Welcome to our dedicated page for Essential Properties Realty Trust SEC filings (Ticker: EPRT), 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.
Essential Properties Realty Trust filings document the formal disclosures of an internally managed net lease REIT focused on primarily single-tenant properties leased to service-oriented and experience-based businesses. Its 8-K reports furnish quarterly earnings releases, investor presentations and supplemental information covering operating results, portfolio activity, leverage, liquidity and REIT performance measures.
The company’s filings also record common stock offerings, underwriting and forward sale agreements, dividend declarations, Regulation FD materials, and governance disclosures. Proxy materials address board matters, shareholder voting, executive compensation and related governance practices, while material-event amendments cover executive employment arrangements and other corporate updates.
Essential Properties, L.P. proposes $400.0 million of 5.400% senior notes due December 1, 2035, guaranteed by Essential Properties Realty Trust, Inc. Interest accrues from August 21, 2025 and is payable semi-annually beginning December 1, 2025. Net proceeds are intended to repay outstanding borrowings under the operating partnership's revolving credit facility (which had $365.0 million outstanding as of August 13, 2025) and for general corporate purposes, including future investment activity. The notes are senior unsecured obligations of the operating partnership and the guarantee is senior unsecured of the guarantor, each effectively subordinated to secured indebtedness and certain liabilities of subsidiaries. The indenture includes customary covenants, limitations on debt and maintenance of unencumbered asset ratios, optional redemption provisions, and no change-of-control protection for noteholders. There is no current public market for the notes and underwriters may act as market makers but are not obligated to maintain a market.