What Is Fidelity BrokerageLink? Oil & Gas 401(k) Guide

Most oil and gas professionals we work with are surprised when they find out their 401(k) investment menu has a back door. The standard plan gives you 15 or 20 funds to pick from – a handful of target-date options, a bond fund, maybe a company stock allocation. That’s it. What most employees never find out is that if your plan is custodied at Fidelity, there’s a good chance you can access a significantly broader universe of investments without touching a taxable account or opening a separate IRA.

That back door is called Fidelity BrokerageLink. Understanding what a Fidelity BrokerageLink is and whether your plan allows it, is one of the more practical conversations I have with energy sector professionals in the years leading up to retirement.

This isn’t a universal option and it’s not right for every account holder. But for the right person in the right plan, it changes the investment conversation entirely.

10,000+
Investment options available through BrokerageLink vs. a typical plan’s 15-20 defaults
$0
Additional account to open — BrokerageLink lives inside your existing 401(k)
100%
Tax-deferred status maintained — same 401(k) protections apply

What Is Fidelity BrokerageLink, Exactly?

BrokerageLink is a self-directed brokerage account window that Fidelity makes available inside certain employer-sponsored 401(k) plans. It doesn’t replace your existing plan menu – it sits alongside it. You keep access to your standard fund lineup, and BrokerageLink becomes an additional sleeve within the same 401(k) where you can invest in a much wider range of securities.

Think of it this way: your standard 401(k) is a restaurant with a fixed menu. BrokerageLink is the same restaurant giving you access to the full kitchen.

Through a Fidelity BrokerageLink account, eligible participants can invest in:

  • Individual stocks listed on major U.S. exchanges
  • Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) across virtually every asset class and sector
  • A broad universe of mutual funds beyond your plan’s default offerings
  • Fixed income securities, including bonds and CDs, depending on plan restrictions

The tax treatment doesn’t change. Assets held in BrokerageLink maintain the same pre-tax or Roth status as the rest of your 401(k). You’re not triggering any taxable event by moving money into the BrokerageLink sleeve – it’s still the same account.

That last point matters more than it might sound. I’ve worked with oil and gas professionals who assumed accessing BrokerageLink meant some kind of distribution or rollover. It doesn’t. You’re not moving money out of your 401(k) – you’re repositioning it within a broader window inside the same plan.

How a Fidelity BrokerageLink 401(k) Actually Works

Before anything else: your employer’s plan has to allow BrokerageLink. Not every Fidelity-custodied 401(k) includes it. Availability is a plan-level decision made by your employer – Fidelity offers the feature, but your company’s plan documents determine whether it’s turned on.

Here’s how the process works once you’ve confirmed eligibility:

  1. Confirm your plan is Fidelity-custodied. Log into NetBenefits at netbenefits.fidelity.com. If you can access your account there, your plan lives at Fidelity.
  2. Check for BrokerageLink availability. Inside NetBenefits, look for a BrokerageLink option in your account menu or under investment options. It may not appear if your plan hasn’t enabled it.
  3. Initiate setup through NetBenefits or through us. At Saxon Financial Group, we contact Fidelity on your behalf and walk you through the process. The account opens within your existing NetBenefits login – no separate application or separate login required.
  4. Transfer a portion of eligible funds. Most plans set a minimum transfer amount and a cap – often you can’t move more than a specified percentage of your total balance into BrokerageLink. Your plan documents will specify the limits.
  5. Invest through the brokerage window. Once funded, you manage the BrokerageLink sleeve the same way you’d manage a standard brokerage account – selecting securities, setting allocations, rebalancing over time.

One operational note: BrokerageLink accounts typically carry Fidelity’s standard brokerage trading fees on certain securities. Most ETFs and many mutual funds trade commission-free. Individual stocks may carry a per-trade cost – check your specific plan’s fee schedule, because it varies by employer arrangement.

According to Fidelity’s plan sponsor documentation, BrokerageLink is designed to give participants expanded investment flexibility while keeping assets inside the plan’s ERISA protections — which matters for creditor protection and plan compliance.

How to Check Fidelity BrokerageLink Eligibility in 3 Steps

  1. Log into netbenefits.fidelity.com with your work credentials
  2. Navigate to your 401(k) plan and look under Investment Options or Account Features
  3. If BrokerageLink doesn’t appear – contact Saxon Financial Group and we’ll check plan eligibility directly with Fidelity

Who a Self-Directed Brokerage Account 401(k) Option Is Built For

BrokerageLink isn’t for everyone in your plan, and I want to be direct about that. The standard fund menu exists for a reason – it limits decision complexity and keeps most participants in broadly diversified, low-maintenance options. For many people, that menu is perfectly adequate.

A self-directed brokerage account 401(k) option makes sense if you fall into one of these situations:

  • Your plan’s default fund lineup doesn’t include exposure you want – a specific sector ETF, an asset class your plan is missing, or individual equities you want to hold in a tax-advantaged account
  • You have concentrated energy sector exposure through company stock or industry income, and you want to use BrokerageLink to build diversification in the opposite direction
  • You’re an experienced investor who actively manages your own portfolio and finds the standard menu limiting
  • You want to align retirement account investments with a specific strategy – dividend income, factor investing, or a sector-tilted approach – that your plan’s defaults don’t support

Oil and gas professionals in particular often have a concentration problem worth addressing. If your income, deferred compensation, pension, and company stock allocations all move with energy commodity prices, your 401(k) may be the best place to build positions that don’t. The standard fund menu might not give you the tools to do that effectively. BrokerageLink often does.

