House stock trades
House stock trades — every Representative's disclosed transactions
House stock trades are filed with the Clerk of the House and published as public PDFs — hundreds of members, uneven formats, no unified search. Politician Stock Tracker normalizes those disclosures into profiles for every Representative who reports stock activity, so you can browse House stock trades by name, ticker, or recent filing date.
Representative rankings
Which House members have the top-performing stock trades?
The House has more members than the Senate and more disclosed volume overall. Our rankings score Representatives by estimated return on reported stock purchases — amount-weighted, buy-and-hold, capped at ten years where data allows. Open any House profile for party, district state, trade count, repeat tickers, and performance vs matched S&P 500 buys. House stock trades, organized the way you'd expect a modern tracker to work.
Chamber comparison
House stock trades vs the rest of Congress
House members often file more frequently than Senators simply because there are more of them trading. Hot stocks shows which tickers multiple politicians are buying across Congress — a quick read on whether House stock trades are driving the current names. For upper-chamber activity, see Senate stock trades filed with the Secretary of the Senate.
Live House disclosures
New House stock trades in the recent-trades feed
When a Representative files a periodic transaction report, it lands in our recent-trades card as soon as we ingest it. That's the fastest way to catch fresh House stock trades without refreshing clerk websites. Click any row for the politician's full profile — estimated volume, top holdings, and a performance view on priced buys. Ready for the full picture across both chambers? Try our congress stock tracker.
House stock trades — common questions
Where do House stock trades come from?
From STOCK Act periodic transaction reports filed with the Clerk of the U.S. House of Representatives and published as public records.
Do all Representatives trade stocks?
No. Some file regularly; others report few or no stock transactions. Search a name to see what's on record for that Representative.
How is this different from Senate stock trades?
Same disclosure law, different filing office. House stock trades go to the House clerk; Senate trades go to the Secretary of the Senate. Our profiles tag chamber so you can tell them apart instantly.
Is this investment advice?
No. Public disclosure data for research only. House stock trades can be delayed and reported in dollar ranges, not exact figures.
Browse House stock trades
Search any U.S. Representative and read their full disclosed trade history — buys, sells, and estimated performance.