Welcome to our dedicated page for Tyler Technologies SEC filings (Ticker: TYL), 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.
Tyler Technologies filings document a NYSE-listed public-sector software company with common stock registered under the Securities Exchange Act. Its regulatory reports include 8-K disclosures for operating results and financial condition, capital allocation actions, financing announcements, and other material events tied to its government technology business.
Proxy and annual meeting filings cover board elections, executive compensation votes, auditor ratification, shareholder proposals, and related governance matters. Other filings describe share repurchase authorizations, Rule 10b5-1 repurchase plans, common stock registration details, and exhibits attached to earnings releases and material-event reports.
Tyler Technologies Executive VP and CFO Brian K. Miller reported a charitable stock gift. He made a bona fide gift transfer of 90 shares of Tyler Technologies common stock at a reported price of $0.00 per share, described as transfers to fund charitable gifts.
After this transaction, Miller directly owned 25,305.0038 shares of common stock. He also indirectly owned 13,695 shares through several family trusts, including 4,369 shares in a trust for his spouse and two trusts holding 4,583 and 4,743 shares for his children.
Tyler Technologies, Inc. approved a new Rule 10b5-1 trading plan with a brokerage firm to repurchase up to $150.0 million of its common stock. Repurchases under this plan may run from June 16, 2026 through July 30, 2026.
The plan operates under a broader share repurchase program. On February 3, 2026, the Board authorized up to $1.0 billion of repurchases, replacing prior authorizations, and there was $332.7 million of capacity remaining as of June 12, 2026. Repurchases are generally funded with existing cash and borrowings under the company’s credit facility and are intended to comply with Rule 10b5-1 and the company’s insider trading policy.
Tyler Technologies, Inc. entered into an Amended and Restated Credit Agreement that provides an unsecured revolving credit facility of up to $1 billion. The facility replaces a prior $700 million line, extends maturity to May 28, 2031, and was undrawn at closing.
The agreement includes an uncommitted accordion feature tied to Tyler’s EBITDA and total net leverage ratio, customary covenants, and guarantees from material domestic subsidiaries. Borrowings will bear interest at either a prime-based or SOFR-based rate plus a leverage-dependent margin and may be used for general corporate purposes, including working capital, acquisitions, and capital spending.
Tyler Technologies issued $1,437,500,000 of 0.50% Convertible Senior Notes due 2031 in a private offering to qualified institutional buyers. The notes carry a 0.50% annual interest rate, mature on July 15, 2031 and have an initial conversion price of approximately $405.94 per share.
Tyler entered into capped call transactions that raise the effective conversion price to about $655.77 per share and paid approximately $187.2 million for these hedges. The company used about $320.7 million of net proceeds to repurchase 1,026,900 shares and reports year-to-date repurchases of roughly 2.1 million shares for approximately $667 million, with remaining proceeds for general corporate purposes.
Tyler Technologies, Inc. is raising capital through an upsized private offering of $1.25 billion aggregate principal amount of 0.50% convertible senior notes due 2031 to qualified institutional buyers, with an option for initial purchasers to buy up to an additional $187.5 million of notes.
The notes carry a 0.50% annual interest rate, payable semi-annually, and mature on July 15, 2031, unless earlier converted, redeemed or repurchased. The initial conversion rate is 2.4634 shares per $1,000 principal amount, implying an initial conversion price of about $405.94 per share, a 30.0% premium to the $312.27 share price on May 11, 2026.
Tyler estimates net proceeds of about $1,224.3 million (or $1,408.1 million if the option is fully exercised). It plans to use approximately $162.8 million for capped call transactions and about $320.7 million to repurchase 1,026,900 shares of common stock, with the remainder for general corporate purposes.
Tyler Technologies, Inc. is raising capital through an upsized private offering of $1.25 billion aggregate principal amount of 0.50% convertible senior notes due 2031 to qualified institutional buyers, with an option for initial purchasers to buy up to an additional $187.5 million of notes.
The notes carry a 0.50% annual interest rate, payable semi-annually, and mature on July 15, 2031, unless earlier converted, redeemed or repurchased. The initial conversion rate is 2.4634 shares per $1,000 principal amount, implying an initial conversion price of about $405.94 per share, a 30.0% premium to the $312.27 share price on May 11, 2026.
Tyler estimates net proceeds of about $1,224.3 million (or $1,408.1 million if the option is fully exercised). It plans to use approximately $162.8 million for capped call transactions and about $320.7 million to repurchase 1,026,900 shares of common stock, with the remainder for general corporate purposes.
Norges Bank reported beneficial ownership of 2,400,010 shares of Tyler Technologies common stock, representing 5.6532% of the class as of 03/31/2026. The filing states Norges Bank has sole voting power for 2,400,010 shares, sole dispositive power for 2,331,376 shares, and shared dispositive power for 68,634 shares. The Schedule 13G names Norges Bank as an Investment Adviser and notes certain shares are invested on behalf of the Government of Norway. The form is signed on 05/11/2026.
Tyler Technologies, Inc. plans a private offering, subject to market and other conditions, of $1,000,000,000 aggregate principal amount of convertible senior notes due 2031 to qualified institutional buyers, with an option for initial purchasers to buy an additional $150,000,000 of notes.
The notes will be senior, unsecured obligations, pay semi-annual interest, and mature on July 15, 2031. Tyler can redeem them for cash on or after July 20, 2029 if its share price exceeds 130% of the conversion price for a specified period.
Tyler expects to use a portion of the net proceeds for capped call transactions and up to $350 million of concurrent share repurchases, with the remainder for general corporate purposes. The capped calls are expected to reduce potential dilution and/or offset cash payments above principal upon conversion.
Tyler Technologies director Cecil W. Jones reported his initial ownership position. The filing shows direct holdings of 425 shares of common stock. On May 5, 2026, he was granted 762 restricted stock units that vest 100% on the first anniversary of the grant date under the 2018 Stock Incentive Plan. Each restricted stock unit represents a contingent right to receive one share of Tyler Technologies common stock upon vesting and settlement.
TYLER TECHNOLOGIES INC insider John S. Marr Jr., who serves as Executive Chair of the Board and is also a director, filed a Form 4 relating to the company’s stock. The provided data show no reported purchases, sales, exercises, gifts, or other share transactions in this filing.
Teed Andrew D. reported acquisition or exercise transactions in this Form 4 filing.
Tyler Technologies director Andrew D. Teed reported equity compensation-related transactions in company stock. On May 6, 2026, previously granted restricted stock units vested and were settled into 452 shares of common stock, increasing his directly held common shares to 5,570.
On May 5, 2026, he received a new grant of 762 restricted stock units, each representing a contingent right to receive one share of common stock. These units vest 100% on the first anniversary of the grant date under the company’s Amended and Restated 2018 Stock Incentive Plan.
In addition to his direct holdings, the filing shows 2,000 common shares held indirectly through a trust where Mr. Teed and his wife serve as sole trustees with shared voting and dispositive power.