FilingFacts

FilingFacts

US public-company fundamentals, straight from SEC filings.

FilingFacts is a free reference of financial fundamentals for 43 large US public companies, taken directly from their annual 10-K filings on SEC EDGAR. For each company you can look up five fiscal years of revenue, net income, operating income, R&D spend, total assets and shareholders' equity, plus computed year-over-year growth, profit margins, R&D intensity and revenue CAGR. We also provide calculators for the P/E ratio, dividend yield, profit margin, EPS and revenue CAGR. Factual data only — not investment advice.

Source: SEC EDGAR. Data as of 2026-06-18.

Largest companies by revenue

AMAZON COM INC (AMZN)

FY2025: $716.92B revenue · 10.8% net margin

WALMART INC. (WMT)

FY2026: $706.41B revenue · 3.1% net margin

Apple Inc. (AAPL)

FY2025: $416.16B revenue · 26.9% net margin

Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL)

FY2025: $402.84B revenue · 32.8% net margin

Exxon Mobil Corporation (XOM)

FY2025: $332.24B revenue · 8.7% net margin

MICROSOFT CORPORATION (MSFT)

FY2025: $281.72B revenue · 36.1% net margin

COSTCO WHOLESALE CORP /NEW (COST)

FY2025: $275.24B revenue · 2.9% net margin

NVIDIA CORP (NVDA)

FY2026: $215.94B revenue · 55.6% net margin

Browse all 43 companies →

Rankings

Highest revenue

US public companies ranked by total revenue in their most recent fiscal year, from SEC 10-K filings.

Highest net income

US public companies ranked by net income (bottom-line profit) in their most recent fiscal year, from SEC 10-K filings.

Highest net margin

US public companies ranked by net profit margin (net income ÷ revenue) in their most recent fiscal year.

Highest operating margin

US public companies ranked by operating margin (operating income ÷ revenue) in their most recent fiscal year.

Top R&D spenders

US public companies ranked by total research & development expense in their most recent fiscal year, from SEC 10-K filings.

Highest R&D intensity

US public companies ranked by R&D intensity (R&D expense ÷ revenue) in their most recent fiscal year — a measure of how research-heavy a business is.

Largest by assets

US public companies ranked by total assets on the most recent balance sheet, from SEC 10-K filings.

Financial calculators

P/E ratio calculator

Calculate the price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio from a share price and earnings per share, the way it is reported in a 10-K.

Dividend yield calculator

Work out the dividend yield from the annual dividend per share and the current share price.

Profit margin calculator

Calculate net, operating or gross profit margin from revenue and a profit figure.

EPS calculator

Calculate basic earnings per share from net income, preferred dividends and shares outstanding.

Revenue CAGR calculator

Calculate the compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of revenue between two fiscal years.

See all calculators →

Guides

Gross vs operating vs net margin, explained

Three profit margins, three different stories. Here's what gross, operating and net margin each measure, how they're calculated, and what counts as a healthy figure.

2026-06-17
Where company financial data comes from (SEC EDGAR & XBRL)

Almost every financial figure you read traces back to SEC EDGAR and the XBRL data tagged inside each filing. Here's how that system works and how to use it yourself.

2026-06-17
What is R&D intensity, and why does it matter?

R&D intensity is research & development spend as a share of revenue. Here's how to calculate it, what counts as high, and which big companies invest most heavily.

2026-06-16
How to calculate the P/E ratio from a company's filings

The price-to-earnings ratio takes two numbers: the share price and earnings per share. Here's how to pull EPS from a 10-K and turn it into a P/E you can trust.

2026-06-16
How to read a 10-K (the annual report that matters)

A plain-English guide to the SEC Form 10-K: what each section contains, where the real numbers live, and how to pull revenue, net income and EPS straight from the source.

2026-06-15
Revenue vs operating income vs net income: what's the difference?

Revenue, operating income and net income are three lines of the same income statement. Here's exactly what each one includes, with real examples from SEC filings.

2026-06-15

What this site is

FilingFacts publishes fast, free, genuinely-useful reference data on company financial fundamentals. Every figure is a real value reported in a company's SEC 10-K and pulled from the EDGAR XBRL company facts API; derived metrics (margins, growth, CAGR) are computed from those figures and shown with their formulas. See our methodology for how the data is produced.

Factual data compiled from SEC filings — not investment advice. Figures may contain errors or lag the original filing; verify on SEC EDGAR before relying on them.