Research · Living data · Updated 2026-07-17

2026 IPO Tracker: Every IPO Priced This Year

A living record of every US IPO in 2026 — offer price, first-day pop, and split-adjusted return since pricing.

New listings are one of the clearest read-outs on market appetite for risk, and 2026 has its own story. NextTrack tracks 12,915 US IPOs across its history, including 0 that have priced on US exchanges so far in 2026. This tracker is a living record — the counts below refresh from SEC pricing filings every time the page is rebuilt, so the numbers you read are current rather than a stale snapshot from a launch-day press release.

MetricLive figure
NextTrack tracks12,915 US IPOs
IPOs priced in 20260
Last updated2026-07-17

What counts as an IPO here

An IPO, in this dataset, is a company's first priced offering of common stock on a US exchange — NYSE or NASDAQ — sourced from its SEC S-1 or F-1 registration and 424B4 pricing filing, then matched to the first trading print. That definition deliberately excludes direct listings that raise no primary capital only where the filing makes the distinction clear, and it folds in de-SPAC listings under the mergers dataset rather than double-counting them here.

Every row carries the offer price the deal was priced at, the exchange, the sector, and the current post-IPO status, so the list tells you not just *who* went public but *how the deal was structured*.

How to read first-day pop vs. return since IPO

Two numbers get confused constantly. **First-day pop** is the move from the offer price to the day-one open or close — it measures how much was left on the table for allocated buyers, not what a public investor could have captured. **Return since IPO** is the split-adjusted total return from the offer price to today, which is the number that actually matters for anyone who held.

The gap between them is the whole point. A deal can pop 40% on day one and still be underwater a year later, and NextTrack computes both so you can see the difference instead of anchoring on the headline pop. Returns are split-adjusted, so a stock that has split since its IPO is measured correctly rather than showing a spurious loss.

What's notable in 2026 so far

With 0 IPOs priced year-to-date, 2026's calendar is best read against the multi-year backdrop of 12,915 total listings NextTrack tracks. The live table below shows a sample of this year's deals; the full 2026 list, sortable by return, exchange, and sector, is in the app.

The most useful lens is dispersion: IPO cohorts are rarely uniform, and the spread between the best and worst performers in a given year usually says more about the underwriting window than any single deal does.

Where the data comes from

IPO records are built from SEC registration and pricing filings (S-1 / F-1 / 424B4), matched to the first exchange trade, with returns computed split-adjusted from the offer price. Lockup-expiry dates are derived from the same prospectuses — see the [IPO lockup expiration tracker](/research/ipo-lockup-expirations) for when insider shares unlock. Because the pipeline reads directly from EDGAR, new pricings appear here within a day of the filing.

2026 IPO dataset & methodology · IPO lockup expirations · 2026 SPAC list & tracker

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