Welcome to our dedicated page for Audioeye SEC filings (Ticker: AEYE), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
AudioEye, Inc. filings document formal disclosures for a Nasdaq-listed Delaware software company focused on digital accessibility. Recent Form 8-K reports furnish quarterly and annual operating results, preliminary unaudited financial estimates, related press-release exhibits, and Inline XBRL cover-page data.
The filing record also covers governance and executive matters, including officer appointments, board composition changes, and compensatory-arrangement disclosures under Item 5.02. These regulatory documents frame AudioEye's public reporting around results of operations, financial condition, leadership structure, and material events.
AudioEye, Inc. furnished an 8-K to report that it issued a press release announcing its financial results for the fiscal quarter ended September 30, 2025. The press release is included as Exhibit 99.1 to the report.
The company notes that the information in Item 2.02 and Exhibit 99.1 is being furnished, not filed, under the Exchange Act, which affects how it is treated for liability and incorporation by reference into other SEC filings.
James B. Hawkins, a Director of AudioEye, Inc. (AEYE), reported a transaction dated 10/01/2025 acquiring 667 restricted stock units (RSUs) at $0 under the AudioEye, Inc. 2020 Equity Incentive Plan. The RSUs vested on the grant date and will be settled no later than the earlier of the third anniversary of the grant, immediately prior to a change in control (but within 90 days thereafter), or by the end of the calendar year following the year of death. Following this grant, Mr. Hawkins beneficially owns 146,850 shares. The Form 4 was signed by an attorney-in-fact on 10/03/2025.
Katherine E. Fleming, a Director of AudioEye, Inc. (AEYE), reported a non‑derivative transaction on 10/01/2025 showing receipt of 867 restricted stock units (RSUs) granted under the 2020 Equity Incentive Plan. The RSUs are reported with a transaction code indicating a grant (Code A) and a reported price of $0. Following the grant, Ms. Fleming beneficially owns 33,794 shares. The RSUs vested on the grant date and will be settled upon the earlier of the third anniversary of the grant, immediately prior to closing of a change in control (but no later than 90 days after such change), or in the calendar year following death (with payment by year‑end). The Form 4 was signed by an attorney‑in‑fact on 10/03/2025.
Tahir Jamil A., a director of AudioEye, Inc. (AEYE), reported on Form 4 that on 10/01/2025 he was granted 1,400 restricted stock units under the company’s 2020 Equity Incentive Plan that vested on the grant date and will be settled according to the plan’s settlement schedule. After the transaction he directly beneficially owns 131,607 shares. He also reports indirect beneficial ownership of 220,000 shares held through TurnMark Partners L.P., where he is a manager of the general partner. The RSUs were granted at a price of $0 and include standard vesting/settlement terms tied to time, change in control, and death.
Tahir Jamil A., a director of AudioEye, Inc. (AEYE), reported purchases of common stock on September 4 and 5, 2025 that increased his indirect holdings through TurnMark Partners L.P. to 220,000 shares. The filing shows he purchased 12,641 shares on September 4 at a weighted average price of $12.5908 and 12,359 shares on September 5 at a weighted average price of $12.7136. The report identifies the reporting person as a manager of TurnMark Capital LLC, the general partner of TurnMark Partners L.P., and indicates the holdings are indirect. The form is signed by an attorney-in-fact on behalf of the reporting person.
AudioEye, Inc. (AEYE) insider filing shows David Moradi, CEO, Director and 10% owner, reported transactions on 08/20/2025. He disposed of 25,532 shares withheld to cover tax obligations upon RSU vesting and a separate disposal of 50,000 shares representing forfeited performance share awards originally reported in 2020 because performance goals were not met. After these changes, Mr. Moradi directly beneficially owns 1,030,335 shares and indirectly owns 1,864,290 shares through Sero Capital LLC, where he is Managing Partner and may be deemed to direct voting and investment decisions.
AudioEye, Inc. director James B. Hawkins purchased 8,000 shares of the company common stock on 08/18/2025 at a weighted average price of $10.945 per share. After the purchases, Hawkins beneficially owned 146,183 shares. The Form 4 was filed indicating the transactions were reported by a single reporting person and the signature was provided by an attorney-in-fact on 08/19/2025. The filing notes the purchase prices ranged from $10.92 to $10.96 and that Hawkins will provide detailed allocation of shares by price upon SEC or issuer request.
AudioEye reported rising revenue and improving quarterly operating results while funding growth through acquisitions and new debt. Revenue for the three months ended June 30 increased to $9.857 million, up 16% from $8.470 million a year earlier, and six‑month revenue rose 18% to $19.59 million. Annual recurring revenue expanded to approximately $38.2 million, up 14% year‑over‑year. Gross profit grew with revenue, and the company recorded a small operating profit of $242 thousand in the quarter after higher selling and general expenses earlier in the year.
The balance sheet shows strengthening cash of $6.869 million and total assets of $33.9 million, but also higher leverage following a new term loan with $13.401 million principal outstanding. The company completed the ADA Site Compliance acquisition (preliminary consideration ~$7.0 million) and recorded customer relationship intangibles and goodwill that will be amortized, and it used $1.76 million of a $12.5 million share repurchase program. Results show growth in core SaaS revenue and ARR expansion, offset by acquisition‑related amortization, higher operating expenses, and increased debt service needs.