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News

5 Key Takeaways from Texas Courts’ Final Strike Against DOL’s Fiduciary Rule

By Matthias Binder April 29, 2026
5 Things You Need to Know Now That a Major Consumer Protection Just Died (Again)
5 Things You Need to Know Now That a Major Consumer Protection Just Died (Again) (Featured Image)
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5 Things You Need to Know Now That a Major Consumer Protection Just Died (Again)

Contents
A Familiar Foe Returns to the GraveWhat the Rule Would Have Meant for AdvisorsIndustry Cheers the DecisionDOL’s Official Response and ResetLooking Ahead for Retirement Security

A Familiar Foe Returns to the Grave (Image Credits: Pexels)

Texas — Two federal courts in Texas delivered the final blow last month to the Department of Labor’s 2024 Retirement Security Rule, a regulation aimed at expanding who qualifies as a fiduciary for retirement investment advice.[1][2] The decisions restored a decades-old standard and ended a multiyear legal battle that began under the Biden administration. Retirement savers and financial professionals now face a return to familiar ground, but questions linger about future protections.[3]

A Familiar Foe Returns to the Grave

The Retirement Security Rule echoed a 2016 Department of Labor effort that federal courts struck down as overreach. Finalized in April 2024, it sought to broaden the definition of an investment advice fiduciary under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, or ERISA.[4] The new version would have classified more advisors — including those offering one-time recommendations on rollovers — as fiduciaries required to prioritize clients’ interests above their own.

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Courts in the Eastern and Northern Districts of Texas halted the rule before its September 2024 effective date. Judge Jeremy D. Kernodle in the Eastern District issued a nationwide stay in July 2024, followed by a similar order from the Northern District.[3] The Biden-era Labor Department appealed, but the incoming Trump administration ceased defense in late 2025, paving the way for final vacatur orders on March 12 and March 17, 2026.[2]

What the Rule Would Have Meant for Advisors

Under the 1975 five-part test now reinstated, fiduciaries must provide personalized advice regularly, based on a mutual understanding of trust and confidence. The 2024 rule dropped that relationship requirement, potentially ensnaring brokers and insurance agents in stricter ERISA duties, even for isolated transactions.[1]

Critics argued this would limit access to commission-based products like annuities, especially for smaller retirement accounts. A prior version in 2016 reportedly cut services to over 10 million such accounts holding $900 billion, according to industry estimates.[4] With the rule gone, advisors regain flexibility to recommend diverse options without fiduciary constraints.

Industry Cheers the Decision

Groups like the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association and Financial Services Institute hailed the rulings as a victory for investors. They contended the rule exceeded DOL authority, mirrored the vacated 2016 version, and threatened advice availability.[5] “Today’s decision rightly vacates and sets aside the 2024 Rule, which exceeded the DOL’s statutory authority and was arbitrary and capricious,” the organizations stated.

The Insured Retirement Institute echoed that sentiment, emphasizing preserved consumer choice. “Consumers no longer face the threat of losing access to their choice of professional financial guidance or retirement products,” said Wayne Chopus, the group’s executive director.[4] Plaintiffs, including insurance associations and the Federation of Americans for Consumer Choice, secured unopposed motions to vacate.[3]

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DOL’s Official Response and Reset

The Labor Department moved swiftly after the judgments, publishing a Federal Register notice on March 20, 2026, to remove the rule from regulations. This action republished unaffected portions of related exemptions, like PTE 2020-02 for rollovers, which still demand best-interest analysis.[2]

Assistant Secretary Daniel Aronowitz clarified the department’s stance: “The challenged regulation wrongly sought to impose ERISA fiduciary status on securities brokers and insurance agents when there was not a relationship of trust and confidence. The Securities and Exchange Commission and state regulators regulate the activities of securities brokers and insurance agents and will continue to do so.”[1] No immediate new rulemaking is planned, though guidance may follow.

5 Key Takeaways:

  • The 1975 five-part fiduciary test is fully restored nationwide.[1]
  • One-time advice, like rollovers, escapes broad fiduciary duties.
  • SEC Regulation Best Interest and state rules fill the gap for brokers.
  • Industry access to commission products rebounds for retirement savers.
  • DOL eyes potential future tweaks but prioritizes plan innovation.

Looking Ahead for Retirement Security

The saga underscores ongoing tensions between federal oversight and market flexibility in retirement advice. While the rule’s end averts immediate disruptions, the Labor Department’s regulatory agenda hints at possible revisions by mid-2026.[3] Savers should verify their advisors’ standards under existing SEC and state regimes. As trillions sit in employer plans, the focus shifts to enforcement of current protections amid evolving political priorities.

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This reset offers clarity but revives debates on whether narrower fiduciary lines truly safeguard nest eggs or stifle options. Financial professionals and regulators alike prepare for steadier ground.

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