Envista - Q4 2025
February 5, 2026
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Hello, my name is Vanessa, and I will be your conference call facilitator this afternoon. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Envista Holdings Corporation's fourth quarter 2025 earnings results conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question during that time, please press the star, then 1 on your keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press the star and the 2. I will now turn the call over to Mr. Jim Gustafson, Vice President of Investor Relations at Envista Holdings. Mr. Gustafson, you may begin your conference call.
Jim Gustafson (VP of Investor Relations)
Good afternoon. Thanks for joining Envista's fourth quarter 2025 earnings call. We appreciate your interest in our company. With me today are Paul Keel, our President and Chief Executive Officer, and Eric Hammes, our Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, I want to point out that our earnings release, the slide presentation supplementing today's call, and the reconciliations and other information required by SEC Regulation G, relating to any non-GAAP financial measures provided during the call, are all available on the investors section of our website, www.envistaco.com. The audio portion of this call will be archived in the investors section of our website later today under the heading Events and Presentations. During the presentation, we will describe some of the more significant factors that impacted year-over-year performance. The supplemental materials describe additional factors that impacted our results.
Unless otherwise noted, references in these remarks to company-specific financial metrics relate to the fourth quarter of 2025, and references to period-to-period increases and decreases in financial metrics are year-over-year. During the call, we may describe certain products and solutions that have applications submitted and pending certain regulatory approvals or are available only in certain markets. We will also make forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws, including statements regarding events and developments that we believe, anticipate, or may occur in the future. These forward-looking statements are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, including those set forth in our SEC filings, and actual results may differ materially from any forward-looking statements that we make today.
These forward-looking statements speak only as of the date that they are made, and we do not assume any obligation to update any forward-looking statements except as required by law. With that, I'll turn the call over to Paul.
Paul Keel (CEO)
Thanks, Jim. Good afternoon, and welcome, everyone. On today's call, I'll kick us off with some opening thoughts on our Q4 and 2025 performance, our progress implementing the Value Creation Plan that we communicated in March of last year, and our guidance for 2026. Eric will then take us through the numbers in more detail, and I'll wrap up with some closing thoughts before we open it up for Q&A. Let's start with the Value Creation Plan that we shared at our Capital Markets Day early last year. In our view, a good plan should be both achievable and aspirational, timely, as well as timeless. A good plan should authentically describe who you are today and who you're striving to be tomorrow. Centered on the 4 foundational components that you see here, we think our plan does exactly this.
We're guided by our purpose of partnering with dental professionals to improve patient lives. We're centered on our CIRCLES values of customer centricity, innovation, respect, leadership, and continuous improvement. We're focused on our three key priorities of growth, operations, and people. Our plan is framed by our medium-term financial objectives of 2%-4% core growth, driving 4%-7% EBITDA and 7%-10% EPS growth, all underpinned by free cash flow conversion of 100% or better. Today, I'll focus on the strategic and operational progress that we're making in implementing this plan, as well as our financial performance relative to our medium-term objectives. Let's begin with Q4 and 2025 progress on the next slide. Slide 5 is organized by the three priorities that I just mentioned. Beginning with growth on the left side of the chart, ours was widespread.
All businesses posted positive growth for the quarter and year, and all outgrew their respective markets in Q4, resulting in continued share gains across the portfolio. Consistent with what we've discussed on previous calls, increased new product activity and clinical training are contributing meaningfully to our accelerating growth. We trained 30% more customers in 2025, and we generated close to $100 million in revenues from products introduced in just the last 12 months. I'll touch on a few of these new products on the next slide. Looking to build on this momentum in 2026 and beyond, Q4 marked another quarter of double-digit increases in R&D investment. On the operations front, we continue to enjoy strong contributions from EBS, our continuous improvement methodology that is central to how we deliver results, develop our people, and advance our culture.
We reduced G&A spending by over $35 million last year, or about 10%, while maintaining our world-class safety, quality, and customer service levels. We took action in 2025 that we expect will result in roughly a 4-point tax rate reduction in 2026. Supported by strong cash flows, we put in place a $250 million share repurchase program in early 2025, a first for Envista, and returned over $160 million to shareholders across the year. Finally, with respect to people, we're working to advance our high-performing, continuous improvement culture. We refreshed our management team in mid 2024, bringing in new leaders from the outside to supplement a strong core team that was already in place. 18 months in, we're working very well together, and stability and collaboration at the senior ranks have cascaded across our organization.
