Welcome to our dedicated page for Bank of America SEC filings (Ticker: BAC), 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.
The Bank of America Corporation (BAC) SEC filings page provides access to the company’s official disclosures filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. As a large financial institution with common stock and multiple series of preferred stock and related depositary shares listed on the New York Stock Exchange, Bank of America files a wide range of documents that detail its financial condition, capital structure, and material corporate events.
Among the most closely watched filings are the company’s periodic reports and earnings-related Form 8-Ks, which announce quarterly and annual results, summarize net income and other key metrics, and reference accompanying press releases, presentation materials, and supplemental financial information. These filings also describe investor conference calls and webcasts where management discusses performance and other matters related to the corporation.
Bank of America’s filings further outline its registered securities, including common stock under the BAC ticker and numerous preferred stock series and hybrid income term securities, each with its own trading symbol. Other 8-Ks address topics such as changes in accounting methods for certain equity investments, the issuance of new preferred stock series and related depositary shares, and authorizations of common stock repurchase programs and dividends.
On this page, users can review Bank of America’s SEC filings as they are made available from EDGAR. AI-powered tools can assist by summarizing lengthy documents, highlighting important sections in 10-K and 10-Q reports, and making it easier to understand disclosures about capital, preferred stock terms, and other regulatory information that shapes the BAC investment profile.
BofA Finance LLC, fully guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation, is offering Contingent Income Issuer Callable Yield Notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500 Indexes, maturing February 1, 2029.
The Notes pay a contingent coupon of 7.50% per annum (0.625% monthly) only when each index is at or above 70% of its starting level on the observation date, and are callable monthly at the issuer’s option starting July 31, 2026 at par plus any due coupon. If held to maturity and any index has fallen more than 30% from its starting level, repayment of principal is reduced 1:1 with the loss in the worst-performing index, up to a complete loss of the $1,000 principal.
The Notes are unsecured obligations subject to the credit risk of BofA Finance and Bank of America, will not be listed on any exchange, and have an initial estimated value between $900 and $950 per $1,000, below the public offering price of $1,000.
BofA Finance LLC, fully guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation, is offering Contingent Income (with Memory Feature) Issuer Callable Yield Notes linked to the iShares Semiconductor ETF (SOXX), with an expected term of about five years, maturing on January 28, 2031.
The notes pay monthly contingent coupons of $8.875 per $1,000 principal when SOXX’s observation value is at least 75% of its starting value, with a memory feature that can make up missed coupons when the barrier is later met. Starting January 28, 2027, the issuer may redeem the notes monthly at par plus any applicable coupon.
If not called and SOXX’s ending value is at least 50% of the starting value, investors receive full principal at maturity plus any final contingent coupon. If SOXX falls more than 50%, repayment is reduced 1:1 with the decline, and up to 100% of principal can be lost.
All payments depend on the credit of BofA Finance and BAC. The initial estimated value is expected between $940 and $990 per $1,000, below the public offering price, reflecting internal funding rates, underwriting discounts and hedging costs. The notes will not be listed on any securities exchange.
BofA Finance LLC, fully guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation, is offering Contingent Income Issuer Callable Yield Notes linked to the worst performer of the Russell 2000, S&P 500 and Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLK). Each Note has a $1,000 denomination, an expected issue date of February 11, 2026 and a scheduled maturity on February 11, 2030, unless called earlier.
The Notes pay monthly contingent coupons only if on an Observation Date all three underlyings are at or above 75% of their starting value. The coupon uses a “memory” formula based on $8.959 per prior payment date, so missed coupons can be partially made up when barriers are later met. Starting February 11, 2027, the issuer may call the Notes monthly at $1,000 plus any due coupon.
If the Notes are not called and the worst underlying finishes below 70% of its starting value, principal is reduced 1:1 with the loss in that underlying, up to a total loss. The public offering price is $1,000 per Note, with an underwriting discount up to $10 and proceeds to the issuer of $990. The initial estimated value is expected between $920 and $970 per $1,000, and all payments are subject to the credit risk of BofA Finance and BAC.
BofA Finance LLC, fully guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation, is issuing $1,569,000 of market-linked notes tied to the common stock of Uber Technologies, Inc. These notes run to January 25, 2029, unless automatically called earlier.
Investors may receive quarterly contingent coupons with a “memory” feature. For each $1,000 note, the coupon on any payment date equals $25.00 times the number of elapsed payment dates minus all prior coupons, but is paid only if Uber’s stock on the relevant observation date is at least 60% of the $84.26 starting value ($50.56).
Beginning July 21, 2026, the notes are automatically called if Uber’s stock is at or above its starting value on a call observation date, returning $1,000 plus the applicable contingent coupon. If the notes are not called and Uber ends below 60% of the starting value at maturity, repayment is reduced 1:1 with the stock decline and up to 100% of principal can be lost. The initial estimated value is $973.30 per $1,000, below the $1,000 public offering price, reflecting internal funding and hedging costs. All payments depend on the credit of BofA Finance and Bank of America.
BofA Finance LLC, fully guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation, is issuing $1,250,000 of Contingent Income Issuer Callable Yield Notes linked to the least performing of the Russell 2000 Index and the S&P 500 Index, maturing on January 7, 2028.
