The S-1 is not a marketing document — it is a legal filing made under penalty of securities fraud. Every material fact about your business, your financials, and your risks must be disclosed accurately. The SEC reviews every line. Institutional investors read every word. And plaintiffs' attorneys will reference it for years after your IPO.
What Is a Form S-1?
Form S-1 is the registration statement required by the Securities Act of 1933 for domestic companies conducting an initial public offering in the United States. Filing an S-1 with the SEC initiates the formal IPO process — triggering SEC review, underwriter due diligence, and the quiet period that governs what the company can say publicly until the offering is complete.
The S-1 serves three simultaneous purposes: it satisfies the SEC's disclosure requirements under Regulation S-K and S-X, it provides investors with the material information they need to make an informed investment decision, and it forms the basis for the prospectus distributed during the roadshow.
For Emerging Growth Companies (EGCs), the S-1 can be submitted confidentially to the SEC at least 15 days before the roadshow begins, allowing the company to work through SEC review before public disclosure. Non-EGC companies and direct listings must file publicly from the start.
S-1 vs. Prospectus vs. 424B4 — What's the Difference?
The S-1 is the registration statement filed with the SEC — it includes the prospectus plus technical exhibits and certifications. The preliminary prospectus (red herring) is the investor-facing version distributed during the roadshow — it contains everything except the final offering price and size. The 424B4 is the final prospectus filed after pricing, containing the complete final terms. When people say "read the S-1," they typically mean the preliminary prospectus section of the registration statement.
S-1 Structure — Every Major Section Explained
A typical S-1 registration statement is 150–400 pages and follows a standardized structure prescribed by SEC Regulation S-K. The sections below are the ones that matter most — to the SEC, to investors, and to your legal exposure.
Form S-1 Registration Statement Structure
Regulation S-K RequirementsThe S-1 Drafting Team
An S-1 is a team effort requiring tight coordination among the company, its legal counsel, its auditors, and its underwriters — all working toward a common filing deadline with the SEC. Weekly "all-hands" drafting sessions are the norm during the 8–12 week drafting process.
Company Management
CFO, CAO, General Counsel, and business unit leaders provide factual content, financial data, and strategic narrative. Management certifies accuracy of all disclosures.
Securities Counsel
Leads the drafting process, manages SEC correspondence, and ensures compliance with Regulation S-K requirements. Both company counsel and underwriter counsel participate.
Independent Auditors
Audit financial statements, provide comfort letters, and advise on accounting disclosures. Must be PCAOB-registered. Attend key drafting sessions throughout the process.
Underwriters
Lead underwriter and their counsel review all disclosures for accuracy and conduct due diligence. Research analysts review the document for consistency with the equity story.
The SEC Review Process — From Filing to Effectiveness
After the S-1 is filed, the SEC's Division of Corporation Finance assigns a reviewing team — typically two staff attorneys and a staff accountant — who review the entire document for completeness, accuracy, and compliance with disclosure requirements. The SEC does not evaluate whether the investment is good or bad; it evaluates whether the disclosure is adequate.
S-1 Filed with SEC
The registration statement is submitted through EDGAR. For EGC confidential submissions, the filing is not publicly available. The SEC assigns the filing to a reviewing division within days of receipt.
Day 0Initial SEC Staff Review
The SEC reviewing team reads every section of the S-1 and prepares their initial comment letter. The SEC aims to deliver the first comment letter within 30 days of filing, though timing varies. If the filing is well-prepared, the first letter may arrive in 20–25 days.
Days 20–35First Comment Letter Received
The first comment letter typically contains 20–60 individual comments spanning multiple sections. Comments range from requests for additional disclosure to accounting methodology questions. Each comment requires a written response, typically within 10–15 business days.
~30 days after filingResponse to Comment Letter & S-1/A Amendment Filed
The company drafts responses to each SEC comment working with securities counsel and auditors. Responses must directly address each comment — evasive responses invite follow-up comments. An amended S-1/A incorporating disclosure changes is filed along with the response letter. Response letters and SEC comments are both made public on EDGAR after review concludes.
10–15 business days per roundAdditional Comment Rounds — Typically 2–4 Total
Most S-1 filings go through 2–4 rounds of comments and responses before the SEC staff signals no further comments. Subsequent letters are usually shorter, focusing on unresolved issues or new questions raised by responses. Budget 6–12 weeks for the full comment letter cycle.
