SEC Form 5 — A Complete Guide
1. What Is SEC Form 5?
SEC Form 5 is the Annual Statement of Beneficial Ownership. It is a "cleanup" filing used to report any transactions or holdings that should have been reported earlier in the year but weren't, or those that are eligible for deferred reporting.
While Form 4 is for immediate updates, Form 5 ensures that the SEC’s records are accurate at the close of the company's fiscal year.
In practice, Form 5 = The Year-End Audit.
It captures "small" transactions or accidental omissions from the prior 12 months.
2. When Is Form 5 Required?
Not every insider needs to file a Form 5. It is only required if:
- Reporting was deferred: Certain small acquisitions or exempt transactions don't require an immediate Form 4.
- Reporting was missed: The insider failed to file a required Form 4 during the fiscal year.
- Specific Exemptions apply: Such as gifts or certain stock dividend distributions.
Filing Deadline (Strict)
- Within 45 days after the end of the issuer's fiscal year.
- Unlike Form 4 (2 days) or Form 3 (10 days), this is a once-a-year obligation.
3. Who Files Form 5?
Form 5 is filed by the same group of Section 16 insiders:
- Officers (CEO, CFO, etc.)
- Directors
- 10% Beneficial Owners
If an insider had no reportable transactions during the year and no missed filings, they are generally not required to file Form 5.
4. What Does Form 5 Disclose?
Form 5 looks almost identical to Form 4, but the data represents a "look-back" over the year. It answers:
- What transactions were exempt from Form 4 reporting?
- What transactions were accidentally missed during the year?
- What is the insider's total ownership balance at fiscal year-end?
5. High-Level Structure of Form 5
The layout mirrors Form 4 to maintain consistency in data entry.
Form 5
├── Part I: Non-Derivative Securities (Common Stock)
├── Part II: Derivative Securities (Options, RSUs)
└── Signature & Compliance Notes
6. Key Disclosures: What Goes on Form 5?
Small Acquisitions
Transactions involving less than $10,000 in a six-month period can often be deferred to Form 5 rather than reported immediately on Form 4.
Gifts and Inheritances
Bona fide gifts of stock (giving or receiving) are typically reported on Form 5.
Correction of Errors
If an insider realized they forgot to report a sale or purchase earlier in the year, they use Form 5 to admit the late filing and correct the record.
7. Form 3 vs. Form 4 vs. Form 5
This table illustrates the hierarchy of the Section 16 reporting system.
| Form | Purpose | Timing |
|---|
| Form 3 | Initial "Onboarding" | Within 10 days of becoming insider |
| Form 4 | Ongoing Changes | Within 2 business days of transaction |
| Form 5 | Annual Reconciliation | 45 days after fiscal year-end |
8. Why Investors Care About Form 5
For investors, Form 5 is a compliance health check:
- Identifies "Late" Filers: Frequent use of Form 5 to report missed trades can be a red flag regarding a company's internal controls or an insider's attention to detail.
- Captures Hidden Dilution: It reveals gifts and small transfers that might otherwise fly under the radar.
- Total Balance Confirmation: It provides the "final word" on how many shares an insider actually holds at the start of the new year.
9. Common Pitfalls
- The "No Filing" Assumption: Many insiders assume they don't need a Form 5 if they filed Form 4s all year. However, if a gift was made, a Form 5 is still technically required.
- Waiting too long: Because the 45-day window falls after the busy fiscal year-end, it is often overlooked by administrative teams.
10. Practical Takeaways
- Form 5 is the final safety net of the SEC reporting system.
- It is the primary place to find stock gifts.
- A "clean" year (no Form 5 filed) usually means the insider stayed 100% current with their Form 4 obligations.