Frequently Asked Questions

Top Questions

A: Voluntary benefits are often viewed as lower risk because they’re employee-paid and sit alongside core health and welfare plans rather than inside them. That perception can lead to lighter oversight of compensation structures, carrier arrangements, and administrative fees.

The exposure typically arises when compensation is indirect, embedded in premiums, or not clearly documented. As regulatory scrutiny and fee-related litigation continue to expand, voluntary programs are increasingly being examined through the same fiduciary lens applied to other ERISA-covered benefits. That includes how vendors are selected, how compensation is structured, and whether the sponsor has exercised appropriate oversight.

A disciplined review doesn’t mean something is wrong. It means ensuring that fee arrangements are transparent, reasonable, and well-documented. SBA helps plan sponsors evaluate voluntary benefit structures, understand how compensation flows, and confirm that governance practices are aligned with evolving expectations—reducing the likelihood of unpleasant surprises down the road.