Join the newsletter to get the 30% launch code for any paid planJoin now
Newsletter launch offer

Get 30% off any paid plan by email.

Join the Insider Alerts newsletter and we will send your 30% launch code in the first email, along with weekly filing context and product updates.
No spam, and you can unsubscribe anytime. The code arrives in your welcome email.
DatabasePricingTelegramForm 4Form 4 toolsInsider AlertsBlogGuide
sitechrome:static
Insider trading database

An insider trading database with free alerts and weekly insider updates

A good insider trading database should do more than list filings. It should help you search by company and insider, review transaction types clearly, and move from free alerts into proper filing history when you want more context.
Searchable filing history
Official SEC-based workflow
Company and insider research paths
For informational and research purposes only. InsiderAlerts does not provide financial, investment, or trading advice.
Database view
Search by ticker
Start with the stock you already follow.
Search by insider
Review the filing history for a specific person.
Filter by transaction type
Separate purchases, sales, awards, and other filing activity.
Move from alert to context
Use database search to review what happened before and after an alert.
Why it matters
Search filings by company
Review insider activity by ticker when you want to understand what is happening around a specific stock.
Search filings by person
See how a specific insider has been transacting and which companies are involved.
Use free alerts as the starting point
Free stock insider alerts help you notice fresh activity before you decide to dig deeper in the database.
Connect weekly updates and research
The database is more useful because it sits next to alerts and weekly insider updates rather than replacing them.
Process

What an insider trading database should help you do

A proper database makes filing history easier to search, compare, and interpret. It should not feel like a giant unstructured dump of public filings.
How it unfolds
Search the company or insider
Start from the name or ticker you want to review.
2
Filter the filing history
Refine the history by date range, transaction type, or watchlist relevance.
3
Use it as research context
Treat the database as a way to deepen review, not just as a list of raw rows.
Contrast

Raw filing archive versus InsiderAlerts database

Raw filing archive
InsiderAlerts database
Harder to search cleanly
Company and insider search workflow
Less useful for watchlist-driven review
Closer tie between alerting and research
More manual interpretation burden
Cleaner path into filing detail and related views
Insight

Why a database matters alongside alerts

An alert can help you notice a filing. A database helps you understand whether it sits inside a larger pattern.
Search by company and insider
Compare filing history across time
Use filters to separate more meaningful activity
Move from detection into research without leaving the workflow
Questions

Frequently asked questions

What is an insider trading database?
An insider trading database is a searchable system for reviewing insider filing history by company, person, and transaction type.
How is a database different from alerts?
Alerts help you notice fresh activity. A database helps you search and review the deeper filing history behind it.
Can I search by stock and insider name?
Yes. InsiderAlerts is built to support both company and insider research paths.
Why does a database matter if I already have alerts?
Because a single alert is often more useful when you can immediately place it inside broader filing history.
Explore next

Related guides and tools

Move naturally between the core InsiderAlerts pages, filing explainers, and workflow guides that connect to this topic.
Conversion

Want a cleaner way to search insider filing history?

Use the InsiderAlerts database to move from free watchlist alerts and weekly insider updates into deeper filing review by company and insider.