We saw record participation in our 2025 employee survey, with broad-based increases in employee engagement. We've redoubled our commitment to talent development, with better than half of all management promotions going to existing employees last year, a 40-point increase over 2024. In addition to taking care of our customers, colleagues, and shareholders, we've also stepped up support of our communities by reaching more than 19,000 underserved patients last year and donating over $2 million to charitable causes through our Envista Smile Project. New product innovation has long been the lifeblood of Envista.
Having served dentists now for over 130 years, and with more than 1,500 patents to our name, we've had a hand in several of the most important dental innovations over time, including the invention of dental implants, the introduction of both self-ligated and conventional orthodontic bracket systems, the first panoramic radiograph, and the now ubiquitous endodontic K-file. We built on this strong heritage in 2025, with key new product launches in all major businesses, and you see some of those listed here. Four major new product introductions in Spark last year supported that business's robust growth. New platforms in both premium and challenger contributed to multiple consecutive quarters of growth for our implants franchise and our fastest full-year performance since 2022. In consumables, launches like OptiBond 360, SimpliCore, and CaviCide HP helped propel above-market growth for that business.
And we enjoyed another strong year of new product launches in diagnostics, with an entirely new intraoral scanning platform, as well as novel cloud and AI features for our market-leading DTX Studio suite of solutions. We have another strong wave of launches lined up for 2026, and we look forward to sharing more about these as they come to market. Now, having given you a flavor for where we're investing our time, attention, and resources, let's turn to the output from all this work. We'll begin with Q4 results on the left side of the slide. We posted another strong quarter, delivering good revenue, EBITDA, and EPS growth. Core growth came in around 11%, or something closer to the mid-single digits, excluding certain factors that Eric will explain shortly.
Strong core growth converted to even stronger EBITDA growth of 22%, driven by Spark turning profitable in Q3 and continued good execution on price, tariff mitigation, and G&A productivity. Adjusted EPS was $0.38, up more than 50% from Q4 2024, supported by strong operating profits, share repurchases, and a lower tax rate. Moving to full year performance in the center of the slide, core growth for 2025 was 6.5%, again, broad-based across the portfolio. Adjusted EBITDA was up 26%, resulting in a margin of around 14% or a 2-point improvement over 2024. EPS was up over 60%, aided by many of the same drivers as Q4. All of this contributed to strong free cash flow conversion for 2025 of 114%.
Rounding out the slide, you'll see our 2026 guidance in the column on the right. This year, we expect core revenue growth of 2%-4% and Free Cash Flow conversion around 100%, both directly in line with our value creation plan. We're guiding to Adjusted EBITDA growth of 7%-13% and Adjusted EPS growth of 13%-22%, both above our medium-term objectives. To summarize my introductory comments, Q4 capped a strong year of progress and performance for Envista, positioning us well for continued improvement here in 2026. And with that, I'll turn it over to Eric to cover the financials in more detail.
Eric Hammes (CFO)
Thanks, Paul. In the fourth quarter, we delivered sales of $751 million. Core sales in the quarter increased 10.8%, and FX added nearly 400 basis points. As Paul mentioned, Q4 was another strong quarter for Envista, with broad-based growth. It is worth noting upfront that our Q4 growth benefited from several items which we do not expect to recur over the long term, namely, Spark deferral and lower 2024 comparables, which I'll say more about in just a moment. Excluding some of these items, our Q4 core growth was closer to the mid-single-digit range. Q4 adjusted gross margin was 55%, a decrease of 220 basis points versus the prior year, due to a significant FX transaction benefit in Q4 of 2024.
Our adjusted EBITDA margin for the quarter was 14.8%, which was 90 basis points better than the prior year, as benefits from volume, price, and productivity were partially offset by investments and the prior year FX impact just mentioned. Adjusted EPS for the quarter was $0.38, up $0.14 compared to the same quarter of last year. Our non-GAAP tax rate for the quarter was 30.3%, slightly better than our expectations. We saw a beneficial trend throughout 2025 in our non-GAAP tax rate as a result of our strong business performance in the United States. As we've discussed previously, U.S. GAAP limits the amount of interest expense that companies can deduct to a portion of their taxable income.