That said – more flexibility comes with more responsibility. If you open a BrokerageLink without a clear investment rationale, you’re not improving your situation. You’re just adding complexity. It’s a tool for a specific job, not a default upgrade. Your oil and gas financial solutions should define the job before reaching for the tool.

What Fidelity BrokerageLink Is Not

A few misconceptions come up regularly, and they’re worth addressing directly before someone makes assumptions that lead to a bad decision.

BrokerageLink IS BrokerageLink IS NOT
A brokerage window inside your existing 401(k) A separate account with its own account number
Subject to 401(k) tax rules (pre-tax or Roth) An IRA or rollover account
Governed by your employer’s plan restrictions A solo 401(k) or fully self-directed plan
Accessible only to current plan participants Available without employer plan eligibility
Funded by transferring existing 401(k) assets Funded by direct deposits or outside transfers

The “self-directed” terminology in what is a self directed brokerage account trips people up. It means self-directed in the investment selection sense – you choose securities rather than selecting from a pre-approved fund list. It does not mean self-directed in the sense of a self-directed IRA, where you might hold alternative assets like real estate or private placements. BrokerageLink is standard brokerage investing – stocks, ETFs, mutual funds – inside a 401(k) wrapper.

Your employer’s plan restrictions still apply. If your plan document prohibits certain investment types, BrokerageLink doesn’t override that. If there’s a cap on how much of your balance can sit in BrokerageLink, that cap holds. Our oil and gas 401(k) and pension guide covers more on how plan-level restrictions interact with investment options inside Fidelity-custodied plans.

Frequently Asked Questions About Fidelity BrokerageLink

Does my 401(k) plan allow Fidelity BrokerageLink?

BrokerageLink availability is determined by your employer, not Fidelity. Even if your 401(k) is held at Fidelity, the feature only appears if your company’s plan documents have enabled it. Log into NetBenefits and look under your investment options – if it’s there, your plan allows it. If it’s not visible, contact your HR or benefits department to confirm. We can also check plan eligibility directly with Fidelity on your behalf as part of a consultation.

Can I transfer all my 401(k) funds into BrokerageLink?

Almost certainly not. Most plans set a cap on how much of your total 401(k) balance can be moved into the BrokerageLink sleeve. Common limits range from 50% to 95% of your eligible balance, but your specific plan document controls this. Some plans also require a minimum balance to remain in the core plan menu. Check your Summary Plan Description for the exact restrictions.

What are the fees for a Fidelity BrokerageLink account?

Fee structure varies by plan. Most plans charge a flat annual fee for BrokerageLink access – typically in the $25-$100 range per year – plus standard Fidelity brokerage commissions on certain trades. Many ETFs and mutual funds trade commission-free through Fidelity’s platform. Individual stock trades may carry a per-trade commission. Your plan’s fee disclosure document (the 404(a)(5) notice) will list BrokerageLink-specific costs.

Can employer contributions go into BrokerageLink?

Generally, no. Most plans route employer matching contributions into the core plan menu, not the BrokerageLink sleeve. You can typically transfer vested employer match dollars into BrokerageLink after they’ve been allocated to your account, subject to vesting schedules and plan rules. Check with your plan administrator or HR benefits team for the exact mechanics at your employer.

Do I still get tax advantages with BrokerageLink?

Yes – completely. BrokerageLink is part of your 401(k), so the same tax treatment applies across the entire account. Pre-tax contributions grow tax-deferred; Roth contributions grow tax-free. Moving money from your standard fund menu into BrokerageLink is an internal transfer within the same tax wrapper – it’s not a distribution, it doesn’t trigger taxes, and it doesn’t affect your contribution limits. The IRS sees it as the same 401(k) account regardless of which sleeve holds the assets.

Find Out If Your Fidelity BrokerageLink Is Available

For oil and gas professionals with a Fidelity-custodied 401(k), BrokerageLink can be a meaningful addition to a retirement strategy – particularly for those who want to hold investments outside their plan’s default menu or who need to build diversification away from energy sector concentration.

The setup process is less complicated than most people assume. Eligibility check, transfer setup, and account activation typically take a week or less when handled correctly. What matters more than the mechanics is having a clear investment rationale before you open the window – knowing what you’ll do with the access and why.

At Saxon Financial Group, we work with Fidelity directly on behalf of oil and gas clients to confirm eligibility, walk through setup, and help develop an investment approach that makes BrokerageLink worthwhile rather than just wider. If you’re not sure whether your plan allows it – or whether it makes sense for your situation – a consultation is the right starting point.

Not sure if your Fidelity 401(k) allows BrokerageLink? We can find out for you – and walk you through setup if it does. Schedule a free retirement planning consultation with the Saxon Financial Group team today.

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