Latest Zoomcar SEC Filings & Recent Activity
Zoomcar (NASDAQ:ZCARW) has submitted 154+ documents to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) since 2022. For investors, these filings are the primary source of verified financial data — covering everything from annual revenue and debt levels in the 10-K, to material business events in 8-K current reports, to insider buying and selling activity in Form 4 disclosures. The most recent filing was a Form 8-K submitted on April 21, 2026.
8-K
Zoomcar Files Current Report on Apr. 21, 2026
An 8-K is filed when a material corporate event occurs, such as an acquisition, leadership change, or financial update.
View filing10-Q
Zoomcar Files Quarterly Report on Feb. 17, 2026
The 10-Q contains Zoomcar's unaudited quarterly financial statements, revenue, earnings updates, and cash flow changes between annual reports.
View earnings history
Zoomcar SEC Filing History
Browse Zoomcar's complete SEC filing history using the filters below. Filter by form type - 10-K, 10-Q, 8-K, Form 4, and more - or set a custom date range to find a filing.
(Data available from 1/1/2016 forward)
Zoomcar SEC Filings - Frequently Asked Questions
Zoomcar (ZCARW) has submitted 154+ filings to the SEC since 2022. You can browse the complete history or filter by form type using the tools above.
The most recent filing was a Form 8-K submitted on April 21, 2026. This was a current report on a material business event.
SEC Filing Types: 10-K, 10-Q, 8-K and More
SEC filings are legally required disclosures that public companies submit to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Unlike press releases or earnings call transcripts, these documents are filed under legal obligation — meaning the financial data they contain is audited, standardized, and subject to penalties if materially false. For investors, that makes SEC filings the most reliable primary source available for evaluating a company's true financial position.
Yes. All SEC filings are publicly available through the SEC's EDGAR database and on financial research platforms like MarketBeat. Companies are required by law to make these disclosures accessible to all investors — meaning retail investors have access to the same source documents as institutional analysts.
A 10-K is an annual report containing audited financial statements and a full review of the company's business — it is the most comprehensive filing a company makes each year. A 10-Q is a shorter, unaudited quarterly update filed three times per year between annual reports. Investors typically use the 10-K for deep fundamental analysis and the 10-Q to track whether the company is on pace with its guidance mid-year.
The most important filing for fundamental investors. Filed once per year, the 10-K contains audited financial statements, revenue and earnings trends, debt obligations, risk factors, and management's own assessment of the business. Reading the risk factors section and comparing year-over-year financials can reveal issues that don't show up in analyst summaries.
An unaudited financial update filed three times per year (the 10-K covers Q4). Investors use 10-Qs to track whether guidance is on pace, monitor changes in cash flow or inventory, and catch any mid-year shifts in business conditions before they become headline news.
Filed within four business days of a material event — earnings releases, merger announcements, executive departures, or major asset sales. Because 8-Ks are filed before media coverage catches up, they are often the fastest way to get unfiltered information directly from the company on market-moving events.
Filed within two business days whenever an executive or director buys or sells company stock. Insider purchases — especially large or clustered buys — are often interpreted as a signal of management confidence. Insider selling is more ambiguous but worth monitoring for patterns, particularly around lock-up expirations or ahead of major announcements.
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This page (NASDAQ:ZCARW) was last updated on 5/5/2026 by MarketBeat.com Staff.