The Overlooked Opportunity Inside Workplace Retirement Plans

Why Self‑Directed Brokerage Accounts Matter More Than Ever for Advisors

For decades, financial advisors have built strong relationships by helping clients manage IRAs, taxable accounts, and rollover assets after they leave an employer. Meanwhile, a significant, often the largest pool, of client wealth has quietly remained out of reach: assets inside workplace retirement plans.

That has begun to change.

Across thousands of 401(k), 403(b), and 457 plans, a feature exists that many advisors and most participants are still unaware of: the Self‑Directed Brokerage Account, commonly known as an SDBA or “brokerage window.”

For advisors looking to grow AUM, deepen client relationships, and deliver more holistic retirement advice, SDBAs represent one of the most underutilized opportunities in the market today.

What Is a Self‑Directed Brokerage Account?

A Self‑Directed Brokerage Account is an optional feature embedded within certain workplace retirement plans. It allows participants to invest their retirement assets beyond the plan’s core investment menu.

Instead of being limited to a small lineup of target‑date funds or curated mutual funds, participants with access to an SDBA may invest in a broad range of securities such as mutual funds, ETFs, and professionally managed strategies that are not otherwise available in the plan’s default lineup.

Crucially, SDBA assets remain inside the employer‑sponsored plan. The assets retain their tax‑advantaged status and do not require a rollover, distribution, or employment change.