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, guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation (BAC), is offering Contingent Income Auto-Callable Yield Notes linked to the S&P 500® Index with total proceeds of $5,146,000.00. The Notes have a term of approximately four years, minimum denominations of $1,000.00, and an initial estimated value of $988.60 per $1,000.00, which is lower than the public offering price.
Investors may receive a quarterly contingent coupon of $19.625 per $1,000.00 (a rate of 1.9625% per quarter, 7.85% per annum) if on an Observation Date the S&P 500 closing level is at or above the Coupon Barrier of 4,622.09, which is 70.00% of the Starting Value of 6,602.99. Beginning with the November 23, 2026 Call Observation Date, the Notes are automatically called if the index is at or above the Call Value, equal to 100% of the Starting Value, paying $1,000.00 plus the applicable contingent coupon.
If the Notes are not called and, at maturity on November 27, 2029, the S&P 500 Ending Value is below the Threshold Value of 4,622.09, the Redemption Amount is reduced in line with the index decline and may be less than 70% of principal, down to zero, so investors can lose their entire investment. Payments depend on the credit risk of BofA Finance and BAC, exclude S&P 500 dividends, and are subject to complex U.S. tax treatment with potential 30% withholding on contingent coupons for many Non‑U.S. holders.
Bank of America’s BofA Finance unit is offering Contingent Income Issuer Callable Yield Notes linked to the worst performer of three equity indexes: the Nasdaq-100 Technology Sector Index, the Russell 2000 Index and the S&P 500 Index. The 18‑month Notes are issued in $1,000 denominations, with an initial estimated value of $982.00 per $1,000.00 that is below the public offering price.
The Notes pay a monthly contingent coupon of $10.834 per $1,000.00 (a 13.00% annual rate) only if on each Observation Date all three indexes are at or above their Coupon Barriers, set at 70.00% of their respective Starting Values. BofA Finance may redeem the Notes early on specified Call Payment Dates at $1,000.00 per Note plus any due coupon. If held to maturity and the least performing index finishes below its Threshold Value (also 70.00% of its Starting Value), repayment of principal is reduced in line with the index loss, and up to 100% of invested principal can be lost.
All payments depend on the credit of BofA Finance, as issuer, and Bank of America Corporation, as guarantor, and on the performance of the three indexes. The pricing supplement highlights structure, market, conflict, underlying, and tax risks, and explains that internal funding rates, underwriting discounts, referral fees and hedging costs lower the Notes’ economic terms relative to traditional debt.
Bank of America’s BofA Finance is offering 5-year Contingent Income Issuer Callable Yield Notes linked to the least performing of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, Russell 2000 and S&P 500. The Notes pay a monthly contingent coupon of $7.292 per $1,000 (0.7292% per month, 8.75% per year) only if, on each observation date, all three indices are at or above 70% of their respective starting levels. If this condition is not met, no coupon is paid for that month.
The issuer can redeem the Notes in whole on specified monthly call dates at $1,000 per Note plus any due coupon, ending future payments. At maturity, if the Notes have not been called and the least performing index is at or above 70% of its starting value, investors receive $1,000 plus the final coupon; if it is below 70%, repayment of principal is reduced one-for-one with the index loss and can fall to zero. The public offering price is $1,000 per Note, with proceeds of $997.50 to BofA Finance, while the initial estimated value is expected between $934.50 and $974.50 per $1,000.
Bank of America Corporation (BAC), via BofA Finance, is offering approximately 3-year Contingent Income Issuer Callable Yield Notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq-100 Technology Sector Index (NDXT), the Russell 2000 Index (RTY) and the S&P 500 Index (SPX). The public offering price is $1,000 per Note, with an underwriting discount of $7 and proceeds of $993 to BofA Finance. The initial estimated value on the pricing date is expected between $938.10 and $978.10 per $1,000, reflecting internal funding and hedging costs.
The Notes pay a contingent monthly coupon of $8.542 per $1,000 (0.8542% per month, 10.25% per year) only if on each Observation Date all three indices are at or above 70% of their respective starting levels. BofA Finance may redeem the Notes early on specified monthly Call Payment Dates at $1,000 per Note plus any applicable coupon if all indices meet the coupon barrier.
At maturity, if not called, investors receive $1,000 per Note plus a final coupon if the least performing index is at or above 60% of its starting level; if it is below 60%, repayment is reduced in proportion to the index loss and can be as low as zero, so investors can lose up to 100% of principal. All payments are subject to the credit risk of BofA Finance as issuer and BAC as guarantor.
BofA Finance, fully guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation, is offering approximately 3-year Contingent Income Issuer Callable Yield Notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq-100 Technology Sector Index, the Russell 2000 Index and the S&P 500 Index. Each Note has a $1,000 denomination, a public offering price of $1,000, an underwriting discount of $2.50 and proceeds to the issuer of $997.50 per Note.
The Notes pay a contingent coupon of $9.375 per $1,000 (0.9375% monthly, 11.25% per annum) only if on each monthly Observation Date all three indices are at or above 70% of their respective starting levels. BofA Finance may redeem the Notes early on specified monthly Call Payment Dates at $1,000 per Note plus any due contingent coupon.