6 to 12 weeks totalSEC Declares Registration Statement Effective
When the SEC staff has no further comments, the company requests acceleration of effectiveness — typically the day before the roadshow begins or before pricing. Once effective, the company can proceed with the roadshow and price the offering. The final prospectus (424B4) is filed with the SEC after pricing.
Day before roadshow or pricingWhat the SEC Comments On Most — The Six Hot Zones
SEC comment letters follow predictable patterns. These six areas account for the majority of comments in first-round S-1 review — knowing them in advance allows your drafting team to address them proactively before the first letter arrives.
How to Respond to SEC Comment Letters Effectively
The quality of your responses to SEC comment letters materially affects how quickly the review process concludes. Companies with experienced securities counsel who have worked extensively with the SEC's Division of Corporation Finance navigate the comment process significantly faster than those who do not.
The Cardinal Rules of Comment Letter Responses
Address every comment directly. Each comment in the SEC's letter must receive a discrete, numbered response. Never bundle responses, skip a comment, or address it obliquely. If the company disagrees with the SEC's interpretation, say so respectfully and explain why — but never ignore a comment.
Show your work on disclosures. When a comment asks for additional disclosure, include the proposed revised language in your response letter — do not just tell the SEC you will add it, show them exactly what you are adding and where it will appear in the document.
Engage experienced counsel. The SEC staff attorneys reviewing your S-1 have read hundreds of similar filings. Responses that are legally accurate but not directly responsive to the staff's concern invite follow-up comments. Former SEC staff attorneys on your legal team can identify the actual concern behind a comment and address it efficiently.
Prioritize speed without sacrificing quality. Each comment letter round adds weeks to your timeline. Moving quickly on responses — while ensuring they are complete and accurate — compresses the SEC review and reduces the risk of financial statement staleness.
⚠️ Common S-1 and SEC Review Mistakes
- Filing an S-1 before the company is operationally ready to respond to SEC comments — the comment process requires significant management and advisor bandwidth
- MD&A that describes financial changes without explaining their specific causes — the SEC will ask every time
- Non-GAAP measures presented without clear, complete reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP measures
- Risk factors copied from competitors' S-1 filings — the SEC cross-references these and will identify boilerplate language
- Underestimating the financial staleness risk — plan filing dates so that fiscal year-end audits are completed with sufficient buffer
- Inconsistencies between the business description, risk factors, MD&A, and financial statement footnotes — the SEC reads the entire document and flags internal inconsistencies
- Inadequate disclosure of customer or revenue concentration — if a small number of customers account for a meaningful percentage of revenue, the SEC expects disclosure
S-1 Filing Timeline — Key Milestones
The S-1 drafting and SEC review process runs approximately 4–5 months from kickoff to effectiveness — occupying Phase 3 of the 18-month IPO timeline. The milestones below determine the critical path.
Typical S-1 Milestone Schedule
- Week 0 — S-1 organizational meeting: company, securities counsel, auditors, and underwriters align on timeline, section ownership, and drafting schedule
- Weeks 1–4 — First drafts of Business, Risk Factors, and MD&A sections circulated for review
- Weeks 4–6 — Full S-1 draft assembled; financial statements and exhibits attached; initial all-hands review
- Weeks 6–8 — Underwriter and auditor diligence sessions; comfort letter process initiated; final S-1 revisions
- Week 8 — Confidential submission filed with SEC (EGC) or public S-1 filing
- Week 12 — First SEC comment letter received; response drafting begins immediately
- Weeks 12–16 — Comment letter response rounds (typically 2–4 rounds)
- Weeks 16–18 — SEC staff signals no further comments; effectiveness request filed; roadshow begins
Building Your S-1 Readiness?
The IPO checklist covers every financial, legal, and governance requirement your team needs to complete before filing the S-1.
MD&A — Revenue & Margin Drivers
The SEC expects specific identification of the why behind every material financial change — not just the what.
Revenue Recognition — ASC 606
The SEC scrutinizes revenue recognition policies intensely, particularly for SaaS, subscription, and services businesses.
Non-GAAP Financial Measures
Non-GAAP metrics must be consistently defined, clearly reconciled, and not misleadingly prominent compared to GAAP measures.
Risk Factors — Specificity
Generic risk factors are routinely challenged. The SEC expects risks tailored to the specific company, industry, and business model.
Related Party Transactions
The SEC is systematic in checking that all material related party transactions are identified and disclosed.
Business Description — KPIs & Metrics
When companies disclose operating metrics — ARR, NRR, DAUs, GMV — the SEC expects clear definitions and consistency.