Welcome to our dedicated page for Toronto Domin SEC filings (Ticker: TD), 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 Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD) is a foreign private issuer in the United States and files regulatory reports with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, primarily on Form 6-K and Form 40-F. This SEC filings page brings together those disclosures for investors who want to review the bank’s official communications, capital markets documentation and other regulatory materials related to its North American banking operations.
Recent Form 6-K filings for TD include earnings-related information such as earnings coverage, quarterly earnings news releases, dividend news releases, notices of shareholder meetings and independent auditor’s reports. These documents provide insight into the bank’s financial reporting, dividend practices and governance processes. Certain Form 6-K reports are explicitly incorporated by reference into TD’s registration statements on Form F-3/A, which support securities offerings in the U.S. market.
The filings also cover capital markets and funding activities. Examples include underwriting agreements, base indentures and supplemental indentures, as well as legal opinions and consents from U.S. and Canadian counsel. Other 6-Ks reference material change reports, the redemption of non-cumulative rate reset preferred shares, and the pricing of subordinated debentures, illustrating how the bank manages its capital structure and funding instruments.
Because TD is a large North American commercial bank with operations in Canada and the U.S., its SEC filings can be extensive and technical. Stock Titan enhances access to these documents by providing real-time updates from EDGAR and AI-powered summaries that explain the purpose and key points of each filing in plain language. Investors can use this page to locate TD’s 6-K reports, understand how they connect to broader registration statements, and monitor ongoing regulatory and capital markets activity for The Toronto-Dominion Bank.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering senior notes linked to an unequally-weighted basket of five indices maturing on December 17, 2027.
The notes are non‑interest bearing and pay at maturity based on the Basket's performance from the pricing date April 14, 2026 to the valuation date December 15, 2027. The Basket weights: EURO STOXX 50 40%, TOPIX 25%, FTSE 100 17%, SMI 11% and S&P/ASX 200 7%. A Leverage Factor of 230.00% multiplies positive basket returns but final payment is capped at $1,227.01 per $1,000 principal. A 15.00% Buffer protects against declines up to that amount; declines beyond the buffer incur a Downside Multiplier (~117.65%) that magnifies losses and could result in total loss of principal. TD's initial estimated value was $990.20 while the public offering price was $1,000.00.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering senior debt securities, Series H, that are equity-linked and auto-callable with a fixed monthly coupon and a 20% downside buffer. The securities pay a coupon of at least 11.00% per annum, are linked to the lowest performing stock among Amazon, Broadcom, Meta, and Microsoft, and mature on May 4, 2029. If not auto-called, the maturity payment depends on the lowest performing stock’s ending price versus an 80% downside threshold and may result in up to an 80% principal loss. Estimated value at pricing is $915–$950 per $1,000 security; original offering price is $1,000.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering $21,352,640 of Trigger GEARS linked to the Swiss Market Index due April 17, 2031. The securities are senior, unsecured debt obligations that repay based on the percent change in the SMI from an initial level of 13,219.58 to the final level, with an upside gearing of 2.50 and a downside threshold equal to 60.00% of the initial level. Investors receive principal plus a geared gain if the underlying return is positive, the principal only if the underlying return is zero/negative but the final level is at or above the downside threshold, or a loss tied to the underlying return if the final level is below the downside threshold; payments are subject to TD credit risk.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD) is offering structured senior notes linked to the MSCI EAFE® Index with a roughly 26‑month term. Each $1,000 note matures on June 16, 2028 and pays no interest; the cash payment at maturity depends on the Index’s percentage change from the initial level of 3,085.08 (pricing date April 14, 2026) to the final level on the valuation date (June 14, 2028). The notes feature a 15.00% buffer (Buffer Level = 2,622.318) that preserves principal if the Final Level declines by up to 15.00%, a 160.00% Leverage Factor for positive participation up to a Cap Level of 120.59% of the Initial Level, and a capped maximum payment of $1,329.44 per $1,000 (maximum return 32.944%). If the Final Level falls below the buffer, losses are amplified by a Downside Multiplier (~117.65%), and investors may lose their entire principal. The notes are unsecured senior debt of TD, not exchange‑listed, not FDIC/CDIC insured, and subject to TD credit and tax risks.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD) is offering Autocallable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq-100 Index, the Russell 2000 Index and shares of the State Street Energy Select Sector SPDR ETF. The Notes have a Principal Amount of $1,000, an estimated value at pricing of $975.20 and a Contingent Interest Rate of approximately 10.55% per annum.
