Chamber

House Stock Trades

All 435 members of the U.S. House of Representatives are required to disclose stock transactions above $1,000 within 45 days under the STOCK Act. This page aggregates all House disclosures — every reported purchase and sale filed with the House Clerk. House committee assignments in Financial Services, Energy & Commerce, Ways & Means, and Armed Services give members direct oversight of sectors that span the entire stock market.

503

Total House disclosures

40

Representatives trading

47%

% purchases

Most active House members by disclosure count

Most traded tickers in the House

Recent House disclosures

RepresentativeTickerTypeAmount
INTCSale$1,001 - $15,000
GDSale$1,001 - $15,000
GILDPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
CORSale$1,001 - $15,000
EQTPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
CHKPSale$1,001 - $15,000
BDXSale$1,001 - $15,000
AMCRPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
TPRSale$15,001 - $50,000
MSFTSale$1,001 - $15,000
METASale$1,001 - $15,000
LUVSale$1,001 - $15,000
NVDASale$1,001 - $15,000
AAPLSale$1,001 - $15,000
IBMSale$1,001 - $15,000
INTCSale$1,001 - $15,000
GEVSale$1,001 - $15,000
GESale$1,001 - $15,000
XOMSale$1,001 - $15,000
AMZNSale$1,001 - $15,000
GOOGLSale$1,001 - $15,000
MSFTSale$15,001 - $50,000
ACNSale$15,001 - $50,000
TSMPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
AXPPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
AEPPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
LRCXSale$1,001 - $15,000
KRPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
TPurchase$1,001 - $15,000
AMGNPurchase$1,001 - $15,000

Frequently asked questions

Do House members have to disclose their stock trades?

Yes. Under the STOCK Act of 2012, all members of the House of Representatives must publicly disclose any stock transaction over $1,000 within 45 days of execution. Disclosures are filed with the House Clerk and published online.

Which House members trade stocks the most?

Transaction volume varies widely among House members. Members with large personal wealth, professionally managed portfolios, or active individual trading habits generate the most disclosures. Capitol Trader's leaderboard ranks all members by total disclosed transaction count.

Can House members trade stocks while in office?

Yes. The STOCK Act prohibits trading on material non-public information derived from congressional duties, but does not ban representatives from owning or trading individual stocks. As of mid-2026, no legislation banning congressional stock trading has passed.

How does House trading compare to Senate trading?

The House has 435 members versus 100 senators, so raw disclosure volume is higher in the House. However, individual senators often have longer tenures, higher average wealth, and committee assignments that involve more concentrated policy power. Both chambers are subject to the same 45-day disclosure requirement under the STOCK Act.