Congress Stock Trading Tracker

Track stock trades disclosed by members of the U.S. Congress under the STOCK Act. See which politicians are buying and selling, how much they're trading, and how long they wait to disclose.

Also browse: Insider Trading Screeners →

410

Politicians tracked

98,916

Total trades

$1.6B

Total volume

Jun 13

Last updated

Most Active Traders in Congress

Recent Congressional Trades

DATEPOLITICIANTICKERTYPEAMOUNT
Jun 5, 2026James E. BanksPTONSale$1K
Jun 4, 2026Robert E. LattaFMAOPurchase$15K
Jun 4, 2026John McguireDELLSale$1K
Jun 4, 2026John McguireMETAPurchase$1K
Jun 4, 2026Tim MooreTPurchase$50K
Jun 2, 2026Gilbert CisnerosSFTBFPurchase$1K
Jun 1, 2026Tim WalbergFSSLSale$15K
May 29, 2026Gilbert CisnerosWDAYSale$15K
May 29, 2026Gilbert CisnerosTELPurchase$1K
May 29, 2026Gilbert CisnerosTSLAPurchase$1K
May 29, 2026Gilbert CisnerosLGNDPurchase$1K
May 29, 2026Gilbert CisnerosWRBSale$1K
May 29, 2026Gilbert CisnerosTCBIPurchase$1K
May 29, 2026Gilbert CisnerosDASHPurchase$1K
May 29, 2026April Mcclain DelaneyHUBBPurchase$1K
May 29, 2026Maria Elvira SalazarBEPPurchase$1K
May 29, 2026Gilbert CisnerosARQTPurchase$1K
May 29, 2026Gilbert CisnerosBSXPurchase$1K
May 29, 2026Gilbert CisnerosHQYPurchase$1K
May 29, 2026Gilbert CisnerosCIENPurchase$1K

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Congress Stock Trading FAQ

What is the STOCK Act?

The Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act, signed into law in 2012, requires members of Congress and their staff to publicly disclose securities transactions within 45 days. It was designed to combat insider trading by lawmakers who may have access to non-public information through their legislative duties.

Can members of Congress trade stocks?

Yes. Members of Congress are legally allowed to trade stocks, but they must publicly disclose all transactions within 45 days under the STOCK Act. Some legislators have voluntarily placed their assets in blind trusts or divested individual stock holdings, but this is not required by law.

Where does this congressional trading data come from?

We source congressional stock trade disclosures from official STOCK Act filings via the Quiver Quantitative API. These filings are originally submitted to the Clerk of the House or Secretary of the Senate and are public record.

How often is congressional trading data updated?

Our congress trading data is synced daily at 6:00 AM UTC. New disclosures typically appear in our system within 24 hours of being filed. Note that legislators have up to 45 days after a trade to file their disclosure.

What is a disclosure delay?

The disclosure delay is the number of days between when a trade was executed and when it was publicly disclosed via a STOCK Act filing. The law requires disclosure within 45 days, but many members take the full window — or even file late. We track this metric for every trade.

How is this different from SEC insider trading?

SEC Form 4 insider trading covers corporate insiders — officers, directors, and 10%+ shareholders trading their own company's stock. Congressional trading covers elected officials trading any publicly traded stock. We track both on Insider Trading Tracker.