late filings or rejected submissions, read: [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).

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**Prepare for vendor conversations**
If you’re considering a change, Form 5500 details can help you come to the table informed. For guidance on selecting support, see [How To Hire A Retirement Plan Advisor](/blog/hire-retirement-plan-advisor) and explore [retirement plan providers](/retirement-plans).

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**Confirm you have required protections in place**
Many plans need an ERISA bond. If you’re unsure, start with [What Is An ERISA Bond And How To Buy One?](/blog/what-is-erisa-bond) and compare options through [ERISA bond providers](/erisa-bonds). For official guidance, see the DOL’s bonding requirements overview at [DOL/EBSA fiduciary responsibilities (bonding discussed)](https://www.dol.gov/agencies/ebsa/about-ebsa/our-activities/resource-center/fact-sheets/fiduciary-responsibilities).

If your health report suggests you’re approaching an audit requirement or you want a second set of eyes on plan operations, you can also connect with [ERISA attorneys](/erisa-attorneys) for legal guidance or engage specialized auditors such as [403(b) auditors](/auditors/403b), [defined benefit plan auditors](/auditors/defined-benefit), [ESOP auditors](/auditors/esop), or [health & welfare plan auditors](/auditors/health-welfare).

## How providers can use the tool (business development + better conversations)

For advisors, auditors, TPAs, recordkeepers, attorneys, and other professionals, our free tools are built to support **research, prioritization, and more relevant outreach**—using public data.

**Examples of provider use cases:**

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**Identify plans that may need help** (e.g., audit-related signals, plan growth, or changes in structure)

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**Prepare for discovery calls** with a clearer picture of the plan’s public filing footprint

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**Benchmark a prospect set** by plan size and other filing-based indicators

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**Support cross-referrals** (e.g., an advisor connecting with a [401(k) auditor](/auditors/401k) when an audit is required)

[Providers can also use the plan health reports](https://planprovider.pro/companies) to create a more consultative experience—“Here’s what the filing suggests; here are the questions we should answer together”—instead of starting from scratch.

## What’s coming soon: Provider search tool (with richer firm insights)

We’re also building a **provider search tool**—and it’s coming soon. It will include a **demo** experience and richer firm insights, including:

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**Firmographics** (company-level attributes that help you understand the firm at a glance)

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**Geographics** (location and market coverage context)

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**Technographics** (signals about the technologies and platforms a firm may use)

Our goal is to make it easier for plan sponsors to find the right-fit partners—and for providers to be discovered by the plans they serve best.

## Conclusion: Turn public filings into practical action

Form 5500 data is already out there. The advantage comes from making it usable. Our **free Form 5500 search** and **plan health reports** are designed to help plan sponsors benchmark and monitor their plan with less friction—and help providers focus their time on the plans where they can add the most value.

If you’re reviewing your plan’s governance, start by searching your plan and saving the key takeaways for your next committee meeting. And if you’re a provider, use the reports to improve your prospect research and deliver more informed first conversations.

**Next steps:** Explore [all auditors](/auditors), connect with [401(k) financial advisors](/plan-advisors/401k), or learn the basics of compliance reporting in [our Form 5500 guide](/blog/what-is-form-5500).

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