What do Ilhan Omar’s official House financial disclosure PDFs list for each year (2019–2024) when read line‑by‑line?

Checked on January 11, 2026
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Executive summary

The official House financial-disclosure PDFs for Representative Ilhan Omar for calendar years 2019–2024 are public documents hosted by the Clerk and by her office and each PDF is digitally signed on the filing date listed on the document (2019 filed Aug. 13, 2020; 2022 filed May 15, 2023; 2023 filed May 14, 2024; 2024 filed May 14, 2025) [1] [2] [3] [4]. Read together, the filings show a shift from a very small set of personal entries in 2019 to multiple asset entries by the 2024 filing, including valuation ranges for businesses associated with her husband that many outlets have flagged as driving the apparent increase in reported wealth [5] [6] [7].

1. What each official PDF is and where to find it

Each year’s filing is a standard House Financial Disclosure Report, available on the Clerk’s public disclosures site and on the Member’s disclosure page; the PDFs for 2019, 2022, 2023 and 2024 bear digital signature dates and are the primary source documents for what was listed line‑by‑line in those years (2019 report digitally signed 08/13/2020; 2022 signed 05/15/2023; 2023 signed 05/14/2024; 2024 signed 05/14/2025) [1] [2] [3] [4] [8].

2. 2019 filing — sparse and personal

The 2019 disclosure as filed and summarized in existing reporting lists essentially one personal asset (a retirement account valued in the $1,001–$15,000 bracket) and one liability (student loan debt listed in the $15,001–$50,000 range), making the report minimal in holdings compared with later filings [5] [1]. The 2019 PDF is the baseline that fact‑checkers and reporting have used to note her previously low reported net worth [5].

3. 2020–2022 filings — incremental additions (documented filing present for 2022)

Subsequent filings through 2022 follow the Clerk’s standard format and are available as signed PDFs; the 2022 report is hosted on the Clerk’s site and bears the May 15, 2023 signature date [2]. Reporting does not provide a line‑by‑line extract for every entry in the 2020 and 2021 filings in the provided sources, so the precise per‑line contents for each intermediate year cannot be fully recited here from the supplied documents; readers are directed to the Clerk’s disclosure database for exact row‑by‑row entries [8] [9].

4. 2023 filing — entries begin to show business valuations appearing

The 2023 financial disclosure PDF exists and is digitally signed May 14, 2024, and reporting around subsequent filings indicates that interests tied to businesses associated with her husband began to appear or rise in valuation around this period [3] [6]. While the provided snippets confirm the document’s existence and signature date, the supplied sources do not supply a full line‑by‑line transcription of the 2023 PDF within these excerpts, so exact line items must be read directly from the Clerk’s hosted PDF to reproduce every line [3] [8].

5. 2024 filing — multiple assets and valuation ranges, including Rose Lake Capital and ESTCRU

The 2024 PDF, filed and digitally signed in May 2025 according to the Clerk file, lists six assets and two liabilities in summary reporting and includes valuation ranges for entities reported as connected to her husband, including Rose Lake Capital LLC (valued in the $5 million–$25 million range in the 2024 report) and ESTCRU LLC (valued between $1 million–$5 million in 2024 after being listed much lower previously), entries that have prompted media scrutiny and watchdog interest [4] [5] [7] [6]. Multiple outlets note that the large shifts shown between the 2019 baseline and the 2024 valuations reflect estimated business valuations rather than liquid financial instruments, and fact‑checkers emphasize that some of the assets reflect businesses run in part by her husband rather than direct cash on hand [5] [6].

6. How reporters and watchdogs have interpreted the line items — and the reporting limits

Conservative watchdog groups and major outlets have highlighted the jump in valuation ranges for Rose Lake Capital and ESTCRU as the cause of headlines about an apparent leap in net worth, and those specific valuation ranges and their year‑over‑year changes are present in the 2024 disclosure as summarized in reporting [7] [6], while fact‑checkers like Snopes caution readers that the filings are estimates and note the relationship of some entries to her husband’s businesses [5]. The available source snippets confirm the signed PDFs and the key contested entries, but the provided material does not include a full, verbatim, line‑by‑line transcription of each page of every year’s PDF in these search results, so reproducing every single line here would require direct inspection of the Clerk’s hosted PDFs cited above [8] [9].

Want to dive deeper?
What exact assets, liabilities, gifts and income are listed on Ilhan Omar’s 2024 House financial disclosure PDF when transcribed line‑by‑line from the Clerk’s PDF?
How do congressional financial disclosures report valuations for privately held companies and what rules govern estimated ranges?
What steps do watchdog groups take to verify the valuations reported on members’ financial disclosure forms?