Our U.S. earnings have improved on several fronts, namely growth, Spark profit, and G&A, all enabling higher deductibility of our third-party and intercompany interest expense. This drove the lower effective tax rate in 2025. Rounding out slide 8, in Q4, we generated $92 million of free cash flow, down slightly from last year. The year-on-year cash flow decline in Q4 was primarily the result of a working capital improvement in Q4 of last year. Our absolute levels of free cash generation and conversion were strong in Q4 2025. Now I'll take you through our full year financials. In 2025, we delivered sales of $2.7 billion, with core sales for the year increasing 6.5% over 2024. Similar to our trends in Q4, the business performed well throughout 2025.
Our core growth was aided in part by the Spark deferral change and softer 2024 comparables, all netting to an underlying core growth of around 4%, in line with both our revised 2025 guidance and the medium-term objectives Paul covered earlier. 2025 adjusted gross margin was 55.1%, a slight decline year-over-year due to the impact of transactional FX penalties in the first half. Our adjusted EBITDA margin for the year was 13.7%, a 190 basis point improvement over 2024, with volume, price, and productivity all delivering well throughout 2025. Adjusted EPS for the year was $1.19, up 46 cents compared to the prior year, as our growth and profit improvements were aided by a reduced tax rate and the share repurchase program we started in Q1 2025.
Now let's turn to two bridges to help break down our fourth quarter year-over-year results, beginning with sales. Core revenues grew 10.8% in the quarter, with positive growth in all businesses. We had good performance in both volume and price, with a small tailwind from the Spark deferral change. Adding in the benefit of FX, a $25 million tailwind, and two small acquisitions that contributed around $2 million, reported growth came in at 15%. As I mentioned previously, Q4 growth did benefit from two notable items we do not expect to repeat over the long term. The tariff price increases of 2025 are the first. We generated about 3 points of price in Q4, with tariff-related increases accounting for approximately two-thirds of this amount. Favorable comps are the second.
As you recall, our China business experienced a high double-digit contraction in Q4 of 2024 due to VBP preparations and other market-specific factors. In addition, our diagnostics business was down high single digits globally in Q4 2024. All in, prior year comps yielded about a 3-point benefit in Q4 2025. Turning to the adjusted EBITDA margin bridge on slide 11, volume, mix, and the Spark deferral benefit combined to deliver a 330 basis point improvement. The previously mentioned price actions helped margins by 260 basis points. We had a net gain of 100 basis points from improved productivity, with continued strong performance within our supply chains, as well as year-over-year reductions in G&A. Partially offsetting these gains, gross tariff expense was about $10 million in the quarter, or roughly 160 basis points.
We continue to reinvest a portion of our productivity gains back into sales, marketing, and R&D to support future growth, which amounted to 170 basis points in the quarter. As mentioned before, year-on-year FX was a headwind to margins of 270 basis points as a result of the FX transaction gain in Q4 2024. Turning to segment performance, revenue in Specialty Products & Technologies grew nearly 16% year-on-year, with core sales up 10.9%. In our orthodontics business, Spark was up high single digits before the additional benefit from the net deferral change. Brackets and wires were up double digits year-on-year, aided by the low China comparable in Q4 last year that I mentioned previously. Excluding this, brackets and wires were up low single digits.
Our ortho business continues to capture share as having leading offerings in both brackets and wires, and clear aligners provides us a distinct portfolio advantage. On the implant side, we grew mid-single digits globally, led by above-market performance in several geographies, including North America. Growth was especially strong in both the digital and regenerative segments of this business. Customers are looking for solutions that support both clinical efficacy as well as practice efficiency, and our products are helping meet these needs.... In Q4, Specialty Products & Technologies posted an adjusted operating margin of 16.2%, up 470 basis points, driven by good growth, as well as the year-over-year impact of Spark profitability. Volume, price, and net productivity were all positive in this segment, and consistent with prior comments, a portion of the gains were reinvested into commercial and new product development activities.
Moving to our Equipment and Consumables segment, core sales in the quarter increased 10.7% versus prior year, including high single-digit growth in consumables, where we delivered broad-based growth across the portfolio, including solid price performance. Diagnostic core sales was up double digits globally, with high single-digit growth in North America. While our diagnostics business did benefit from a soft Q4 2024 comparable, Q4 of 2025 was our third consecutive quarter of diagnostics growth, driven by strong commercial execution, new product introductions, and improving trends in the North America market in the second half of 2025. Adjusted operating profit margin for the segment was down 510 basis points, driven by continued investment for future growth and the prior year FX transaction benefit that I noted earlier. Now let's turn to cash flow.
Q4 free cash flow was $92 million, a decrease of about $32 million when compared to the fourth quarter of last year, driven by very strong working capital results at the end of 2024 and higher CapEx in Q4 of 2025. For the full year, we delivered $231 million of free cash flow with a conversion of 114%. Free cash flow dollars were down year-over-year, primarily as a result of lower incentive bonus payments in 2024, related to 2023 performance and higher CapEx in 2025. Our balance sheet remains strong, with net debt to adjusted EBITDA of approximately 0.6x, providing welcome stability in the current environment. In Q4, we deployed approximately $24 million in cash to repurchase 1.2 million shares of stock.
On a full year basis, we repurchased $166 million, or a total of more than 9 million shares at an average price of around $18 per share, making strong progress against our $250 million two-year repurchase authorization. As Paul mentioned, today, we're providing guidance for 2026 using the same measures we introduced at the 2025 capital market stage. Core sales growth of 2%-4%, adjusted EBITDA dollar growth of 7%-13%, adjusted EPS of $1.35-$1.45, and free cash conversion of approximately 100%. Slide 16 provides additional detail on key assumptions underlying this guidance. First, we expect the dental market in 2026 to be similar to what we've seen this past year, continued stability with the potential for modest improvement across the year.
Quarterly sales in 2026 will cadence a bit differently than last year, and that we have 4 more selling days in Q1 and 4 fewer in Q4 relative to 2025. Specific to this effect, we expect stronger Q1 core growth and slower Q4 growth. The straight math on the days would imply a 6-7 point shift in growth, although with about one third of our business going to distribution, we expect this to be closer to 4-5 points of additional growth in Q1 2026. We will update you throughout the year on how we see the progression playing out. We're assuming December ending exchange rates for our guidance. With the dollar ending 2025 at 1 euro to 1.17 US dollars, this would imply a 1.5% revenue benefit from foreign exchange in full year 2026.
The impact of the 2024 change in the Spark deferral will continue to subside, with about $15 million of remaining tailwind landing in the first half of 2026. We expect pricing to moderate across the year as we lap the tariff-related price increases implemented in Q2 of 2025. As the tariff environment has proven to be difficult to forecast, we have not modeled any material changes to tariffs in 2026. We incurred about a $30 million tariff headwind in 2025, and we expect around $40 million from tariffs currently in effect in 2026 due to annualization. We were able to offset tariff impacts in 2025 from a combination of price increases, cost reductions, and supply chain adjustments, and expect to cover tariffs currently in effect again in 2026.
And finally, on the tax rate, as a result of improving U.S. profitability and the resolution of the intercompany loan that we discussed last quarter, we expect our 2026 non-GAAP tax rate to be approximately 28% of adjusted pre-tax income. Now, back to you, Paul, to wrap things up.
Paul Keel (CEO)
Thanks, Eric. I'll start by circling back to our value creation plan. While we're still in the early days of unlocking the vast potential of our company, our first year executing the plan has us pointed in the right direction as we delivered above target performance on all four of our medium-term financial objectives in 2025. As noted earlier, we're guiding to continued progress in 2026... with core growth, EBITDA, EPS, and free cash flow conversion all at or above medium-term targeted levels. A few closing thoughts as we put a cap on 2025 and turn our full attention to 2026 and beyond. First, across most of last year, we described the dental market as slow but stable. On balance, that's still the best descriptor, although we are beginning to see some signs of market improvement.
For example, the North American diagnostic market returned to growth in H2, and Q4 was the third straight quarter where all of our businesses posted positive growth. As we're a top three player in all of our categories, the breadth and consistency of our performance should be a positive signal for the broader market as well. Second, we feel good about the progress we're making in implementing the value creation plan that we shared with all of you last year. Underlying growth in 2025 was consistent with our medium-term plan, converting to even stronger earnings and EPS gains. Third, the full year guidance that we've shared today reflects our confidence in building on this momentum here in 2026. Guidance for core growth and free cash flow conversion are right in line with our medium-term objectives, and EBITDA and EPS guidance are above the medium-term plan.
Importantly, I'll close by noting that all this progress is made possible by the commitment, collaboration, and deep capability of our global Envista team. We accomplished a great deal together in 2025, and we've only scratched the surface of what's possible. We're excited to build on this momentum here in 2026. That completes our prepared remarks for today, and we'll now open it up for Q&A.
