Welcome to our dedicated page for Kohls SEC filings (Ticker: KSS), 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 Kohl’s Corporation (NYSE: KSS) SEC filings page on Stock Titan centralizes the company’s regulatory disclosures, giving investors a structured view of how this U.S. department store retailer reports its financial and corporate information. Kohl’s is incorporated in Wisconsin and its common stock is registered under Section 12(b) of the Securities Exchange Act, trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol KSS, as confirmed in multiple Form 8-K filings.
For Kohl’s, Form 10-K annual reports and Form 10-Q quarterly reports are key sources for detailed financial statements, segment information, risk factors, and management’s discussion and analysis. These filings allow readers to examine trends in net sales, comparable sales, gross margin, operating income, cash flows, and balance sheet metrics across reporting periods.
Recent Form 8-K current reports illustrate how Kohl’s uses this form to disclose material events. Examples include 8-K filings that furnish quarterly earnings press releases and presentation materials under Item 2.02 and Item 7.01, as well as filings under Item 8.01 documenting Board decisions to declare quarterly cash dividends of $0.125 per share. Another 8-K details the Board’s appointment of Michael J. Bender as Chief Executive Officer and outlines principal terms of his compensation and governance roles.
Investors interested in capital allocation and shareholder returns can use these filings to track dividend declarations, debt issuance and repayment, and references to financial outlooks and non-GAAP measures. Kohl’s 8-K filings also contain cautionary statements regarding forward-looking information and descriptions of non-GAAP metrics such as adjusted operating income, adjusted net income, and adjusted diluted earnings per share.
On Stock Titan, Kohl’s filings are updated in step with EDGAR, and AI-powered tools can help summarize lengthy documents, highlight key items such as earnings guidance, dividend actions, and executive changes, and surface relevant sections for deeper review. This makes it easier to navigate Kohl’s 10-Ks, 10-Qs, and 8-Ks, and to connect regulatory disclosures with the company’s broader financial and strategic narrative.
Kohl's Corp Chief Financial Officer Jill Timm reported a compensation-related stock transaction. She acquired 32,354 shares of common stock at $0.0000 per share as settlement of performance share units under the company’s long-term plan. Of these, 10,354 shares were withheld at $12.03 per share to cover tax obligations, a non-market disposition. After these entries, she directly holds 347,561 common shares, which the footnotes state include 157,175 unvested restricted stock units.
Kohl's Senior EVP and Chief People Officer Mari Steinmetz reported a mix of equity awards and a small automatic share sale. She received 151,745 restricted stock units under the company’s long-term plan on March 13, 2026, tied to her promotion to Senior Executive Vice President, Chief People Officer.
On March 19, 2026 she acquired 9,706 common shares through settlement of performance share units, with 3,375 shares withheld at $12.03 per share to cover taxes. On March 20, 2026 an open-market sale of 1,583 shares at $12.81 per share was executed automatically under a previously adopted Rule 10b5-1 trading plan. After these transactions she holds 218,750 common shares directly, including 203,822 unvested restricted stock units.
Kohl’s Corp executive Raymond Christie received a stock award and related tax withholding on company shares. He acquired 20,799 shares of Common Stock on March 19, 2026 at no cost, in settlement of performance share units granted under Kohl’s Long-Term Compensation Plan.
To cover tax obligations from this vesting, 6,781 shares were withheld by the company at a price of $12.03 per share. After these transactions, Christie directly holds 240,494 shares of Kohl’s Common Stock, which the filing states includes 140,165 unvested restricted stock units.
Kohl’s Corp executive Jennifer J. Kent reported routine equity compensation activity involving company common stock. She acquired 20,799 shares on March 19, 2026 at $0.00 per share through settlement of performance share units under Kohl’s Long-Term Compensation Plan. On the same date, 6,656 shares were withheld at $12.03 per share to satisfy tax withholding obligations, which is an administrative disposition rather than an open-market sale. After these transactions, she directly holds 212,624 shares of Kohl’s common stock, including 102,793 unvested restricted stock units.
KOHLS Corp Chief Merchandising Officer Nicholas D. G. Jones reported compensation-related share activity. He acquired 30,813 shares of common stock on settlement of performance share units granted under the company’s long-term compensation plan. On the same date, 9,925 shares were withheld by the company to satisfy tax withholding obligations, rather than sold in the open market.
After these transactions, Jones directly owns 192,979 shares of common stock, which includes 153,711 unvested restricted stock units. The filing reflects routine equity compensation and associated tax withholding, not discretionary buying or selling of shares.
Kohl's Corp senior executive Fred Hand reported routine equity compensation activity. He acquired 12,073 shares of common stock on March 19, 2026 as settlement of performance share units under the company’s Long-Term Compensation Plan, with no cash price per share reported.
On the same date, 2,933 shares were withheld by Kohl's at $12.03 per share to satisfy tax withholding obligations tied to this vesting. After these transactions, Hand directly owns 260,296 common shares, which the filing states include 153,325 unvested restricted stock units.
Kohl’s Corporation reports that 2025 was a mixed year, with softer sales but stronger profitability and cash generation. Net sales fell 4.0% to $14.8 billion and comparable sales declined 3.1%, as transactions decreased across most categories except Accessories.
Gross margin improved to 37.5% of net sales, helped by tighter inventory, fewer markdowns, and moderating shrink. SG&A expenses fell 4.1% to $5.1 billion, roughly flat as a percentage of revenue. Operating income rose to $624 million from $433 million, aided by a $129 million gain from a credit card interchange fee settlement; adjusted operating income was essentially flat at $510 million.
Net income increased to $272 million, or $2.38 per diluted share, versus $109 million or $0.98 a year earlier. Cash flow from operations more than doubled to $1.4 billion, enabling repayment of $353 million of 4.25% notes due 2025 and open‑market repurchases of $87 million of other debt, partially offset by issuing $360 million of 10.000% senior secured notes due 2030.
Management guides 2026 net sales and comparable sales to range from down 2% to flat, with adjusted operating margin of 2.8–3.4% and adjusted diluted EPS of $1.00–$1.60, alongside planned capital expenditures of $350–$400 million and a quarterly dividend of $0.125 per share.
Kohl's Corp senior executive Jennifer J. Kent reported routine equity compensation activity in company stock. She acquired 7,370 shares of common stock at no cost as a grant tied to vested restricted stock units and related dividend equivalents. On the same date, 12,846 shares were withheld at $13.18 per share to cover tax obligations from the vesting, which is not an open-market sale. After these transactions, she directly owned 198,481 shares of common stock, including 102,793 unvested restricted stock units. These events reflect standard long-term compensation and tax withholding mechanics rather than discretionary market trading.