Browse All Retirement Plans

Explore 402,674 employer retirement plans from DOL Form 5500 filings. Includes 401(k), pension, ESOP, and profit-sharing plans.

Plan Participants
Village Kids, Inc 401(k) Plan
Village Kids, Inc
11
Village Kids, Inc 401(k) Plan
Village Kids, Inc
15
Village Kids, Inc 401(k) Plan
Village Kids, Inc
10
Village Kids, Inc 401(k) Plan
Village Kids, Inc
1
Village Kids, Inc 401(k) Plan
Village Kids, Inc
1
Village Management Services, Inc. 401(k) Plan
Village Management Services, Inc.
769
Village Management Services, Inc. 401(k) Plan
Village Management Services, Inc.
780
Village Management Services, Inc. 401(k) Plan
Village Management Services, Inc.
818
Village Motors, Inc. 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan
Village Motors, Inc.
294
Village Motors, Inc. 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan
Village Motors, Inc.
306
Village Motors, Inc. 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan
Village Motors, Inc.
364
Billy Craft Honda 401(k) Retirement Plan
Village Motors, Inc. Dba Billy Craft Honda
47
Vnu 403(b) Plan
Village Northwest Unlimited
299
Vnu 403(b) Plan
Village Northwest Unlimited
287
Vnu 403(b) Plan
Village Northwest Unlimited
280
Village Pizza Sebastian Kaly & Jose Inc. Retirement Plan
Village Pizza Sebastian Kaly & Jose Inc.
4
Village Pizza Sebastian Kaly & Jose Inc. Retirement Plan
Village Pizza Sebastian Kaly & Jose Inc.
2
Village Pizza Sebastian Kaly & Jose Inc. Retirement Plan
Village Pizza Sebastian Kaly & Jose Inc.
2
Village Plaza Sparkle Market, Inc. 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan
Village Plaza Sparkle Market, Inc.
173
Village Md 401(k) Plan
Village Practice Management Co.
5,594
Village Md 401(k) Plan
Village Practice Management Comp
3,284
Villagemd 401(k) Retirement Savings Plan
Village Practice Management Company, LLC
11,509
Village Realty Holdings, LLC 401(k) Plan
Village Realty Holdings, LLC
133
Village Retirement Communities 401(k) Plan
Village Retirement Communities, LLC
192
Village Retirement Communities 401(k) Plan
Village Retirement Communities, LLC
197
Village Retirement Communities 401(k) Plan
Village Retirement Communities, LLC
214
Village Royale Animal Clinic, Inc. 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan
Village Royale Animal Clinic, Inc.
8
Village Shalom, Inc. 403b Plan
Village Shalom, Inc.
192
Village South, Inc. Profit Sharing Plan
Village South, Inc.
148
Village South, Inc. Profit Sharing Plan
Village South, Inc.
194
Village Square 401(k) Plan
Village Square of Penna, Inc.
192
Village Square 401(k) Plan
Village Square of Penna, Inc.
223
Village Square 401(k) Plan
Village Square of Penna, Inc.
254
Village Subaru 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan
Village Subaru
351
Village Subaru 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan
Village Subaru
346
Village Subaru 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan
Village Subaru
363
Village Super Market, Ee's Retirement Plan
Village Super Market, Inc.
306
Village-Local 72 Retail Clerks Ees Ret. Plan
Village Super Market, Inc.
43
Village Super Market, Inc. Employees Thrift Savings Plan
Village Super Market, Inc.
780
Village-Local 72 Retail Clerks Ees Ret. Plan
Village Super Market, Inc.
39
Village Super Market, Inc. Employees Thrift Savings Plan
Village Super Market, Inc.
839
Village Super Market, Inc. Employees Thrift Savings Plan
Village Super Market, Inc.
564
Village-Local 72 Retail Clerks Ees Ret. Plan
Village Super Market, Inc.
N/A
Village Travel, LLC Profit Sharing 401(k) Plan
Village Travel, LLC
103
Village Travel, LLC Profit Sharing 401(k) Plan
Village Travel, LLC
417
Village Travel, LLC Profit Sharing 401(k) Plan
Village Travel, LLC
448
Village Ventures 401(k) Plan
Village Ventures, Inc.
1
Village Ventures 401(k) Plan
Village Ventures, Inc.
5
Village Ventures 401(k) Plan
Village Ventures, Inc.
5
Villageplan, 401(k) Plan
Villageplan Care Options, LLC.
223

