Uber profit surge outpaces bookings as platform hits 50m subscribers
Uber's first-quarter earnings confirm a decisive shift toward profitability, with earnings growth more than doubling top-line growth even as the stock trades well below analyst targets.
Uber posted its first-quarter fiscal 2026 results on May 6, demonstrating that its roughly $151.5 billion market valuation is now underpinned by tangible operating leverage. The platform processed $53.72 billion in gross bookings during the period, a 25% year-over-year increase. This top-line expansion was driven by 3.6 billion completed trips across a base of 199 million monthly active consumers, representing 20% and 17% growth, respectively.
The real significance for investors lies in the margin expansion rather than the raw transaction volume. Non-GAAP earnings per share surged 44% year over year to $0.72, easily beating analyst estimates of $0.7133. Operating income jumped 56.6% to $1.923 billion as adjusted EBITDA margins on gross bookings widened to 4.6%. "Importantly, we're scaling this growth profitably. Non-GAAP EPS increased 44% year-over-year, more than twice as fast as our bookings growth, driven by disciplined cost management and operating leverage," CEO Dara Khosrowshahi told investors.
This accelerated earnings growth is directly tied to shifts in user behavior and product mix. Uber One subscriptions have reached 50 million members. These subscribers now generate more than half of all platform bookings and spend three times as much as non-members, providing a highly predictable revenue base that drops straight to the operating margin.
Volatile Bottom Line Masks Core Strength
The reported GAAP net income of $263 million fell 85.19% from the prior year, a figure that requires context. The decline was entirely driven by a $1.50 billion pre-tax mark-to-market adjustment on equity investments, leaving the core operating business unscathed. Similarly, reported revenue of $13.203 billion missed the consensus estimate of $13.263 billion by a narrow 0.45% margin. Uber attributed this small gap to a roughly nine percentage-point headwind from recent business model changes.
Despite the underlying profitability improvements, the stock's market reaction has been tepid. Shares closed at $74.43 on July 2, 2026, up 2.44% for the day, but they remain down 8.91% year-to-date and 19.14% over the trailing twelve months. After initially popping to $77.14 in the hour following the earnings filing, the stock drifted down to $70.71 thirty days later.
This divergence between operating performance and stock price presents a notable disconnect. With analysts maintaining a $104 price target, the current valuation implies significant upside. Internal executives appear to agree with that assessment. CFO Balaji Krishnamurthy and multiple other executives bought shares in June at $73, putting their own capital behind the thesis that the platform's new profit phase is just beginning.