Insider Trading Penalty Estimator

This tool estimates potential penalties for alleged insider trading violations under U.S. federal securities laws. It helps professionals, small business owners, and individuals assess rough compliance risk ranges. Always consult a qualified securities attorney for case-specific legal advice.

Insider Trading Penalty Estimator

Estimate potential federal securities violation penalties

Estimated Penalty Breakdown

Disgorgement Amount
$0.00
Pre-Judgment Interest
$0.00
Civil Penalty (SEC)
$0.00
Criminal Fine (DOJ)
$0.00
Total Estimated Penalty
$0.00

Estimates are for reference only. Penalties vary by jurisdiction, case specifics, and regulatory changes.

How to Use This Tool

Enter the total ill-gotten gains from the alleged insider trading activity in the disgorgement field. Select the violation type that matches your scenario from the dropdown menu. Choose your offense history, entity type, and enter the number of violating transactions. Input the estimated pre-judgment interest period in months between the violation date and expected judgment. Click Calculate Penalty to view the detailed breakdown, or Reset Form to clear all inputs.

Use the Copy Results to Clipboard button to save the estimate for your records. All fields are required to generate an accurate estimate.

Formula and Logic

Penalty estimates are based on current U.S. federal securities laws and sentencing guidelines:

  • Disgorgement: Full amount of ill-gotten gains, mandatory for all SEC and DOJ violations.
  • Pre-Judgment Interest: Calculated at 5% annual federal rate, prorated for the number of months between violation and judgment.
  • Civil Penalties (SEC): 1x disgorgement for first offenses, up to 3x for repeat offenses. Tipping violations are assessed at 50% of the base civil penalty.
  • Criminal Fines (DOJ): Fixed maximums based on entity type and offense history: $5M/$10M for individuals, $10M/$25M for small businesses, $25M/$50M for large entities (first/repeat offenses respectively).

Total estimated penalty is the sum of disgorgement, pre-judgment interest, civil penalties, and criminal fines applicable to the selected violation type.

Practical Notes

Insider trading penalties vary significantly by jurisdiction, case specifics, and regulatory updates. Key considerations for legal compliance include:

  • SEC civil penalties apply to all insider trading, tipping, and misappropriation violations under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
  • DOJ criminal charges carry additional penalties including imprisonment (up to 20 years for individuals) not reflected in this tool.
  • State-level securities laws may impose additional penalties not included in federal estimates.
  • Repeat offense multipliers apply to any securities violation within the prior 5 years, not just insider trading.

Why This Tool Is Useful

This estimator helps professionals, small business owners, and individuals quickly assess rough penalty ranges for alleged insider trading violations. It provides a transparent breakdown of how different factors like offense history, entity type, and violation type impact total liability. The tool is not a substitute for legal advice but serves as a starting point for compliance risk assessment and preliminary case evaluation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this penalty estimate legally binding?

No. This tool provides rough reference estimates only. Actual penalties are determined by courts, the SEC, or DOJ based on case-specific evidence, mitigating factors, and judicial discretion. Always consult a qualified securities attorney for binding legal guidance.

Does this tool account for imprisonment terms?

No. This estimator only calculates financial penalties. Criminal insider trading convictions can carry up to 20 years in federal prison for individuals, plus financial penalties. Consult legal counsel for full sentencing exposure.

How often are penalty guidelines updated?

Federal sentencing guidelines and SEC penalty caps are updated periodically by Congress and regulatory agencies. This tool uses 2024 federal guidelines; check the SEC and DOJ websites for the most recent updates.

Additional Guidance

Always retain records of all trading activity, communications, and compliance training to support your case if investigated. Early consultation with a securities attorney can help mitigate penalties, as self-reporting violations to the SEC may qualify for reduced civil penalties. Regulatory agencies consider cooperation, remediation efforts, and lack of intent as mitigating factors that can lower final penalties. This tool does not account for these case-specific factors, so professional legal review is critical for accurate liability assessment.