The Notes pay monthly contingent interest only if each Reference Asset is at or above a 60.00% barrier on observation dates, and are automatically called if each Reference Asset is at or above its 100.00% call threshold on any monthly call observation date. At maturity, if not called, payment depends on the Final Value of the Least Performing Reference Asset relative to its 60.00% Barrier Value, exposing investors to loss of principal up to 100%; all payments are subject to TD credit risk.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq-100 Index, the Russell 2000 Index and the State Street Energy Select Sector SPDR ETF. The Notes have a Principal Amount of $1,000, an approximate contingent interest rate of 10.70% per annum, and pay contingent monthly interest only if each Reference Asset’s Closing Value on the monthly observation date is at or above a barrier equal to 60.00% of its Initial Value. The Notes were priced on April 15, 2026, will be issued on April 20, 2026, and mature on April 19, 2029. TD may call the Notes in whole monthly beginning on the sixth contingent interest payment date upon at least three business days’ notice; if called, holders receive Principal plus any contingent interest then due. Payments (including principal) are subject to TD credit risk; estimated value at pricing was $974.30 and the public offering price is $1,000.00.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank is offering capped, leveraged structured Senior Debt Securities ("Capped Leveraged Contingent Absolute Return Buffered Notes") linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq-100 and S&P 500 indices. The Notes provide 150.00% leveraged participation in positive returns of the least performing index up to a Maximum Upside Redemption Amount of $1,127.50 per $1,000 Note, include a 15.00% buffer that protects against limited declines, and expose holders to losses equal to declines beyond the buffer (up to 85.00% of principal). Issue terms (Initial Values, final pricing and exact fees) will be set on the Pricing Date and are subject to change; estimated value on the Pricing Date is shown as $950.00–$985.00 per Note. Payments are unsecured obligations of TD and subject to TD credit risk.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD) is offering Autocallable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500. The offering consists of Notes with a Principal Amount of $1,000 per Note (total initial offering shown $1,205,000), a Contingent Interest Rate of approximately 9.10% per annum, an estimated value at pricing of $968.80 per Note, and a maturity date of April 19, 2029. Interest payments are conditional on monthly observation tests vs. 70% barrier levels; automatic early call is possible if all indices meet 100% call thresholds on a Call Observation Date. Payments at maturity depend on the least‑performing index and are subject to TD’s credit risk.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD) offered Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq-100 (NDX), Russell 2000 (RTY) and S&P 500 (SPX). Each Note has a $1,000 Principal Amount, a contingent interest rate of approximately 12.65% per annum and contingent interest and barrier levels equal to 70.00% of each Reference Asset’s Initial Value. TD may call the Notes monthly beginning on the third contingent interest payment date; if not called, the maturity payment on April 19, 2029 depends on the Least Performing Percentage Change and can result in a loss of up to the entire principal. The Notes are unsecured senior debt of TD, not listed, and carry TD credit risk. The Pricing Date was April 15, 2026 and the Issue Date is April 20, 2026. The issuer’s estimated value at pricing was $989.10 per Note versus a public offering price of $1,000.00.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank has offered Callable Contingent Interest Barrier Notes linked to the least performing of the Nasdaq-100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500. The initial issue totals $3,049,000 with a $1,000 principal per Note and estimated value of $968.30 per Note.
The Notes mature on April 19, 2029, pay a contingent monthly interest (approximately 10.10% per annum) only if each index is at or above a 70.00% barrier on observation dates, and may be called by TD monthly beginning on the sixth contingent interest payment date. At maturity, unpaid principal exposure depends on the Least Performing Reference Asset; investors can lose up to the entire principal. Payments are subject to TD’s credit risk.