HR-7362-119
Ordered to be Reported (Amended) by the Yeas and Nays: 22 - 12.
Sponsored by Glenn Grothman (R-WI)
What it does
This bill would amend the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) to extend the deadline for employee benefit plan administrators to file Form 5500 annual reports. The current deadline — 210 days after the close of the plan year — would be replaced with a new deadline of 15 days after the end of the 9th calendar month following the close of the plan year (roughly 285 days). The bill would also allow electronic signatures on these filings and direct the Departments of Labor and Treasury and the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) to update their regulations and forms accordingly.
Who benefits
Employee benefit plan administrators, particularly those managing small and mid-sized plans, who would gain additional time to compile and submit annual reports. Employers who sponsor retirement and health benefit plans and face compliance costs under the current timeline. Accountants, actuaries, and third-party administrators who prepare Form 5500 filings and often face compressed deadlines. Plans affected by disasters or emergencies, which would receive explicit statutory authority for deadline extensions. Businesses that prefer electronic workflows, who would benefit from the formal authorization of electronic signatures.
Who is hurt
Plan participants and beneficiaries who rely on timely Form 5500 data to assess the financial health of their retirement or health plans — a later filing deadline means this information becomes publicly available later in the year. Federal regulators at the Department of Labor, IRS, and PBGC who use Form 5500 data for oversight and enforcement may face delayed access to plan information. Researchers, journalists, and advocacy groups that monitor plan data for transparency purposes would also receive that data later.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current 210-day deadline creates unnecessary compliance burdens, particularly for smaller plan sponsors that lack dedicated compliance staff and must coordinate across multiple agencies — the IRS, Department of Labor, and PBGC — all of which use Form 5500 data. They contend that extending the deadline to approximately 285 days aligns the filing window more closely with other federal tax and reporting deadlines, reducing costly rush filings and errors. The addition of electronic signature authority, they argue, modernizes a paper-era process and further reduces administrative friction for the millions of plans required to file annually.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that Form 5500 is a primary transparency tool for the roughly 150 million Americans covered by employer-sponsored benefit plans, and that delaying the filing deadline by approximately 75 days meaningfully reduces the timeliness of public and regulatory oversight. They contend that plan participants — especially those in financially troubled plans — have a strong interest in receiving current financial data, and that a longer filing window could allow plan problems to go undetected for an additional reporting cycle. Critics may also argue that the existing 210-day window, which already includes a built-in extension mechanism, is sufficient and that further delay primarily benefits plan administrators at the expense of participant transparency.