Form 5500 ranking
Retirement Plans with Highest Net Income
Plans that generated the most net income in the latest filing year.
Data updated 2026-05-15
- $12.9B
- #1 Plan
- 50
- Ranked
- $204.7B
- Combined net income
The ranking in one line
Microsoft Corporation Savings Plus 401(k) Plan leads with $12.9B in net income; the 50 plans ranked here hold $204.7B combined.
- $12.9B
- #1 - Microsoft Corporation Savi…
- 50
- plans ranked
- $204.7B
- combined net income
What This Ranking Tells Us
Net income represents the total gain from investments, contributions, and other revenue minus expenses and benefit payments for the plan year. Technology company plans (Microsoft, Google, Apple) dominate because their large equity-heavy portfolios benefit from stock market gains. Net income is highly variable year to year, a plan ranking #1 in a bull market may show losses in a downturn. This metric reflects investment performance more than plan quality.
How to Read the Retirement Plans with Highest Net Income Ranking
This page ranks 50 plan records by net income, from Microsoft Corporation Savings Plus 401(k) Plan at the top ($12.9B) through National Electrical Annuity Plan at #50 ($2.0B). The underlying dataset is drawn from the Department of Labor, Form 5500 Annual Return/Report for the 2023 plan year. Each ranked entry links to a detail page with the full set of Form 5500 fields, plan type, sponsor EIN, state, participants, net assets, net income, and prior-year history where available.
Net income represents the total gain from investments, contributions, and other revenue minus expenses and benefit payments for the plan year. Technology company plans (Microsoft, Google, Apple) dominate because their large equity-heavy portfolios benefit from stock market gains. Net income is highly variable year to year, a plan ranking #1 in a bull market may show losses in a downturn. This metric reflects investment performance more than plan quality.
Rankings based on a single metric can be misleading in isolation - "Net Income" captures one dimension of a plan's profile and does not measure participant outcomes, fees, investment options, or funding health. Year-to-year movement in this ranking reflects market performance, workforce changes, plan mergers, and filing timing as much as plan quality. This page is informational only, summarizing public DOL disclosures for research and educational purposes, and is not retirement, tax, legal, or financial advice. Before relying on any ranking to evaluate an employer's plan or make retirement decisions, verify the underlying filing on EFAST2 and consult a qualified professional.
Source: Department of Labor, Form 5500 Annual Return/Report.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does net income include?
Net income on Form 5500 includes investment gains/losses (realized and unrealized), employer contributions received, employee contributions received, minus benefit payments to retirees, plan expenses, and administrative costs. It is essentially the change in net assets for the year.
Is high net income always good?
Not necessarily. High net income usually reflects strong investment returns, which is positive. However, it can also mean the plan received large contributions from a growing workforce. Negative net income is not always bad, it may reflect large benefit payments to retirees (the plan fulfilling its purpose) rather than poor investment performance.
Nearby Rankings
Other leaderboards cut from the same Form 5500 dataset, ranked by different metrics.
Source: Department of Labor, Form 5500 Annual Return/Report. Rankings rebuilt from the publicly released 2023 plan-year file.
Source: DOL EFAST2 filing system (efast.dol.gov) - original Form 5500 filings retrievable by plan sponsor EIN or plan name.
Read our methodology - how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.
How Plan Rankings Are Constructed
Ranking retirement plans is more subtle than ranking, say, restaurants or stocks. A "largest" plan is unambiguous when measured by participant count or asset total, both are reported in Form 5500 and audited by an independent accountant once a plan crosses the 100-participant threshold. But a "best" plan is contextual: the right benchmark for a multi-employer pension fund is different from the right benchmark for a single-employer 401(k), and both are different from the benchmark for an ESOP. PlainRetire's ranking pages stick to clearly defined, source-derived metrics, participant counts, plan assets, net contribution, employer contribution as a share of pay, year-over-year asset growth, and surface each metric on its own page so readers can decide which framing is relevant for their question.
Each ranking includes the underlying source (Form 5500 schedule and line item), the plan-year vintage, and a footnote when an aggregate excludes plans with incomplete or amended filings. Where a plan has filed multiple amendments, a sometimes-routine but sometimes-meaningful signal, the ranking uses the most recent accepted filing and notes the amendment count on the plan detail page. This approach lets readers see who is at the top of a particular ladder without conflating different scales of "size" or "growth."
Methodology and Limitations
Rankings are computed against the most recent annual dataset released by the Department of Labor. New plans, terminations, and significant amendments will not appear until the next annual release, which has roughly a seven-month publication lag from plan year end. Plans that file Form 5500-EZ (single-participant plans) are not included in the public datasets and therefore do not appear in PlainRetire rankings. International plans, government plans, and church plans (which are exempt from Title I of ERISA) are similarly outside the dataset and outside these rankings. When evaluating a ranking, consider the universe being compared: a national ranking of 401(k) sponsors will be dominated by Fortune 500 employers, while a state-level ranking will surface regionally significant plans that don't appear in the national list.
Asset and participant counts are reported by the plan sponsor and certified by an auditor for plans above 100 participants. Smaller plans rely on plan-sponsor attestation. Both are subject to standard data-quality caveats: corrections appear as amended filings in subsequent years, and PlainRetire reflects amendments as soon as DOL releases updated datasets.