Congress stock trades

Search politician stock trades — senators, House & OGE

Browse every politician in our database with reported stock trades. Search by name, filter by party or chamber, and open any profile for recent trades, top stocks, and performance from STOCK Act filings.

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Sorted by trading activity and profile completeness

FAQ

Questions about searching politician stock trades

How to find Congress members, what each profile includes, and where the disclosure data comes from.

Use the search bar to look up any senator, representative, or executive branch filer by name or state. You can also browse the full directory and filter by party (Democrat or Republican) or chamber (House, Senate, or OGE). Click any profile to open that politician's full stock tracker with their trade history, top stocks, and performance.

This directory lists every politician and public official in our database who has filed stock trades under the STOCK Act — typically U.S. senators, House representatives, and senior executive branch officials who report through the Office of Government Ethics (OGE). Each card shows how many stock trades they have reported and their most recent activity.

Yes. Use the Party filter to show only Democrats or Republicans, and the Chamber filter to narrow results to the House, Senate, or OGE executive branch filers. You can combine filters with a name search — for example, finding a specific senator or all House members from a particular party.

Each profile is a dedicated stock tracker page for one politician. It includes their recent stock buys and sells, top stock picks, trading timeline, performance on reported purchases, and other insights derived from their public disclosure filings. The directory is the starting point; the profile is where you dig into the full history.

Yes. Congressional trades come from House and Senate financial disclosure systems. Executive branch trades come from OGE Form 278-T filings. All of it is organized in one searchable directory so you do not need to know which filing system a politician uses before you search.

By default, politicians with the most stock trading activity and the most complete profiles appear first. That means filers with more reported trades, recent activity, and richer data surface at the top. When you search by name, exact matches are prioritized, then results are ranked by activity.

All data comes from public financial disclosure filings required under the STOCK Act — the same reports politicians and senior officials must file when they buy or sell stocks and other securities. We do not use private tips, broker data, or unverified sources.

We update profiles as new disclosure filings are published and processed. Politicians are not required to report trades in real time, so there is often a delay between a trade and when it appears in a public filing. Trade counts and last-trade dates refresh as new reports are indexed.