How to Track Insider Trading in Stocks: Free Tools & Data (2026)

Every source of insider trading data available to retail investors. SEC Form 4 filings, congress trades, dark pool activity, and how to build a systematic tracking workflow.

Congress Stock Trading Ban 2026: Trump Calls for Action, But Don't Hold Your Breath

Trump endorsed a trading ban in the State of the Union. A bipartisan bill has been introduced. Mullin and Pelosi keep making suspicious trades. Here's why nothing will change.

The PELOSI Act: Will Congress Actually Ban Stock Trading?

Where the congressional stock trading ban stands in 2026. The PELOSI Act, STOCK Act loopholes, which members trade the most, and what it means for markets.

This Week's Congress Trades

The latest disclosed congressional stock trades, updated as filings come in. Who bought what, committee context, and what it might signal.

How to Track Congress Stock Trades

A practical guide to finding, reading, and using congressional stock trading disclosures for your own research.

How to Use Congress Trading Data

Congressional trades as a market signal: what the data tells you, what it doesn't, and how to incorporate it into a real strategy.

What Is Options Flow?

How to read unusual options activity and what large block trades tell you about where institutional money is moving.

Best Options Flow Indicators

The metrics that matter when analyzing options flow: volume, open interest, sweep detection, and dark pool correlation.

What Is Dark Pool Trading?

Dark pools explained: how off-exchange trading works, why institutions use them, and what the prints reveal about market direction.

How to Read Dark Pool Prints

A breakdown of dark pool print data: block size, timing, price levels, and how to distinguish signal from noise.

How to Combine Institutional Signals

Layering congressional trades, options flow, and dark pool data into a single framework for stronger conviction trades.

Free Tools for Retail Investors

The best free resources for tracking institutional activity, congressional trades, and unusual market signals.