Congressional Stock Trading

The STOCK Act requires every member of Congress to disclose stock trades within 45 days. Integrity Index aggregates those disclosures so you can see who is trading, what they are buying and selling, the size of each transaction, and which trades happened around relevant committee hearings or legislation.

Browse the latest reported transactions, the largest holdings on Capitol Hill, and the members with the most active trading desks. Stock-price data is provided by Quiver Quantitative.

What you can do here

Filter trades by member, ticker, transaction type (buy / sell / exchange), party, chamber, or committee assignment. Click through to a member profile to see their full holdings and trading history, or to a company page to see every member of Congress trading that stock.

  • Public companies traded by Congress
  • Track Congressional stock trades
  • Members of Congress
  • 2026 candidates
  • Most-traded politicians

Why it matters

Members of Congress routinely vote on legislation that affects companies in their personal portfolios. Studies have repeatedly found that Congressional stock-trading returns outperform the broader market. Tracking these trades is a baseline accountability function — and a leading indicator for potential conflicts of interest.