Operator (participant)
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. Should you have a question, please press the star followed by the one on your touch tone phone. You will hear a prompt that your hand has been raised. Should you wish to decline from the polling process, please press the star followed by the two, and if you're using a speakerphone, please lift the handset up before pressing any keys. We have our first question from Brandon Vazquez with William Blair. Please go ahead.
Brandon Vazquez (Research Analyst)
Hey, everyone. Thanks for taking the question and congrats on a nice end of the year here. You know, can you maybe let's start at a high level, just talk to us a little bit about guidance. What are the potential upsides here? What are the risks to guidance, especially as we look in the top line and the bottom line, especially in the context of what is some pretty good momentum, I think even when you back out some of these moving pieces exiting the year?
Paul Keel (CEO)
Yeah, thanks for the question, Brandon. Why don't I cover the growth part of your question, and then I'll ask Eric to cover the profitability, component. Maybe I'll just begin by, reframing core guidance for the year, 2%-4%, for 2026. And a reminder that this range is directly in line with the medium-term financial objectives that we communicated last year. And the high end of the 2026 range maps well to the roughly 4% underlying growth that we just, delivered. You know, I guess I would also say in terms of context, that since we've not observed any material change in the underlying dental market, 2%-4% feels like a, a good jumping off point for 2026.
Again, noting that, we expect relatively faster Q1 and slower Q4 growth due to the billing day effect that we just mentioned. Now, having set the frame, let me answer your question. A couple of upsides and then maybe a few risks. I'd say there's three upsides worth noting. Consistent with your question, I guess I'd, I'd have to start with our momentum. Not only did we have positive growth across all the businesses, we had accelerating sequential growth across the four quarters. So carrying that momentum into 2026 is, is naturally helpful. And related to this, with all of the businesses positive and generally accelerating, there's two businesses in particular that we don't typically say a lot about that I think do have upside this year. The first is diagnostics.
The overall diagnostics market, as we mentioned, turned positive in the second half of 2025 after three years of contraction. We're a large player both in North America and globally, and while it's still far too early to say with confidence that that market has turned, if indeed it does, that would naturally be upside for us. The second market that we don't say much about is our consumables franchise. It was up high single digits in 2025, behind some really good work by the team on fundamental things like price, new product introductions, DSO penetration, et cetera. We have been intentionally investing more in our consumables business of late, which could yield some upside. Let's see, maybe the third upside I'd mention, Brandon, would be price.
As we said in our prepared remarks, our guidance assumes that we return to more normal pricing levels, you know, call it a point or so per annum once we lap the tariff-related increases that we took mid last year. There's just too many moving pieces to put it in our guidance, but it's not hard to envision scenarios where inflation, both general to the economy and specific to dental, continue at elevated levels here in 2026. We've been working hard at improving our price execution, and so if inflation stays, you know, at higher levels, I think we'd be positioned to take advantage of that. Now, giving you a balanced response on the growth side before I turn it over to Eric for profitability. I think two risks warrant mention.
The first, of course, you'd have to start with macro volatility. No one gives a confidence interval along with their guidance, but if, if, we did, you'd have to expect that it'd be unusually wide, for this year for the, the reasons we all know well. Factors like tariffs and interest rates, consumer confidence, et cetera, et cetera, all impact dental demand. As we saw pretty clearly in 2025, there's a, a real possibility of some or all of those, recurring here in 2026. Which brings me on to a second risk, worth noting, that being China. China now represents about 7% of our total sales. While VBP and ortho and implants are very likely in 2026, the specific timing, is difficult to forecast. There's been a, a number of delays.
Based on prior experience, we feel like we generally have our arms around the impact of VBP across a 12- or 18-month horizon, but the specific quarter-by-quarter effects can vary quite a bit depending upon government timing. So in sum, 2%-4% for the year. I would say, I would shade the upsides a little bit above the risks, but there's plenty, plenty out in the world right now to keep us cautious. Eric, you want to say same on the EBITDA side?
Eric Hammes (CFO)
Yeah, excellent. Thanks, Paul. Brandon, thanks for the question. A good forward lean for us to talk through. So, maybe just before the headwinds, tailwinds, what I would just start with is the fact that our profit improvement and our margin improvement in 2025 was pretty solid. Double-digit growth in profit, almost 200 points in year-over-year improvement in margin. And I think if you just follow our, you know, bridges as we provided through each quarter, and now fourth quarter, what you saw in 2025 is good growth in productivity, more than offsetting tariffs and FX, all while being able to invest for future growth, which you saw more predominantly in Q3 and Q4. So good, good year for us, good equation in total.
