Welcome to our dedicated page for New York Times SEC filings (Ticker: NYT), 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 New York Times Company filings document the operating results, governance and capital-structure matters of a public media company. Form 8-K reports furnish quarterly and annual financial results, including digital-only subscription revenue, subscriber activity, ARPU, advertising revenue, affiliate and licensing revenue, operating costs and profitability measures.
Proxy and annual-meeting filings cover director elections, auditor ratification, advisory executive compensation votes and the separate voting mechanics of Class A and Class B common stockholders. Other material-event filings describe executive compensation arrangements, including severance-plan and employment-agreement disclosures.
The New York Times Company describes itself as a global media organization built around paid digital and print journalism, with products spanning core news, The Athletic, Audio, Cooking, Games and Wirecutter plus licensing and commercial printing.
As of December 31, 2025, it had approximately 12.78 million total subscribers, including about 12.21 million paid digital-only subscribers across 234 countries and territories, and aims to reach 15 million subscribers by year-end 2027. Subscription revenue is the main income source, complemented by advertising, of which digital made up roughly 73% of 2025 advertising revenue, with print at about 27%.
The company highlights heavy investment in technology, data and AI to support engagement, bundling and advertising, while warning that generative AI, changing platform algorithms, intense competition, economic conditions, cybersecurity risks and fast-evolving privacy and subscription rules could pressure traffic, monetization and brand value. It also emphasizes human capital, with about 6,000 full-time equivalent employees, roughly 43% represented by unions, and multiple collective bargaining agreements coming up for renewal.
New York Times Co Chairman and Publisher Arthur G. Sulzberger reported two tax-related share deliveries to the company. He delivered 1,883 and 2,039 shares of Class A common stock at $77.99 per share to satisfy withholding taxes on vesting restricted stock units, and now directly holds 134,680 shares.
New York Times Company director David S. Perpich reported tax-related share dispositions, not open-market sales. On February 21 and 22, 2026, a total of 736 Class A Common shares (343 and 393) were delivered at $77.99 per share to The New York Times Company to satisfy tax withholding obligations tied to one-third vesting of stock-settled restricted stock units granted in 2023 and 2024 under the 2020 Incentive Compensation Plan. After these transactions, he directly holds 25,702 Class A shares, and additional shares are held indirectly in trusts and as UTMA custodian, for which he disclaims beneficial ownership.
New York Times Company executive reports tax-withholding share deliveries
NEW YORK TIMES CO EVP and CHRO Jacqueline M. Welch reported two tax-withholding dispositions of Class A Common Stock related to vesting of restricted stock units under the company’s 2020 Incentive Compensation Plan.
On February 21, 2026, she delivered 386 shares to The New York Times Company at $77.99 per share to satisfy tax obligations from the one-third vesting of stock-settled RSUs granted on February 22, 2023, leaving 14,084 shares owned directly afterward. On February 22, 2026, she delivered an additional 448 shares at $77.99 per share to cover taxes on the one-third vesting of RSUs granted on February 21, 2024, leaving 13,636 shares owned directly.
New York Times Company President & CEO Meredith Kopit Levien reported two insider transactions involving Class A Common Stock. On February 21, 2026, 2,922 shares and on February 22, 2026, 3,800 shares were delivered back to the company at $77.99 per share. The Form 4 states these were tax-withholding dispositions to satisfy obligations from the one-third vesting of stock-settled restricted stock units granted in 2023 and 2024 under the company’s 2020 Incentive Compensation Plan, rather than open-market sales.
NEW YORK TIMES CO senior vice president, treasurer and chief accounting officer Anthony R. Benten reported two tax-related share dispositions under the company’s equity plan. On February 22, 2026, he delivered 162 shares of Class A Common Stock at $77.99 per share to The New York Times Company to satisfy tax withholding tied to the one-third vesting of restricted stock units granted on February 21, 2024. On February 21, 2026, he similarly delivered 131 shares at $77.99 per share related to vesting of units granted on February 22, 2023. After these tax-withholding dispositions, he directly owned 37,479 Class A shares.
New York Times Company executive William Bardeen, EVP and Chief Financial Officer, delivered shares of Class A Common Stock back to the company to cover tax withholding on vesting equity awards. These were tax-withholding dispositions, not open-market sales.
He delivered 655 shares on February 21, 2026, and 256 shares on February 22, 2026, tied to one-third vesting of stock-settled restricted stock units granted in 2023 and 2024 under the company’s 2020 Incentive Compensation Plan. After these transactions, he directly holds 10,332 Class A shares.
NEW YORK TIMES CO executive Diane Brayton reported multiple share dispositions of Class A Common Stock. On February 20, 2026, she completed an open-market sale of 4,600 shares at $77.03 per share. Following this sale, her directly held stake was 28,279 shares.
On February 21 and 22, 2026, she delivered 932 and 766 shares, respectively, to The New York Times Company at $77.99 per share to satisfy tax withholding obligations tied to the one-third vesting of previously granted stock-settled restricted stock units. After these tax-withholding deliveries, she directly owned 26,581 shares.
New York Times Co senior executive Anthony R. Benten reported an open-market sale of company stock. He sold 1,913 shares of Class A Common Stock at a weighted average price of $73.574 per share. After this sale, he directly owns 37,772 Class A shares.
The sale price reflects multiple trades executed between $73.470 and $73.585 per share, as disclosed in the filing.