Welcome to our dedicated page for Nextdoor Holdings SEC filings (Ticker: KIND), 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 SEC filings historically associated with Nextdoor Holdings, Inc. under the ticker symbol KIND. Nextdoor describes itself as the essential neighborhood network, and its filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission offer formal detail on how the business is structured, governed, and financially reported.
Investors reviewing Nextdoor’s filings can examine periodic reports such as annual and quarterly filings, which include information on revenue, net loss, adjusted EBITDA, and user metrics, as well as discussions of risks and business operations. Current reports on Form 8-K, like those excerpted here, document material events. For example, one 8-K describes an investor update and press release announcing quarterly financial results, while another outlines a cost reduction plan with expected one-time charges related to severance, benefits, and stock-based compensation.
Filings also record corporate governance and leadership changes. In a reported event, Nextdoor disclosed the resignation of its Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, the plan for that executive to serve as an advisor during a transition period, and the designation of the Chief Executive Officer as interim principal financial officer alongside the appointment of a Chief Accounting Officer. Another 8-K details the company’s decision to change its NYSE ticker symbol from KIND to NXDR, noting that the Class A common stock would remain listed on the New York Stock Exchange and that no shareholder action was required.
On Stock Titan, these SEC documents are paired with AI-powered summaries that help explain key sections, highlight material items, and make it easier to understand topics such as cost reduction plans, leadership transitions, and ticker symbol changes. Users can follow new 8-Ks and other filings as they are posted to see how Nextdoor’s regulatory disclosures evolve over time.
Nextdoor Holdings (KIND) Q2-25 highlights
- Revenue reached $65.1 million, up 3% YoY, supported by 21.8 million Platform WAU (+1%) and ARPU of $2.99 (+2%).
- Cost discipline drove a 24% YoY drop in total expenses; G&A declined 61% to $15.8 million.
- Operating loss narrowed to $20.3 million from $49.0 million; net loss improved 64% to $15.4 million (-$0.04 per share).
- 1H-25 operating cash flow turned positive at $3.3 million versus a $19.0 million outflow last year.
- Liquidity remains strong: $62.1 million cash plus $351.3 million marketable securities (≈$413 million total), no debt.
- 8.4 million Class A shares repurchased for $14.5 million; $82.8 million remains under the $250 million authorization.
- Subsequent event: Q3 cost-reduction plan to incur ~$5 million severance and ~$1 million SBC acceleration.
Stock-based compensation was $17.1 million (26% of revenue). Equity stands at $429.5 million; deferred revenue $7.5 million. Management provided no formal guidance but continues to prioritise monetisation, engagement and expense control.
Form 4 filing overview – Nextdoor Holdings, Inc. (KIND)
Director Elisa Steele reported the first vesting tranche of a restricted stock-unit (RSU) grant on 07/03/2025. The vesting converted 60,976 RSUs into an equal number of Class A common shares at a price of $0 (Code M – derivative conversion). Following the transaction, Steele now directly owns 69,994 Class A shares and retains 60,975 unvested RSUs.
The filing also corrects the original award schedule disclosed on 07/30/2024: the RSU grant vests 50% on 07/03/2025 and the remaining 50% on 07/03/2026, contingent on continued service. No open-market purchases or sales were reported.
- Transaction type: automatic RSU conversion (not open-market)
- Cost basis: $0; no cash exchanged
- Remaining derivative holdings: 60,975 RSUs
The event is administrative in nature and does not directly affect Nextdoor’s operations or financial results, but it modestly increases insider equity alignment.