A live feed of every stock trade disclosed by members of the U.S. Congress under the STOCK Act. The most recent disclosure was filed 12 JUL 2026. Quantellect tracks 13,367 trades worth $898.9M by 128 members across 1,180 companies (10 buys and 15 sells on this page). Filter by type, party, chamber, sector, or trade size, or open the member leaderboard ranked by BW Score.
About congressional stock trades
Every U.S. Senator and Representative has to report their stock trades within 45 days under the 2012 STOCK Act, and this page pulls all of those disclosures into one live feed. Right now that covers 13,367 trades by 128 members across 1,180 companies, worth $898.9M in disclosed value. Each row shows who traded, the company, when they traded versus when they actually filed, the disclosed dollar range, and how the stock has moved since. You can filter by party, committee, sector, security type, or trade size, sort by date or size, and open any trade, any member, or the member leaderboard to dig deeper.
Frequently asked questions
How do I track Congress stock trades?
This page tracks every stock trade that members of Congress disclose under the STOCK Act, and it updates as new filings come in. Each row shows the member, the company and ticker, the trade and filing dates, the disclosed dollar range, and how the price has moved since. Search or filter to follow a specific member, company, sector, or party.
What is congressional stock trading?
Congressional stock trading is members of the U.S. Congress, along with their spouses and dependent children, buying and selling stocks and other securities. Under the 2012 STOCK Act, every covered transaction has to be disclosed publicly in a periodic transaction report within 45 days. Quantellect pulls those filings together into the searchable feed on this page.
Can members of Congress trade stocks?
Yes. Members of Congress, along with their spouses and dependent children, are legally allowed to buy and sell individual stocks. The 2012 STOCK Act does not ban trading; it just requires that each transaction be disclosed within 45 days, and it bars trading on material non-public information they gain through their office. This page tracks the disclosures that result.
Did Congress ban stock trading?
No. As of 2026, members of Congress can still trade individual stocks, and the 2012 STOCK Act calls for disclosure rather than an outright ban. Several bills to restrict or prohibit the practice, such as the TRUST in Congress Act, have been introduced in recent sessions, but none has become law yet. Until that changes, congressional trades stay legal and publicly disclosed, which is exactly what this page tracks.
Are Congress stock trades public?
Yes. The 2012 STOCK Act requires every member of Congress, plus their spouse and dependent children, to publicly file each covered transaction in a periodic transaction report. Quantellect gathers those filings into this one searchable feed.
How quickly must a member of Congress disclose a stock trade?
Within 45 days of the transaction. The reporting delay shown on each row is the gap between the trade date and the disclosure date, so you can see how long a trade stayed private before it became public.
What do the trade size ranges mean?
Members do not report an exact amount. The STOCK Act lets them disclose each trade as a dollar range instead, for example $1,001 to $15,000, and the size column shows that range. Any total volume figure uses the midpoint of each range as an estimate.
How can I follow or copy a politician's trades?
Search or filter the feed by a member's name to see only their disclosed trades, then open their profile for their full history and BW Score. Keep in mind this is historical disclosure data that arrives on a delay, not investment advice or a recommendation to trade.
Which members of Congress are the best stock traders?
Quantellect ranks members by their BW Score on the politicians leaderboard, a 0 to 100 measure of how well their disclosed stock purchases have actually performed. Nancy Pelosi currently holds the #1 BW Score.
Not investment advice. Congressional trading data is sourced from public STOCK Act disclosures, which are filed with a delay and may contain errors or be revised. Estimated prices and post-trade returns are derived algorithmically from public filings and end-of-day market data and describe historical activity, not a recommendation. Always do your own research and consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions.