skip navigation
Here's how you know US flag signifying that this is a United States Federal Government website

An official website of the United States government

Here's how you know

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

SSL

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

April Quarterly Report notice for congressional committees, PACs and parties (2024)


Current report due

Report Close of books [1] Reg./cert. & overnight mailing deadline Filing deadline
April Quarterly 03/31/2024 04/15/2024 04/15/2024


Pre- and post-election reports

Congressional committees

The principal campaign committee of any candidate participating in a 2024 state primary, nominating convention or runoff election–even if unopposed–must also file a pre-election report 12 days prior to the primary, nominating convention or runoff. The principal campaign committee of a candidate participating in the general election must file Pre- and Post-General Reports. Separate notices will be sent to explain these additional reporting obligations.

Read supplemental filing information


PACs and parties

Committees that make contributions or expenditures (including independent expenditures) in connection with an election must also file a pre-election report, if the activity was not previously reported. All committees must file a Post-General Report.

Read supplemental filing information



Reporting schedule for remainder of 2024

Report Close of books [1] Reg./cert. & overnight mailing deadline Filing deadline
July Quarterly 06/30/2024 07/15/2024 07/15/2024
October Quarterly 09/30/2024 10/15/2024 10/15/2024
Pre-General [2] 10/16/2024 10/21/2024 10/24/2024
Post-General 11/25/2024 12/05/2024 12/05/2024
Year-End 12/31/2024 01/31/2025 01/31/2025

Read supplemental filing information for:



FOOTNOTES:

[1] These dates indicate the end of the reporting period. A reporting period always begins the day after the closing date of the last report filed. If the committee is new and has not previously filed a report, the first report must cover all reportable activity that occurred before the committee registered up through the close of books for the first report due.

[2] PACs and parties: required only if committee makes contributions or expenditures in connection with the general election during the reporting period.

Congressional committees: the principal campaign committee of a candidate who participates in the general election must file Pre-and Post-General Reports.