Why Form 5500 Data Matters for Retirement Planning

Form 5500 is the annual return that virtually every private-sector retirement plan in the United States files with the Department of Labor. The filing covers funding, participant counts, plan investments, fees, service providers, and corrective contributions. Because the data is collected for regulatory oversight rather than marketing, it is one of the most consistent windows into the retirement economy: the same questions are asked of plans across all industries and all states, year after year. That consistency makes it possible to compare plans, sponsors, and markets on equal footing, a kind of comparability that voluntary survey data and vendor brochures cannot provide.

PlainRetire reorganizes the Form 5500 universe so a participant, employer, or analyst can ask everyday questions of the dataset without reading thousands of pages of agency documentation. Browsing by state surfaces concentration patterns: where pension assets sit, which states host the largest 401(k) sponsors, where retirement coverage trails the national average. Browsing by industry reveals the structural difference between sectors that historically relied on defined-benefit pensions and sectors that adopted defined-contribution plans early. Browsing by plan size highlights both the largest sponsors, typically Fortune 500 employers and multi-employer Taft–Hartley funds, and the long tail of small plans that collectively cover millions of workers.

What This Hub Page Aggregates

Each hub page on PlainRetire is a navigable index into the underlying database. The page shows summary counts, the most recent Form 5500 vintage, and direct links to individual plan detail pages. Detail pages carry the canonical filings, schedules where applicable, and audit trail back to the DOL's EFAST2 disclosure portal. Where the underlying dataset supports it, hub pages also expose key aggregates: total participant counts, aggregate assets, plan-type breakdowns (401(k), pension, profit-sharing, ESOP), and changes over the most recent reporting period.

Plan data is updated as DOL releases new annual Form 5500 datasets. Filings have a roughly seven-month lag from plan year end, so the most recent vintage typically reflects the previous full calendar year. This lag is inherent to the disclosure regime, plans are given time to gather audit reports and service-provider statements, and PlainRetire reflects the timing transparently rather than backfilling estimates.

Reading the Data With Appropriate Caveats

Aggregate numbers are useful for trend-spotting and structural comparison; they are less useful for decisions about a specific plan. The participant count for a state, for instance, includes both very large plans (which dominate the total) and very small plans (which influence median but not mean). When evaluating a specific employer's plan, drill into the plan detail page and consider plan-type, asset-mix, fee structure, and audit history, these details are flattened in any hub-level aggregate. Where regulatory updates change the categorization of a plan, PlainRetire preserves the historical filing alongside the most recent one so longitudinal analyses remain valid.

Several variables shape what shows up in Form 5500 data and what it means in context. The first is the disclosure threshold: every plan with 100 or more participants files audited financials (Schedule H); plans with fewer than 100 participants file a simplified schedule (Schedule I) and are exempt from independent audit. That gap is consequential, the headline asset totals you see for small plans rely on plan-sponsor attestation rather than auditor confirmation, and the line items reported are coarser. The second variable is plan-type coding. A defined-contribution plan (401(k), 403(b), profit-sharing) reports very differently from a defined-benefit pension (which must additionally file Schedule SB with actuarial assumptions, funded ratio, and discount rate) and an employee stock ownership plan (Schedule E in pre-2009 filings, now folded into the main return). When you read a plan's filing, the schedules attached tell you what kind of plan you are looking at as much as the named plan type does.

The third variable is filing status. Plans can file as initial, amended, final (plan termination), or short-year. Amended filings are routine when audit reports arrive after the original due date; final filings mean the plan is winding down, often after a corporate merger or acquisition. When a sponsor's filing history shows a 2018 final filing followed by a 2019 initial filing under a different EIN, that is usually a successor plan, not a new plan, PlainRetire's plan detail pages link related filings where the connection is unambiguous. Finally, the EFAST2 system has experienced periodic data revisions where DOL re-codes plan types or applies retroactive corrections. PlainRetire reflects revisions at the next refresh cycle and notes the source vintage on every page.

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