DOL Expands Fiduciary Obligations for Cybersecurity to Health and Welfare Plans


A little more than three years ago, the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) posted cybersecurity guidance on its website for ERISA plan fiduciaries. That guidance extended only to ERISA-covered retirement plans, despite health and welfare plans facing similar risks to participant data.

Last Friday, the DOL’s Employee Benefits Security Administration (EBSA) issued Compliance Assistance Release No. 2024-01. The EBSA’s purpose for the guidance was simple – confirm that the agency’s 2021 guidance generally applies to all ERISA-covered employee benefit plans, including health and welfare plans. In doing so, EBSA reiterated its view of the expanding role for ERISA plan fiduciaries relating to protecting plan data:

“Responsible plan fiduciaries have an obligation to ensure proper mitigation of cybersecurity risks.

In 2021, we outlined the DOL’s requirements for plan fiduciaries here, and in a subsequent post discussed DOL audit activity that followed shortly after the DOL issued its newly minted cybersecurity requirements.

As noted in our initial post, the EBSA’s best practices included:

Indeed, the substance of the guidance is largely the same, as indicated above, and still covers three areas – Tips for Hiring a Service ProviderCybersecurity Program Best Practices, and Online Security Tips (for plan participants). What is different are some of the issues raised by the new plans to which the expanded guidance applies – health and welfare plans. Here are some examples.

“any plan, fund, or program…established or maintained by an employer or by an employee organization…for the purpose of providing for its participants or their beneficiaries, through the purchase of insurance or otherwise…medical, surgical, or hospital care or benefits, or benefits in the event of sickness, accident, disability, death or unemployment, or vacation benefits, apprenticeship or other training programs, or day care centers, scholarship funds, or prepaid legal services.

A threshold compliance step for ERISA fiduciaries, therefore, will be to identify the plans in scope. However, cybersecurity should be a significant compliance concern for just about any benefit offered to employees, whether covered by ERISA or not.

The EBSA’s Compliance Assistance Release No. 2024-01 significantly expands the scope of compliance for ERISA fiduciaries with respect to their employee benefit plans and cybersecurity, and by extension the service providers to those plans. Third-party plan service providers and plan fiduciaries should begin taking reasonable and prudent steps to implement safeguards that will adequately protect plan data. EBSA’s guidance should help the responsible parties get there, along with the plan fiduciaries and plan sponsors’ trusted counsel and other advisors.


Jackson Lewis P.C. © 2025
National Law Review, Volume XIV, Number 253