Welcome to our dedicated page for Toro SEC filings (Ticker: TTC), 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 Toro Company (NYSE: TTC) files a range of documents with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that provide detailed information about its operations as a global provider of solutions for the outdoor environment. These SEC filings complement the company’s press releases by supplying formal disclosures on financial results, material agreements, capital structure, and governance matters related to its activities in turf and landscape maintenance, snow and ice management, underground utility construction, rental and specialty construction, and irrigation and outdoor lighting solutions.
Among the filings available for The Toro Company are current reports on Form 8-K, which the company uses to report events such as quarterly and annual financial results, entry into material definitive agreements, completion of acquisitions, issuance of senior notes, stock repurchase authorizations, and changes in key executive roles. For example, 8-K filings describe the acquisition of Tornado Infrastructure Equipment Ltd., including the arrangement agreement terms and the completion of the transaction, as well as a note purchase agreement for senior notes and the intended use of proceeds.
Investors can also review 8-K items that furnish earnings press releases under results of operations and financial condition, providing another channel to access the company’s reported net sales, segment performance, and non-GAAP financial measures. Other 8-K items address matters such as departures of certain officers and related governance disclosures.
On this page, SEC filings for TTC are presented with real-time updates from EDGAR and AI-powered summaries that explain the key points of each document in accessible language. Users can quickly see what a filing covers, whether it relates to financial performance, a financing arrangement, an acquisition, or a corporate governance change, without reading every technical detail. For deeper research, the full text of each filing remains available, allowing investors to examine the exact wording of agreements, covenants, and disclosures that shape The Toro Company’s financial and strategic profile.
The Toro Company entered into a note purchase agreement and issued $200 million of 5.27% Senior Notes due September 30, 2032 in a private placement. The company plans to use the proceeds primarily to fully repay the entire $200 million outstanding under its April 27, 2022 term loan credit agreement, with the remainder available for general corporate purposes.
The new notes are senior, unsecured obligations with interest payable semiannually on March 30 and September 30, beginning March 30, 2026. Toro can prepay the notes at 100% of principal plus a make-whole premium and accrued interest, and during the 90 days before maturity may prepay without a make-whole premium. If certain change of control events occur, holders can require Toro to repurchase their notes at 100% of principal plus accrued interest.
The note purchase agreement includes customary covenants, such as limits on affiliate transactions, mergers, asset sales, liens and subsidiary debt, along with a maximum leverage ratio and a most favored lender covenant tied to other material credit facilities. It also provides for standard events of default. The notes were issued under Section 4(a)(2) of the Securities Act and are not registered, so they may only be offered or sold under applicable exemptions.
The Toro Company reported that Amy Dahl, its Vice President, International, has notified the company she will be leaving effective September 30, 2025 to pursue other interests. The company states that her departure is not due to any disagreement regarding its operations, policies, or practices, indicating this is described as a voluntary transition rather than a conflict-driven exit.
Janey Gregory S, Group VP, Landscapes & Contract for The Toro Company (TTC), reported multiple transactions dated 09/18/2025. The filing shows purchases of 1,940 common shares via option exercises at $38.82 per share and dispositions of 1,248 shares at about $80.03 and $80.02 per share. Post-transaction beneficial ownership figures on the form include positions reported as 5,538.669, 4,290.669, 6,230.669, and 4,982.669 shares in various lines, plus 2,195.446 shares held indirectly and 6,398.101 shares tied to performance share units. The form also discloses non-qualified stock options tied to 1,940 underlying shares and 767.953 restricted stock units that convert to common shares when vested.
A Toro Company (TTC) Form 4 filed for Amy E. Dahl reports multiple transactions on 09/17/2025 showing both acquisitions and dispositions of common stock and the grant/exercise-status of stock options. The filing lists three non-qualified stock option grants exercisable for 17,200; 16,600; and 13,200 shares with exercise prices of $38.82, $56.54, and $65.93, respectively, and notes those options currently result in 0 underlying shares held following reported transactions. On the same date the report records several open-market or plan transactions: acquisitions of 17,200, 16,600, and 13,200 shares at the prices above, and dispositions of 11,589, 13,207, and 11,576 shares at $80.15. The filing also shows 4,175.082 shares held indirectly via the Retirement Plan and 18,777.125 performance share units noted as disposed. The report was signed by an attorney-in-fact on 09/18/2025.