If the Notes are not called and at maturity the worst-performing index is at or above 70% of its starting level, investors receive $1,000 per Note plus any final contingent coupon. If the worst index finishes below this threshold, principal is reduced in line with the index decline and can fall to zero. The initial estimated value is expected to range from $938.10 to $978.10 per $1,000, reflecting internal funding and hedging costs.
Bank of America’s BofA Finance unit is offering Contingent Income Buffered Issuer Callable Yield Notes linked to the Russell 2000 and S&P 500, with a term of about 2.75 years. The notes are issued at $1,000 per note, with underwriting of $5 and proceeds of $995 to BofA Finance. The initial estimated value on the pricing date is expected between $940 and $990 per $1,000.
Investors can receive contingent monthly coupons of $8.125 per $1,000 (about 0.8125% per month, 9.75% per year) only if on each observation date both indices are at or above 85% of their starting levels. The issuer may redeem the notes early on specified call dates at $1,000 plus any due coupon.
If not called, at maturity investors get back full principal plus the final coupon if the least performing index is at or above its 85% threshold. If it finishes below that level, principal is reduced in line with the index loss and investors can lose up to 85% of their investment. All payments depend on the credit of BofA Finance and the BAC guarantee and the notes do not pay dividends from the underlying indices.
BofA Finance, guaranteed by Bank of America Corporation, is offering approximately 3‑year Contingent Income Issuer Callable Yield Notes linked to the Nasdaq‑100 Technology Sector Index, the Russell 2000 Index and the S&P 500 Index. The Notes pay a contingent coupon of $9.375 per $1,000 (0.9375% per month, 11.25% per year) on monthly Observation Dates only if each index is at or above 70% of its starting level.
The issuer may redeem the Notes early on specified monthly Call Payment Dates at $1,000 per Note plus any due coupon if each index meets its barrier. If the Notes are not called and, at maturity, the least‑performing index is at or above 70% of its starting level, investors receive $1,000 plus any final coupon. If the least‑performing index is below 70%, repayment of principal is reduced in proportion to the index decline, and investors can lose up to their entire investment. All payments depend on the credit of BofA Finance and BAC, and the initial estimated value per $1,000 is expected to be between $938.10 and $978.10, lower than the $1,000 public offering price.
Bank of America (BAC), via BofA Finance, is offering Contingent Income Issuer Callable Yield Notes linked to the least performing of the Russell 2000® Index and the S&P 500® Index. The notes have an approximate 5-year term, with quarterly observation and payment dates. Investors receive a contingent coupon of $16.50 per $1,000 (1.65% per quarter, 6.60% per annum) only if on each observation date both indices are at or above their coupon barriers, set at 55.00% of their respective starting values.
The issuer may redeem the notes early on designated call dates at $1,000 plus any due coupon. If held to maturity and the least performing index ends at or above its 55.00% threshold, principal is repaid with any final coupon; if it finishes below that threshold, repayment is reduced proportionally and investors can lose up to 100% of principal. The initial estimated value is $964.80 per $1,000, below the public offering price, reflecting internal funding and hedging costs. Payments depend on the credit risk of BofA Finance as issuer and BAC as guarantor.
BofA Finance is offering up to $1,104,000 of 2‑year digital return notes linked to the worst performer among Broadcom (AVGO), Intel (INTC) and QUALCOMM (QCOM). Each Note has a $1,000 denomination and pays a fixed Digital Payment of $1,735 per $1,000 (a 73.50% return) if, on the valuation date, the least‑performing stock is at or above its Redemption Barrier, set at 70.00% of its starting price for each stock. If the weakest stock finishes below its Threshold Value at 60.00% of the starting price, repayment drops in line with the stock loss and can fall to zero, meaning up to a 100.00% loss of principal. The initial estimated value is $971.30 per $1,000, reflecting BAC’s internal funding rate, hedging costs and fees, so buyers pay more than this estimated economic value. All payments depend on the credit of BofA Finance and the BAC guarantee.
Bank of America’s BofA Finance unit is offering two-year Contingent Income Issuer Callable Yield Notes linked to the worst performer of three equity indexes: the Nasdaq-100 Technology Sector, the Russell 2000, and the S&P 500. The notes pay a contingent coupon of $9.00 per $1,000 (0.90% monthly, 10.80% per year) on each monthly observation date only if all three indexes stay at or above their coupon barriers, set at 70% of their starting values.
The notes may be called by the issuer on specified monthly call dates at $1,000 plus any due coupon, ending future payments. At maturity, if not called, investors get full principal back only if the worst-performing index is at or above its threshold value, set at 65% of its starting level. If the worst index finishes below its threshold, repayment is reduced in line with that decline and investors can lose up to their entire principal.
The initial estimated value is $974.40 per $1,000, below the public offering price of $1,000, reflecting BAC’s internal funding rate, underwriting discount, referral fees, and hedging-related charges. All payments depend on the credit of BofA Finance as issuer and Bank of America Corporation as guarantor, and investors do not receive any dividends from the underlying indexes.