Most retail investors have never heard of EDGAR. That's wild, because it's one of the most useful tools you can use as an active investor. It's also free.
EDGAR is the system the SEC uses to collect, validate, index, and store every document public companies are legally required to file. The key word is required - companies don't get to choose what they share. Federal law mandates what they report and when.
In our daily Market Briefs newsletter, we use EDGAR to dig up the data that drives our coverage of stocks, sectors, and market shifts. You can use the same tool. Here's how.
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Why SEC EDGAR Matters for Investors
When a journalist writes that "Microsoft's operating margins improved to 42%," they pulled that number from EDGAR. Same goes for analyst reports, Reddit posts, and Bloomberg headlines. EDGAR is where the original data comes from.
Going straight to the source gives you two real advantages. You see the full picture instead of someone else's summary, and you can dig into the parts that matter for your specific question - whether that's how to evaluate a company's financial health or how to value a stock from scratch.
There's another reason EDGAR matters. Companies can spin things on their Investor Relations page or in press releases, but they can't lie in SEC filings. That's securities fraud. The SEC takes it seriously, and so do companies.
How to Use SEC EDGAR in 3 Steps
The basic search is simple. Once you've done it once, you'll never forget it.
Step 1: Open the EDGAR Search Page
Just Google "SEC EDGAR" and click the sec.gov link. On the homepage, find the menu on the right and click Search Filings.
You can also go straight to sec.gov/edgar. Either way works.
Step 2: Search by Company Name or Ticker
In the search bar, type the company's name or stock ticker. For example, type RIVN to pull up Rivian, or just type "Rivian" if you don't know the ticker.
EDGAR shows a list of every filing the company has ever submitted, in chronological order. You'll see a lot of forms, sorted by most recent.
Step 3: Filter by Form Type
This is where EDGAR gets powerful. You can filter the long list by specific form types. Want only annual reports? Filter for 10-K. Want only quarterly reports? Filter for 10-Q. Want big events? Filter for 8-K.
Click into the form you want, and you'll see the actual filing - usually as a long PDF or HTML document. Item 8 on a 10-K is where the full financials live.
The Most Important SEC Filings for Investors
EDGAR holds dozens of form types, but four of them cover most of what investors need.
10-K: The Annual Report
The 10-K is the annual, audited financial report. It's the most complete view of a company. Audited means an outside firm has checked the numbers, so you can trust them.
A 10-K includes the three financial statements (balance sheet, income statement, cash flow statement), management's analysis, risk factors, and notes. It's longer than a 10-Q but more detailed.
10-Q: The Quarterly Report
The 10-Q is the shorter, unaudited version filed every three months. It gives you the most recent view of a business between annual reports.
For growth stocks especially, you want to track 10-Qs because revenue and earnings can move fast. Waiting for the 10-K means waiting up to a year.
8-K: Big Events
An 8-K gets filed whenever something material happens - a CEO change, a merger announcement, a major lawsuit, an earnings preview, or anything else investors should know.
Want to see the last six months of 8-Ks for a company? Easy. EDGAR lets you filter by date range and form type at the same time.
Form 4: Insider Trading
Form 4 shows when company executives and major shareholders buy or sell their own stock. Insider buying can be a positive signal. Insider selling isn't always negative, since executives often sell to fund their lifestyles, but a wave of selling can be a yellow flag.
EDGAR also stores prospectuses (the document a company files when it launches a new fund or goes public via IPO).
Advantages of Using SEC EDGAR
There are three big reasons EDGAR beats other research sources.
First, it's the official source. Companies legally cannot lie. Press releases can be optimistic, IR pages can spin, but SEC filings are the legal record.
Second, it's easily searchable across all filing types. You can compare the last five annual reports of a company, see every insider trade in the past year, or pull every 8-K to track major events. That kind of view is hard to get anywhere else.
Third, it gives you a long historical snapshot. You can go back years - even decades for some companies - and see how the business has evolved. How did debt levels change after a recession? How did revenue mix shift after an acquisition? EDGAR shows you.
How to Find a 10-K on EDGAR (Real Example)
Let's say you want Microsoft's most recent 10-K.
Open EDGAR. Search "Microsoft" or the ticker MSFT. Click into the company filings page. Filter by 10-K. Click the most recent one, and you're in.
Total time: under a minute.
You could also Google "Microsoft 10-K" and find it on the company's Investor Relations page. Both work, but EDGAR is faster because every company looks the same. Some IR pages are clean, others are nearly impossible to navigate. EDGAR removes that friction.
Common Mistakes Beginners Make on SEC EDGAR
Most beginners stumble on the same things. Avoid these.
Skipping the 10-K when you have the 10-Q. The 10-Q is more current, but the 10-K is more complete. Read both - the 10-K once a year, and the 10-Q each quarter. Reading only the press release. EDGAR also stores the original press releases (Form 8-K), but the actual filing has more detail. Always click into the filing itself, not just the headline summary. Ignoring the historical view. Comparing one year's numbers to the next is good. Comparing across five or ten years is better - it shows the trend.
If you're brand new to all of this, start with our stock market beginner's guide and our list of 77+ stock market terms in plain English to get your bearings before diving into filings.
Use SEC EDGAR Like a Pro
Pick three companies you own or want to buy. Pull each one's latest 10-K and 10-Q on EDGAR. Compare last year's revenue to this year's. Then check the most recent 8-K to see what big events the company has reported lately.
Doing this once a quarter on the stocks you own builds your edge. You'll catch problems before headlines do, and you'll spot opportunities before the crowd.
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