Welcome to our dedicated page for Dollar Tree SEC filings (Ticker: DLTR), 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.
This page provides access to U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filings for Dollar Tree, Inc. (NASDAQ: DLTR), a Virginia-incorporated value retailer in the retail trade sector. Through these filings, investors can review the company’s official disclosures about its operations, financial condition, capital structure and significant corporate events.
Dollar Tree uses Form 8-K to report material developments, including earnings releases, investor conferences, leadership changes, financing arrangements, share repurchase authorizations and major transactions. Recent 8-K filings describe, among other items, the completion of the sale of the Family Dollar business, approval of a $2.5 billion share repurchase authorization, changes to the company’s commercial paper program, and conference calls to discuss quarterly results.
In addition to current reports, investors typically look to annual reports on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q for detailed discussions of Dollar Tree’s business, risk factors, segment information, and audited or reviewed financial statements. These periodic reports also explain the presentation of continuing and discontinued operations following the Family Dollar sale, and provide context for metrics such as net sales, same-store net sales growth, gross margin, operating income, income from continuing operations and diluted earnings per share.
Other filings may include information on capital markets and liquidity tools, such as the company’s commercial paper program and credit facilities, as well as narrative pro forma financial information illustrating the effects of significant transactions. Governance-related disclosures, including executive appointments and departures, also appear in 8-K items and related exhibits.
On Stock Titan, Dollar Tree filings are supplemented with AI-powered summaries that highlight key points from lengthy documents, helping users quickly identify important changes in performance, capital allocation, financing, or corporate structure. Real-time updates from EDGAR mean new DLTR filings appear promptly, while structured views make it easier to navigate between current reports, periodic reports and other submissions.
Dollar Tree, Inc. (DLTR) has closed the divestiture of its Family Dollar Stores, LLC subsidiary to 1959 Holdings, LLC on 5 July 2025. The transaction, first announced on 25 March 2025, transfers 100% of Family Dollar’s membership interests in exchange for a base cash consideration of $1.0075 billion, subject to customary working-capital and indebtedness adjustments. At closing, $665 million was received; management expects an additional ≈$135 million from net working-capital monetisation, bringing estimated net proceeds to ≈$800 million within 90 days.
Pro forma balance-sheet impact (as if the sale occurred 3 May 2025):
- Total assets decline $4.044 billion to $14.248 billion, driven primarily by elimination of Family Dollar’s $4.603 billion current assets, partially offset by recognised cash proceeds of $681.8 million and reclassification of $103 million intra-group cash.
- Total liabilities fall $4.027 billion to $10.360 billion, mainly from removal of $3.904 billion current liabilities tied to the discontinued operations and a $123 million reduction in taxes payable.
- Total shareholders’ equity contracts modestly by $17 million to $3.888 billion, reflecting the estimated loss on sale.
Pro forma operating impact (continuing operations):
- 13 weeks ended 3 May 2025: Income rises from $313.5 million to $337.1 million (+$23.6 million). EPS increases $0.11 to $1.58 as SG&A falls by $11.6 million (employee costs transferred) and DLTR recognises $19.7 million of service income under a Transition Services Agreement (TSA).
- Fiscal year ended 1 Feb 2025: Income increases $108.7 million to $1.151 billion; basic EPS improves $0.51 to $5.34 (diluted +$0.50). SG&A is $46.4 million lower and TSA income totals $96.5 million.
Strategic and cash-flow considerations: The divestiture simplifies DLTR’s portfolio, injects significant liquidity, reduces leverage, and immediately accretes EPS, albeit at the cost of a small book loss and a smaller asset base. Ongoing TSA fees provide a temporary revenue stream while the buyer transitions operations.
Dollar Tree, Inc. (NASDAQ: DLTR) filed a Form 8-K on July 7, 2025 to furnish a Regulation FD disclosure announcing that it has completed the sale of its Family Dollar business. The company issued a press release (filed as Exhibit 99.1) confirming the transaction’s closing on the same date. No purchase price, buyer identity, or financial impact metrics are included in the filing; those details are expected to be contained in the accompanying press release.
The divestiture marks the formal separation of a banner Dollar Tree acquired in 2015 and signals a strategic shift toward a single-brand, value-retail model. The filing does not treat the information as “filed” for liability purposes under Section 18 of the Exchange Act, indicating that management views this disclosure primarily as informational rather than constituting definitive financial reporting. No other Items of the Form 8-K were triggered, and there are no pro-forma financial statements, adjustments, or forward-looking statements included in the text provided.
Key exhibits are limited to:
- Exhibit 99.1 – Press release announcing completion of the sale.
- Exhibit 104 – Inline XBRL cover page data file.
Because the filing omits terms such as the transaction’s valuation, expected gain or loss, use of proceeds, or guidance revisions, investors must review Exhibit 99.1 or subsequent filings for a complete financial assessment.
On 07/01/2025, Dollar Tree, Inc. (DLTR) filed a Form 4 indicating that director Timothy A. Johnson received 1,477 shares of common stock, coded “A” for acquisition. The shares were issued as the annual director equity award under the company’s shareholder-approved 2021 Omnibus Incentive Plan at a reference price of $101.50 per share. After the grant, Johnson’s direct beneficial ownership rose to 2,153 shares. No dispositions or derivative transactions were reported. The filing reflects routine board compensation rather than a signal of insider conviction, but it marginally tightens management-shareholder alignment and carries no apparent negative implications.