Toro Company director James Calvin O'Rourke executed and reported equity transactions on 09/08/2025. The filing shows a non-qualified stock option exercise (code M) resulting in acquisition of 5,038 shares at an exercise price of $37.67. The same day a separate transaction (code F) recorded a disposition of 2,334 shares, leaving the reporting person with 2,704 shares beneficially owned following the sale. The derivative table confirms the exercised option related to a grant with a vesting schedule that began on November 2, 2015. The filer also corrected a prior Form 4 overstatement: an administrative error had previously double-counted shares, and the current filing adjusts the reported balance to the accurate amount.
The Toro Company reported third-quarter fiscal 2025 consolidated net sales of $1,131.3 million, down 2.2% from $1,156.9 million a year earlier, and year-to-date net sales of $3,444.2 million, down 1.8%. Professional segment sales rose 5.7% in the quarter to $930.8 million and were up 2.7% year-to-date, while Residential segment sales fell 27.9% in the quarter to $192.8 million and were down 15.7% year-to-date.
Net earnings were $53.5 million, or $0.54 per diluted share, versus $119.3 million, or $1.14 per diluted share, in the prior-year quarter; adjusted net earnings were $122.5 million, or $1.24 per diluted share, versus $123.7 million, or $1.18 per diluted share. The company recorded an $81.1 million non-cash impairment charge related to the Spartan trade name in the Professional segment. The Board increased the quarterly cash dividend to $0.38 per share and the company returned $403.8 million to shareholders via dividends and repurchases in the first nine months.
The Toro Company director and President & COO Edric C. Funk reported Form 4 transactions on 09/02/2025 reflecting awards, disposals and account balance adjustments. The filing shows a disposition of 321.241 shares to correct an administrative error and grants of 18,418 restricted stock units (RSUs) granted 09/02/2025 and 767.953 RSUs from a prior grant, each unit representing one share. The 09/02/2025 RSUs have an indicated per-share price reference of $81.44 and vest in three equal annual installments beginning one year after grant. The report also discloses holdings across a Roth IRA (6,045.452 shares), a Health Savings Account (244.104 shares), and The Toro Company Retirement Plan (net holding activity noted). Explanatory notes clarify dividend reinvestment and administrative adjustments; no option exercises or cash sales are reported.
The Toro Company furnished an update on its financial performance by announcing results for the three- and nine-month periods ended August 1, 2025. The company released these figures through a press release dated September 4, 2025, which is attached as Exhibit 99.1. The disclosure is provided under an informational item and is described as furnished rather than filed, meaning it is not automatically subject to certain liability provisions or incorporated into other securities filings unless specifically referenced.
T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. filed an Amendment No. 3 to Schedule 13G disclosing beneficial ownership of 4,170,500 shares of Toro Co common stock, representing 4.2% of the class. The filing reports sole voting power over 3,988,287 shares and sole dispositive power over 4,145,484 shares and identifies the security by CUSIP 891092108.
The statement classifies the filer as an investment adviser organized in Maryland and includes a certification that the shares were acquired and are held in the ordinary course of business and not to change or influence control of the issuer. No group affiliations or parent/subsidiary acquisitions are reported.
On 31 July 2025, Jason P. Baab—Vice President, Strategy, Corporate Development & Sustainability of The Toro Company (TTC)—filed a Form 4 disclosing routine equity-award activity. Baab converted 2,718.579 restricted stock units into common stock (Transaction Code M) at an exercise/valuation price of $74.25. To satisfy tax withholding, 832 shares were automatically forfeited to the issuer (Code F) at the same price. After these transactions, Baab’s direct holdings rose to 3,736.322 shares; he also owns 1.022 shares indirectly via The Toro Company Retirement Plan and retains 2,719.618 unvested RSUs that vest in three equal annual installments beginning 07/31/2024.
No open-market purchases or sales occurred, and the filing does not alter the company’s share count. The activity reflects scheduled vesting under a 2023 grant and modestly increases insider ownership, offering limited but generally constructive signaling to investors.