12B-1 Plan

12B-1 Plan

A 12B-1 plan is a plan structured by mutual fund companies for the distribution of funds through intermediaries. Mutual fund companies will pay 12B-1 fees from a mutual fund to compensate distributors. In some cases, funds may also be structured with a low-level load that is paid to financial advisors annually during the course of an investor's holding period. Financial industry legislation typically restricts 12B-1 fees to 1% of the current value of the investment on an annual basis, but fees generally fall somewhere between 0.25% and 1%. Mutual fund companies are required to provide full disclosure on their sales load schedules and 12B-1 annual fund expenses in the fund’s prospectus. The prospectus is one aspect of documentation required for the mutual fund’s registration and is also the key offering document providing information on the fund for investors. 12B-1 plans and any changes to their expense structuring must be approved by the fund’s board of directors and amended in its prospectus filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. In most cases, fund companies will have higher 12B-1 fees on share classes paying a lower sales charge, and lower 12B-1 fees on share classes with higher sales charges.

What Is a 12B-1 Plan?

A 12B-1 plan is a plan structured by mutual fund companies for the distribution of funds through intermediaries. 12B-1 plans provide mapping for the partnerships between distributors and intermediaries who help to ensure the sale of a fund. Sales commission schedules and 12B-1 distribution expenses are the primary components driving a 12B-1 plan.

Understanding the 12B-1 Plan

12B-1 plans facilitate the partnerships between distributors and intermediaries offering mutual fund shares. 12B-1 plans are primarily focused on open-end mutual funds, which have multiple class structures for sales charges and distribution expenses. Mutual fund companies consider two types of 12B-1 charges in their 12B-1 plans, sales commissions, and 12B-1 expenses.

Sales Commissions

Sales commission schedules are structured to provide compensation to intermediaries for transacting mutual funds. These partnerships can help to increase demand for funds by being marketed from a full-service broker-dealer who facilitates the transaction for a sales load fee. These fees are paid to the broker and are not associated with annual fund operating expenses.

Sales loads are structured to vary across share classes. Share classes can include front-end, back-end, and level-load sales charges. These sales charges are associated with individual retail share classes which typically include Class A, B, and C shares.

12B-1 Expenses

12B-1 expenses paid from the mutual fund to distributors and intermediaries are also a key part of a 12B-1 plan. To market and distribute open-end mutual fund shares, mutual fund companies work with distributors to get their funds listed with discount brokerages and financial advisor platforms. Distributors help fund companies partner with the full-service brokers that transact their funds at the agreed-upon sales load schedule.

Mutual fund companies will pay 12B-1 fees from a mutual fund to compensate distributors. In some cases, funds may also be structured with a low-level load that is paid to financial advisors annually during the course of an investor's holding period.

Financial industry legislation typically restricts 12B-1 fees to 1% of the current value of the investment on an annual basis, but fees generally fall somewhere between 0.25% and 1%. In most cases, fund companies will have higher 12B-1 fees on share classes paying a lower sales charge, and lower 12B-1 fees on share classes with higher sales charges. This helps to balance out the compensation paid to intermediary brokers while also providing for payment to distribution partners.

Disclosure

Mutual fund companies are required to provide full disclosure on their sales load schedules and 12B-1 annual fund expenses in the fund’s prospectus. The prospectus is one aspect of documentation required for the mutual fund’s registration and is also the key offering document providing information on the fund for investors. 12B-1 plans and any changes to their expense structuring must be approved by the fund’s board of directors and amended in its prospectus filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Related terms:

12b-1 Fund

A 12b-1 fund is a type of mutual fund that charges its holders a 12b-1 fee, which covers the costs of the marketing and selling of shares, paying brokers, and advertising the fund to potential investors. read more

12B-1 Fee

A 12b-1 fee goes toward paying for marketing, distribution and other expenses a mutual fund incurs.  read more

Exit Fee

An exit fee is a fee charged to investors when they redeem shares from a fund. Exit fees are most common in open-end mutual funds.  read more

Financial Intermediary

A financial intermediary facilitates transactions between lenders and borrowers, with the most common example being the commercial bank. read more

Holding Period

A holding period is the amount of time an investment is held by an investor or the period between the purchase and sale of a security. read more

Investor Shares

Investor shares are mutual fund shares structured for investment by individual investors.  read more

Load

A load is a sales charge commission charged to an investor when buying or redeeming shares in a mutual fund.  read more

Load Fund

Load funds charge fees of less than 1% in order to compensate the broker or fund manager associated with the fund.  read more

Mutual Fund

A mutual fund is a type of investment vehicle consisting of a portfolio of stocks, bonds, or other securities, which is overseen by a professional money manager. read more

Retail Fund

A retail fund is an investment fund with capital invested by individual investors.  read more