SI
Stride, Inc. (LRN)·Q4 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 FY2025 delivered a top-line beat with revenue of $653.6M (+22.4% YoY) versus S&P Global consensus of $625.1M; adjusted EPS was $2.29, materially above consensus $1.89, while GAAP diluted EPS was $1.03 due to a $59.5M one-time impairment related to Galvanize .*
- Strength was broad-based: General Education revenue grew 13.6% YoY, and Career Learning (Middle–High) grew 43.8% YoY; average quarterly enrollments were 235.3K (+21.7% YoY), with Career Learning enrollments up 33.2% .
- Management guided qualitatively for FY2026: expect Q1 enrollment growth of 10–15%, revenue per enrollment flat-to-up slightly, gross margin to continue improving but at a slower pace, SG&A as a % of revenue to decline marginally, and CapEx as a % of revenue to be relatively flat; tax rate and interest expense roughly in line with FY2025 .
- Key catalysts: visible beat on revenue and adjusted EPS, strong K-12 demand/brand awareness, New Mexico multi-district partnership securing ~3,000 enrollments, and tutoring/product investments (including responsible AI) that could widen differentiation .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Sustained demand and enrollment growth: average Q4 enrollments rose to 235.3K (+21.7% YoY), with Career Learning enrollments up 33.2%; Q4 revenue per enrollment improved to $2,630 (+2.4% YoY) .
- Segment momentum: Career Learning Middle–High revenue rose 43.8% YoY to $240.5M, and General Education rose 13.6% YoY to $394.1M, lifting total revenue to $653.6M (+22.4% YoY) .
- Management confidence and execution: “we will once again achieve double digit enrollment growth this fall” and a “cautious but ambitious approach” to AI; tutoring rollouts targeted to 2nd–3rd grade reading and engagement initiatives like K-12 Zone sustained brand advantages .
What Went Wrong
- GAAP profitability impacted by impairment: recorded $59.5M in one-time noncash charges (Galvanize) pulling GAAP diluted EPS down to $1.03 vs $1.42 prior year, despite strong adjusted EPS of $2.29 .
- Adult Learning softness: Adult revenue declined 4.3% YoY in Q4 (and throughout FY2025), with management acknowledging execution challenges and continued tech demand headwinds; pivoting MedCerts from B2C to B2B is underway .
- Gross margin expansion to moderate: after +180 bps YoY in FY2025 (to ~39.2%), management expects slower improvement given reinvestments (tutoring, engagement, teacher tools) even as efficiencies continue .
Financial Results
Quarterly Performance vs Prior Quarters (oldest → newest)
Q4 Year-over-Year Comparison (Q4 FY2025 vs Q4 FY2024)
Segment Breakdown (Revenue)
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO: “we will once again achieve double digit enrollment growth this fall” and “proceeding with our cautious but ambitious approach to enable the use of AI…in a responsible and impactful manner” .
- CFO: “adjusted earnings per share was $8.1 up 48%… we booked a onetime noncash impairment charge of $59.5M related to…Galvanize” and “free cash flow…was $372.8M” .
- On New Mexico: customers migrated to new programs; “we anticipate no hole to fill” from the ~4,000 terminated contract, with ~3,000 enrolled in Destinations Career Academy via new district partners .
Q&A Highlights
- Funding/State Mix: FY2026 funding environment favorable across states; federal changes not expected to materially impact revenue per enrollment .
- Gross Margin: expansion will continue but at a slower pace given reinvestments (tutoring, engagement, teacher tools) .
- Adult Learning: candid acknowledgment of execution miss on tech side; pivoting MedCerts to B2B; focus to avoid distraction while creating incremental value .
- Enrollment Caps/Operational Constraints: caps exist but typically negotiable; robust demand indicators (applications) support growth .
- Marketing Efficiency: testing velocity increasing; intent to optimize spend rather than scale significantly .
Estimates Context
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Notes: Primary EPS in Q4 appears aligned to adjusted EPS (company introduced adjusted EPS in Q4 materials), while Q2–Q3 reflect GAAP diluted EPS reporting .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Strong beat and accelerating revenue trajectory: sequential revenue growth Q2→Q3→Q4 with broad-based segment strength; adjusted EPS outperformance in Q4 despite GAAP impairment headwind .
- Demand durability: application funnels and brand awareness point to continued double-digit enrollment growth early in FY2026; segment mix remains favorable to Career Learning .
- Margin path: expect continued improvement but at a moderated pace as Stride invests behind tutoring, engagement, teacher tools and responsible AI; SG&A leverage persists .
- Franchise resilience: swift New Mexico remediation with multi-district partnerships (~3,000 enrollments) mitigates contract loss risk; indicates operating/partner strength .
- Adult Learning execution is a watch item: pivot to B2B underway; not material to group but could provide incremental value if stabilized .
- Cash generation and balance sheet: FY2025 free cash flow ~$372.8M and cash + securities ~$1.0B provide flexibility for continued investment and shareholder-friendly actions .
- Near-term trading lens: stock may respond to the magnitude of the Q4 adjusted EPS beat and enrollment commentary; monitor FY2026 formal guidance at Q1 call and margin cadence updates .
Citations:
- Q4 FY2025 8-K press release and financials: .
- Q4 FY2025 earnings call transcript: .
- New Mexico press release: .
- Q3 FY2025 press release and 8-K: .
- Q3 FY2025 call: .
- Q2 FY2025 press release and 8-K: .
*Estimates disclaimer: Values retrieved from S&P Global.