When you read a CNBC headline like "Apple's revenue grew 12% year over year," that number didn't come from a press release. It came from Apple's 10-Q. The 10-Q is the legal filing every public company has to turn in to the SEC every three months. It's where the real numbers live.
Once you know what to look for, reading a 10-Q takes less than 15 minutes - and it's the best way to cut through analyst noise and headlines.
For the bigger picture, you also need to keep up with what's happening across the market each day. That's what we do every morning at Market Briefs - our free daily newsletter that breaks down the biggest stock and market stories in plain English. Subscribe free here.
What a 10-Q Is and Why It Matters
A 10-Q is a short-term financial snapshot covering the last three months of a company's business. The SEC requires it from every public company. They don't get to skip the parts they don't want to share, and they can't lie in it. Doing so is securities fraud, and people go to prison for it.
Compared to a 10-K, which is the annual report, a 10-Q is shorter and unaudited. Unaudited just means a third-party firm hasn't double-checked the numbers yet. The numbers can change a little when the 10-K comes out, but big changes are rare.
So why does this matter? A 10-K only comes once a year. By the time it lands, the data could be 12 months old. A 10-Q tells you what's happening right now.
10-Q vs 10-K: The Key Differences
Most beginners don't know the difference between a 10-Q and a 10-K. Here's the simple breakdown.
A 10-K is annual, audited, longer, and more detailed. It covers the full fiscal year, so it's the most comprehensive view of a business. A 10-Q is quarterly, unaudited, shorter, and more current. It gives you a look at the most recent three months.
Both filings include the three financial statements every investor should know: the balance sheet, the income statement, and the cash flow statement. The 10-K usually has more notes and analysis, while the 10-Q is leaner.
For long-term research, start with the 10-K. For tracking how a stock you own is performing right now, the 10-Q is your tool.
How to Find a 10-Q on SEC EDGAR
The easiest place to find a 10-Q is the SEC's free database called EDGAR. Just Google "SEC EDGAR" and click the sec.gov link.
From there, search the company's name or stock ticker. You'll get a list of every filing they've ever submitted, going back years. Filter by 10-Q to see only the quarterly reports. Click into the most recent one.
You can also find a 10-Q on a company's Investor Relations page. Most public companies have one, usually linked at the top or bottom of their main website. The downside is that every company's IR page looks different, and some are tough to navigate. EDGAR is faster because every company's filings are presented the same way.
What to Look for in a 10-Q
A 10-Q has a lot of pages, and you don't need to read all of them. Focus on the financial statements, which usually live near the front. The key numbers come from the balance sheet, income statement, and cash flow statement.
Revenue and Net Income
Revenue is the company's total sales for the quarter, and it's the first number most investors check. Compare it to the same quarter last year. Growing revenue is a good sign. Slowing or shrinking revenue is a yellow or red flag.
Net income is what's left after expenses, taxes, and other costs. It's the actual profit. A company can grow revenue but still lose money if expenses grow faster, so always check both. (Pros also use earnings per share to break net income down on a per-share basis.)
A real example: Microsoft's 2024 fiscal year had total revenue of about $245 billion and net income of $88 billion. Both were higher than 2023, which means Microsoft's profits were growing alongside its sales.
Cash Flow That Actually Matters
Cash flow shows the actual cash moving in and out of the business. There are three buckets: operating, investing, and financing. Operating cash flow is the most important - it's the cash the core business is generating.
A company can show big paper profits and still run out of cash. That's why pros look at operating cash flow before getting excited about earnings. If profits are up but operating cash is down, something's off. (Free cash flow - the cash left after a company pays its bills and reinvests in its business - is one of the cleanest ways to check this.)
Liabilities and the Balance Sheet
The balance sheet shows what the company owns (assets) and what it owes (liabilities). It's normal for both to grow over time, but you want to see assets growing faster than liabilities.
Liabilities split into two parts: current (due within 12 months) and non-current (due later). A company with rapidly rising current liabilities can run into trouble even if the long-term picture looks fine. The gap between current assets and current liabilities is a number called working capital - one of the cleanest checks on whether a business can pay its short-term bills.
A Real 10-Q Example: Spotting a Growth Stock
In early 2025, CoreWeave filed its first-quarter 10-Q. Revenue jumped from $188 million to over $981 million in one year. That's over 400% year-over-year growth.
How did the stock react? It was up over 250% year-to-date when that filing came out. Investors who read the 10-Q early caught a move before it became mainstream news.
That's the power of the 10-Q. It often shows the story before the headlines catch up. (For more on how to spot fast-growing companies before the crowd, see our breakdown of market disruptors.)
How to Use 10-Qs in Your Research Routine
Reading 10-Qs should be part of every active investor's routine. Pick five stocks you own or are watching closely. Once a quarter, pull each one's latest 10-Q from EDGAR and check three things.
First, did revenue grow compared to the same quarter last year? Second, did net income grow at the same pace, faster, or slower? Third, what does management say about guidance for the rest of the year?
That last part lives in a section called Management Discussion and Analysis, or MD&A. It's where executives explain what's working and what's not. Their tone often matters as much as the numbers. This is also a great place to start if you're learning how to evaluate a company's financial health.
Why the 10-Q Is the Investor's Edge
Most retail investors get their news from headlines, social media, or analyst summaries. That means they're reading someone else's interpretation of the data. The 10-Q is the source.
Going to the source gives you two advantages. You see the full picture instead of cherry-picked highlights, and you spot moves earlier. Journalists and analysts pull from these filings, so by the time they publish, the data is already a few days old.
That edge is small, but it adds up over years. It's the same edge value investors have used for decades.
Your Next Step With 10-Qs
Pick a company you own or want to own. Pull its latest 10-Q from EDGAR right now. Compare revenue, net income, and operating cash flow to the same quarter last year.
If you've never done this before, take 15 minutes and just walk through the financials. The terms will make more sense the second time. (If you hit a word you don't know, our 77+ stock market terms guide translates the jargon into plain English.) By the third 10-Q you read, the patterns start to jump out.
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