ERISA Case Qualification Quiz
This short quiz asks a few questions about your plan, fees, and timeline to gauge whether your situation is worth a free, confidential ERISA review. It is a preliminary screen, not legal advice.
Is your 401(k) quietly costing you money?
Most people have no idea what their workplace retirement plan charges them — or how much it quietly adds up to over the years. These free tools spell it out in plain English. No jargon, no cost, and nothing you need to look up.
ERISA Case Qualification Quiz
You don't need to understand the law — just answer a few plain questions about your workplace retirement plan, and we'll give you a sense of whether it's worth a free, confidential look. This is a quick guide, not legal advice.
Your answers match the kinds of problems these cases involve. The next step is simple: a free, confidential review to see whether you may be owed money. No cost, no obligation.
This is a quick, automated guide — not legal advice, and not a decision about whether you do or don't have a case. The only way to know for sure is a free review.
Worried by what you see? Talk to an attorney — free.
You don't have to understand any of this. If these numbers look off, a free, confidential review will tell you in plain English whether your employer's plan may owe you money. You pay nothing unless money is recovered, and your employer is never contacted without your okay.
A quick note. These tools give rough, illustrative estimates based only on what you enter and on simple assumptions (steady yearly growth, no taxes). They are not financial or legal advice, not a prediction of any outcome, and they don't prove that anyone did anything wrong or that any money can be recovered. Any actual recovery is decided by a court and depends on facts these tools can't capture. Using this tool doesn't make us your lawyers, and prior results don't guarantee a similar outcome. Attorney Advertising.
How to read your result
- A 'likely worth a review' verdict means several common factors are present.
- A 'maybe' verdict often turns on a single specific fact you'd discuss with an attorney.
- A 'probably not' verdict is preliminary — facts can change the picture quickly.
- Either way, an ERISA attorney can confirm in a free call.
Common reasons plans get reviewed
If your result looks concerning, these are the practice areas that most often line up with what this tool measures.
Frequently asked questions
Does this tool cost anything?
No. It's free, anonymous, and there's no obligation. You don't have to share your contact info to use it.
Is this a guarantee of how much I can recover?
No. It's an illustrative estimate, not legal advice or a prediction of any individual outcome. Actual results in ERISA cases depend on the facts of the plan and the court.
What should I do if my result looks concerning?
Request a free, confidential case review. An ERISA attorney will tell you honestly whether your situation looks like a case.
How are the figures calculated?
Using transparent, illustrative formulas — compounding projections, published fee benchmarks, or weighted self-assessment scoring. The component shows its assumptions inline.
How long do I have to act on a possible ERISA claim?
ERISA limitations periods are short and fact-specific. If you suspect a problem, talk to counsel sooner rather than later.
Related calculators
All calculators →Was your 401K plan named in a lawsuit?
A licensed ERISA attorney from ERLG will respond within one business day. Confidential. No cost to consult.
- Speak directly with an ERISA attorney.
- Contingency representation — no fee unless we recover.
- Confidential. Your employer is never contacted without your consent.
A few quick questions — no legal or financial know-how needed. We'll give you an honest read on whether your situation is worth a closer look.
What kind of retirement plan do you have through work?
Don't worry if you're not sure — just pick the closest one.
