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Pension plan tracing

How to request pension plan tracing assistance from the Office of the PBGC Participant and Plan Sponsor Advocate

Are you struggling to locate your pension plan to claim a pension benefit? The Office of the Advocate’s Pension Tracing Service uses historical information that PBGC has on file about the pension plans it insures to help individuals track down the right points of contact for their pension plans.

Please go through the following steps before reaching out to the Office of the Advocate for pension tracing assistance. Taking these steps will help make sure that the Office of the Advocate is the most appropriate resource to help you with your inquiry. It will also make sure that you have gathered the information necessary for our office to be effective. If you do not complete these steps, it can reduce the likelihood that our office will be able to assist you and/or impact the quality of the research our office can perform on your behalf.

Please note, though, that going through these steps does not guarantee that our office will find information useful to you in PBGC’s records. Additionally, PBGC is unlikely to have any records related to pension plans sponsored by governmental employers or by certain religiously affiliated employers.

An additional resource you might check is the Department of Labor’s new Retirement Savings Lost and Found Database(link is external). This database serves as a centralized location to find lost or forgotten benefits and get information on how to obtain those funds.
 

  1. Do you have any documents containing information about your pension plan/pension benefit (such as a plan name or plan identification number)?

    Examples:

    • Notice of potential private retirement benefit from the Social Security Administration (SSA)
    • Deferred vested letter from your employer
    • Summary plan description.

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