Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 2A— - SECURITIES AND TRUST INDENTURES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - DOMESTIC SECURITIES › § 77d–1
Intermediaries who help sell small-company securities must register with the SEC as either a broker or a funding portal and join any required self‑regulatory group. They must give clear risk and education materials, make sure each investor reads those materials, confirms they could lose their whole investment, and answers basic questions showing they understand risks like illiquidity and startup risk. Intermediaries must try to stop fraud, including running background and enforcement-history checks on every officer, director, and anyone owning more than 20% of an issuer. They must give the SEC and potential investors the issuer’s offering information at least 21 days before sales begin, hold money until the offering reaches its target, let investors cancel, limit how much someone can invest in a 12‑month period, protect investor privacy, not pay for lists of personal investor data, avoid conflicts of interest by barring insiders from owning issuers that use their service, and follow other SEC rules for investor protection. Issuers who sell under this exemption must file and give investors basic facts: name, address, website, leaders and large owners, business plan, use of proceeds, target amount and progress updates, price or how it’s set, ownership and capital-structure details, risks, and financial statements sized to the offering: for offerings totaling $100,000 or less, most recent tax return (if any) and a CEO-certified statement; more than $100,000 up to $500,000, reviewed statements; more than $500,000, audited statements. Issuers may only post notices that point investors to the portal or broker, must disclose paid promoters when required, file annual reports, and follow other SEC rules. Buyers can sue to get back money if the issuer made a material false statement or left out required facts, unless the issuer proves it did not and could not have known. The SEC will share offering info with state regulators. Securities bought under this rule cannot be resold for 1 year except to the issuer, an accredited investor, a registered offering, or certain family or similar transfers. The SEC can set other limits. The SEC will adjust dollar limits at least every 5 years for inflation. Definitions: Intermediary = person who helps sell securities; Issuer = company offering the securities; Investor = person who buys them.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 77d–1
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73