Welcome to our dedicated page for Healthy Choice Wellness SEC filings (Ticker: HCWC), 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.
Healthy Choice Wellness Corp. filings document the company’s public-company reporting, capital structure, and governance as a natural and organic grocery holding company. Its SEC record includes registration materials, current reports, and proxy filings that describe Class A common stock, Series A Convertible Preferred Stock, and securities issued in private transactions.
Material-event filings cover exchange agreements involving company indebtedness, unregistered issuances of Class A common stock, preferred-stock financing, and amendments affecting security-holder rights. Proxy materials and related 8-K disclosures document annual meeting proposals, board elections, auditor ratification, stockholder voting results, and other governance matters.
Healthy Choice Wellness Corp. entered into an Exchange Agreement with certain noteholders to swap $2,000,000 of note principal for shares of its Class A common stock. The exchange price will equal the closing bid price on the trading day prior to closing, and the exchange date will be set by mutual agreement between the company and the holders.
The notes being exchanged were issued under the Loan and Security Agreement dated July 18, 2024. A form of the Exchange Agreement is filed as Exhibit 10.1.
Healthy Choice Wellness Corp. (HCWC) filed its Q3 2025 report, showing higher sales but continued losses as the company scales its grocery and wellness platform. Q3 sales were $19,039,927, up from the prior-year period, with gross profit of $7,391,629 and an operating loss of $609,422. Other expenses, including interest and a loss on debt extinguishment, brought net loss to $1,224,139 for the quarter. For the nine months, sales reached $59,499,512 and net loss was $2,275,908.
Liquidity reflects mixed trends: cash and cash equivalents were $3,000,387 and operating cash flow turned positive at $1,851,134 for the nine months. The balance sheet shows total liabilities of $27,817,598 and stockholders’ equity of $5,913,747. Debt, net of discounts and costs, was $8,465,277, and operating lease liabilities totaled $11,504,215 (current and long-term). The company recorded a $2,063,991 inventory write-down year to date.
HCWC closed a $3.25 million Series A preferred raise and discloses $10.0 million in binding equity commitments tied to prior agreements. Supplier concentration remains notable, led by KeHe. Shares outstanding were 15,065,750 as of October 17, 2025.
Healthy Choice Wellness Corp. (HCWC) reported interim results for the quarter ended June 30, 2025. The company recorded approximately $1.1 million of net losses for the six-month period while generating about $2.2 million of cash from operations and maintaining positive working capital of $1.3 million. Liquidity through June 30, 2025 was supported by proceeds from an IPO, a $3.25 million closed Series A convertible preferred offering and financing agreements with private lenders, with an additional $10.0 million in committed Series A proceeds. HCWC closed a $7.5 million loan facility (12% interest) and used $4.2 million to acquire GreenAcres Market; related vendor notes and acquisition consideration are disclosed. Total debt, net of discounts, was presented at approximately $11.34 million. The company recorded non-cash items including inventory write-downs and amortization, and reported basic/diluted net loss per share in the periods shown (e.g., $(0.03) to $(0.14)). Management concluded no substantial doubt about going concern given committed financing.
Healthy Choice Wellness Corp. (HCWC) filed a Form S-8 with the SEC to register 2,626,968 shares of its Class A common stock for issuance under the company’s 2024 Equity Incentive Plan. The plan, approved by the board and shareholders on 21 Aug 2024, permits grants of stock options, stock appreciation rights, restricted stock and other equity awards to directors, employees and consultants.
The registration statement is administrative—no new funds are raised; it only covers share issuance for compensation. HCWC qualifies as both an emerging growth company and a smaller reporting company, allowing scaled disclosure. Standard indemnification language, undertakings and incorporation-by-reference of the company’s prior 10-K, 10-Q and 8-Ks are included. Exhibits comprise charter documents, the equity plan, legal opinions (Cozen O’Connor) and auditor consents (Marcum LLP, UHY LLP).
- Potential dilution if all registered shares are issued.
- Strengthens employee retention and alignment with shareholder interests.
- No immediate impact on cash flow or earnings.
Healthy Choice Wellness Corp. (NYSE American: HCWC) filed an 8-K announcing a debt-for-equity exchange. On 15 Jul 2025 the company entered into an Exchange Agreement with certain noteholders to convert $1.0 million of principal outstanding under its July 2024 Credit Agreement into 2.5 million Class A common shares priced at the 14 Jul 2025 closing bid of $0.40. After the transaction, $5.375 million of principal remains outstanding under the facility.
The shares were issued privately under Securities Act exemptions (Section 3(a)(9) and/or Reg D); no commissions were paid. The company attached the form of Exchange Agreement as Exhibit 10.1. No other material events, financial results or pro-forma data were disclosed.
Implications: The exchange lowers leverage by roughly 16% of the original $6.375 million debt but increases the outstanding share count, causing dilution. Cash is preserved because no cash repayment was required. Remaining indebtedness and associated obligations persist.
Healthy Choice Wellness Corp. (HCWC) has filed a Form S-1 to register the resale of 2,355,072 Class A shares issuable upon conversion of 3,250 Series A Convertible Preferred shares that were sold in a private placement on 24 June 2025. The selling stockholders—Hal & Allison Mintz, the 2021 Mintz Family Trust and Anson Investments Master Fund—will receive all sale proceeds; the company will receive none. Full conversion would expand the public float from 12.6 million to 14.9 million shares, creating immediate dilution.
HCWC operates a multi-brand platform of natural and organic grocery stores—including Ada’s Natural Market, Paradise Health & Nutrition, Mother Earth’s Storehouse, Greens Natural Foods, Ellwood Thompson’s and GreenAcres Market—plus the e-commerce site TheVitaminStore.com. Operations span New York, New Jersey, Virginia, Florida, Kansas and Oklahoma, positioning the company in a growing segment focused on health-conscious consumers.
Classified as both an Emerging Growth Company and a Smaller Reporting Company, HCWC may provide reduced disclosures and faces lower Sarbanes-Oxley compliance costs. It intends to trade on the NYSE American exchange under the ticker “HCWC”.
Capital structure & liquidity: On 18 July 2024 the company arranged a $7.5 million, three-year Acquisition Loan at 12 % to fund its purchase of GreenAcres Market; $6.2 million principal remains outstanding as of 30 June 2025. The debt is secured by substantially all corporate assets and requires stepped repayments over the next two years.
Supply-chain concentration: United Natural Foods (UNFI) represented 41 % of purchases in 2023 and 25 % in 2024, but KeHe Distributors will become the primary supplier from January 2025 (26 % of purchases in Q1 2025). Any disruption could materially affect inventory availability and margins.
Risk highlights: fierce competition from conventional, specialty and online grocers; geographic concentration; commodity cost volatility; execution risk in new-store integration; 12 % secured debt load; potential unionisation; product-liability exposure; cyber-security threats; and share-dilution pressures from preferred-stock conversion. Anti-takeover and forum-selection provisions further limit investor influence. HCWC does not plan to pay cash dividends.
In sum, the registration provides liquidity for early investors while outlining a debt-funded roll-up strategy in a fragmented natural-foods niche. Investors must weigh growth potential against leverage, supplier dependence and near-term dilution.