The notes pay a contingent coupon of 8.35% per year (2.0875% quarterly) only if, on each observation date, both indices close at or above 70% of their starting levels
Beginning January 26, 2027, BofA Finance may redeem the notes quarterly at par plus any due coupon. If the notes are not called and either index finishes more than 30% below its starting level at maturity, investors are exposed to 1:1 downside in the weaker index, with up to a total loss of principal; otherwise, principal is repaid, plus a final coupon if the 70% barrier is met.
The initial estimated value is $982.70 per $1,000, below the public offering price, reflecting internal funding and hedging costs. Payments depend on the credit of BofA Finance and Bank of America and the notes will not be listed on any exchange.
BofA Finance LLC, fully guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation, is issuing $692,000 of Contingent Income (with Memory Feature) Auto-Callable Yield Notes maturing in January 2028, linked to the S&P 500 Index, VanEck Gold Miners ETF and VanEck Oil Services ETF.
The notes can pay quarterly contingent coupons of $26 per $1,000 when all three underlyings stay at or above 50% of their starting values, with missed coupons potentially paid later under the “memory” feature. Beginning July 2026, the notes auto-call quarterly at par plus coupon if all underlyings are at or above 100% of their starting values.
If the notes are not called and any underlying ends below 50% of its starting value, principal is exposed 1:1 to the decline of the worst performer, up to a total loss. The initial estimated value is $978.50 per $1,000, below the public offering price, and the notes are unsecured, subject to BofA Finance and BAC credit risk, and will not be listed on any exchange.
BofA Finance LLC, fully guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation, is offering Contingent Income Auto-Callable Yield Notes linked to the Nasdaq-100 Technology Sector Index and the Russell 2000 Index, maturing August 10, 2027. The notes have an approximate 18‑month term and pay a contingent coupon of 11.14% per annum (0.9284% per month) when, on a monthly Observation Date, both indices are at or above 75% of their respective starting levels.
Beginning with the August 5, 2026 Call Observation Date, the notes are automatically called if both indices are at or above 100% of their starting levels, returning principal plus the applicable contingent coupon. If the notes are not called and the worst‑performing index finishes below 75% of its starting level at maturity, investors are exposed to 1:1 downside in that index and can lose up to all principal. The notes are unsecured, subject to the credit risk of BofA Finance and BAC, will not be listed on any exchange, and have an initial estimated value between $940 and $990 per $1,000 face amount.
BofA Finance LLC, fully guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation, is offering $500,000 of Enhanced Return Notes linked to an unequally weighted basket of five equity indices: EURO STOXX 50® (50%), Nikkei 225® (20%), FTSE® 100 (10%), Swiss Market Index (10%) and S&P®/ASX 200 (10%). The Notes price at $1,000 each and have an approximate 5‑year term, maturing on January 24, 2031.
At maturity, if the basket’s ending value is above its 100 starting level, investors receive 155% of the basket’s gain. If the ending value is between 70% and 100% of the starting value, investors receive only their principal back. If it falls below 70%, repayment is reduced 1:1 with the loss in the basket and up to the entire principal can be lost.
The Notes pay no periodic interest, are unsecured senior obligations of BofA Finance, fully and unconditionally guaranteed by BAC, and will not be listed on any exchange. The initial estimated value is $945.10 per $1,000, below the public offering price, reflecting internal funding and hedging costs, and the offering includes an underwriting discount of up to $31 per $1,000.
BofA Finance LLC, fully guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation, is offering 10.70% Issuer Callable Daily Range Accrual Notes linked to the 10-year Constant Maturity Treasury (CMT) rate, maturing on July 27, 2032. These unsecured senior notes pay quarterly interest based on how often the CMT rate stays between 0.00% and 4.60%; the effective annual rate is the 10.70% base rate multiplied by the fraction of days the CMT rate is within that range, capped at 10.70% and floored at 0.00%.
The notes can be called at par plus accrued interest on quarterly payment dates from January 27, 2027 through April 27, 2032, which would end all future interest. Investors receive principal at maturity if the notes are not redeemed, but may receive little or no interest if the CMT rate remains outside the accrual range. The notes are not FDIC insured, are subject to the credit risk of both BofA Finance and Bank of America, may have limited or no secondary market, and their tax treatment is complex, generally intended to be treated as variable rate debt instruments.
BofA Finance LLC, fully guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation, is issuing $16,997,000 of Buffered Digital Return Notes linked to the least performing of the S&P 500 Futures Excess Return Index, the Utilities Select Sector SPDR ETF and the iShares Russell 2000 Value ETF. These approximately 12‑month notes pay a fixed $1,080 per $1,000 at maturity (an 8% return) if every underlying finishes at or above 75% of its starting level. If any underlying falls more than 25%, principal is reduced on a leveraged basis, with up to a 100% loss of invested amount based on the worst performer. The notes pay no interest, will not be listed on an exchange, and are unsecured obligations subject to the credit risk of BofA Finance and BAC. The public offering price is $1,000 per note, with an initial estimated value of about $990, reflecting dealer discounts, referral fees and hedging costs.