Where can I find Bernie Sanders’s official 2023 and 2024 financial disclosure forms to compare reported assets?

Checked on January 12, 2026
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Executive summary

Official copies of Senator Bernie Sanders’s 2023 and 2024 personal financial disclosures can be retrieved from public disclosure aggregators and hosted PDFs: LegiStorm lists his annual filings (showing 2023 and 2024 entries) [1], OpenSecrets provides searchable access to members’ personal financial disclosure reports [2], and a hosted PDF of the 2024 disclosure is available in the linked repository [3]; readers should expect the forms to report asset and income ranges rather than precise net‑worth figures [4].

1. Where the official filings are posted — concrete links and dates

A convenient index of Sanders’s annual filings appears on LegiStorm, which organizes reports by filing date and explicitly shows an “Annual 2023” filed on 2023‑05‑11 and an “Annual 2024” filed on 2024‑05‑15 [1], while OpenSecrets maintains a searchable database of members’ personal financial disclosure reports where Sanders’s historical filings can be viewed [2]; a copy of the Senate disclosure labeled “United States Senate Financial Disclosures Annual Report for Calendar 2024” is available as a PDF in the referenced media repository [3].

2. What those PDFs and pages actually contain — how the data is presented

The annual disclosure forms are the formal Personal Financial Disclosure (PFD) filings that include income, royalties, gifts, liabilities and asset ranges rather than precise dollar amounts, and the 2024 PDF bears the standard certification language affirming the filer’s statement [3], a format that third‑party summaries repeatedly note produces wide ranges for “net worth” estimates [4].

3. Why comparing 2023 vs. 2024 matters — and what jumps out in public reads of the filings

Readers looking to compare calendar‑year 2023 (filed in the 2024 report) with 2024 (filed in the 2025 report) will find recurring themes in the disclosures—steady Senate salary and material book royalties—details that reporters and analysts have drawn from the filings to quantify outside income (for example, Business Insider and Forbes cite royalty figures and multi‑year book income reported on Sanders’s disclosures) [5] [6].

4. Methodological caveats: ranges, amendments, and interpretive limits

Any direct attempt to convert the PFD entries into a single “net worth” number is constrained by the PFD system itself, which uses ranges for asset and liability lines and therefore produces inherently imprecise totals; observers and aggregators caution that estimates derived from those ranges are best treated as broad intervals rather than exact valuations [4] [7].

5. Practical next steps for a side‑by‑side comparison

To compare reported assets side‑by‑side, download the 2023 and 2024 annual disclosure PDFs from LegiStorm and/or OpenSecrets (LegiStorm’s member disclosure index lists both filings by date) [1] [2], open the 2024 PDF copy in the media repository to inspect the certified entries [3], then map asset categories and ranges across the two forms while accounting for the PFD’s range conventions and any reported royalties or gifts noted by journalists who have summarized the filings [6] [5].

Want to dive deeper?
How do congressional personal financial disclosure forms report assets and liabilities, and what are their range conventions?
What do Sanders’s disclosures reveal about book royalties and other outside income between 2011 and 2024?
Which third‑party databases (LegiStorm, OpenSecrets, Senate Office of Public Records) provide amendments or historical versions of senators’ financial disclosures and how do they differ?