Just as Paul said, just a reinforcement on guidance, we're guiding to 7%-13% EBITDA growth in 2026, so slightly better than our capital markets day guide or outlook, which was intended to be an average year. We do think it's important to focus on the dollar growth versus the margin percentage, although, of course, we manage both. We think the dollar growth aligns better with value creation. We know our investors like to see that, and it allows us a little bit of flexibility on trade-offs between growth and margin. That said, if you take our guide and you back into margins, you'll get a guidance that implies about 50-100 basis points in margin improvement in 2026. Tailwinds, I would say, would be core growth.
So margin improvement based on the strong growth margins that we get. Paul talked about the fact that we've got a good momentum right now in terms of growth heading into 2026, and we see that as a tailwind for margin rate. Productivity, just like 2025, we'll continue to drive productivity, factory productivity, G&A discipline. We'll just put another focus on that this year, like we did last year. We've got good momentum in Spark, both in terms of growth and profitability, and I think we can expect more of that in 2026. And then FX, while certainly less predictable as a, as a forward projection, we do think FX is a year-on-year tailwind to our margins. That's mostly because we took losses on, what we call transaction balance sheet revaluation in the first half of last year.
We have a hedging program in place, and that's why you've seen sort of a settling and more of a neutral interquarter view of that in the second half. Then if we just flip for a moment to headwinds, I think we gave a pretty instructive view of tariffs and our guide assumptions. About $10 million per quarter is the run rate that we've been at in second half. If you just annualize that, it means we've got about a $10 million headwind next year. We'll continue to offset that with the actions that we've had thus far. China, Paul, Paul mentioned sort of the uncertainty of China.
He mentioned the 7% of our revenues, but I think in general, you should see China as a margin rate headwind, maybe a slight profit dollar headwind, just based on how we expect China to play out in terms of growth and profitability. And then lastly, I would just say, you know, investments, just as we saw in 2025, we'll continue to invest in R&D, sales and marketing. That will certainly be at the pace of our business performance, right? How well we grow, and how well we fund that investment by delivering on productivity. You kind of take all that together, and the cadence for the year probably looks like slightly lower margins first half, slightly higher second half. Most of that just being defined by the revenue profile of our business.
Brandon Vazquez (Research Analyst)
Got it. Thanks, guys, and that, that's super helpful, very comprehensive. So maybe I'll ask a quick modeling touch-up once some others can get in the queue here. But, Eric, as you think of the tax rate, you guys have clearly done some good work there. Is there more work to be done? What's kind of the expectations of tax rate, tax rates to go lower? Thanks for the questions, guys.
Paul Keel (CEO)
Yeah, great, great question, Brandon. So, I mean, just kind of taking everybody back, we finished the year just under 32%. We put in our guidance assumptions just to give you the, you know, the sort of the answer on our EPS equation. We expect tax to be this year, 2026, around 28%.
... That's fully inclusive of the resolution of the intercompany loan that we've talked about. That is the majority of our 4-point tax rate reduction. Future benefits, I would say, would primarily come from one of three things: continued U.S. profit improvement. We still pay third-party interest, that's interest on our debt, and we have a little bit of a deductibility cap that we still have, there, which pressures our tax rate. Continued U.S. income improvement will just help to absorb that effectively. The second would be any kind of pay down in debt. So if we choose to capitally deploy our balance sheet towards debt pay down, that may help our tax rate. That's also linked to that interest expense just mentioned.
And then the last would just be if we have any geo mix benefits and the ability to improve profits in lower tax jurisdictions. But I would say the 28% is a good view. It's obviously showing a lot of year-on-year improvement, and most of the, you know, mentioned items on favorability would be, you know, minor at this point in time.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We have our next question from Jonathan Block with Stifel. Please go ahead.
Jonathan Block (Managing Director)
Great. Thanks, guys, and good afternoon. Great color on 25 and the 26 outlook. I think the only thing that, you know, I was a little bit unclear on, and sorry if I missed it, but just the detail or assumptions on VBP for ortho and/or implants. In other words, sort of what's embedded in the 26 guidance regarding those variables. Is it one? Is it the other? Stub. Again, I know it's a moving part or moving parts to it, but just curious on how you guys are thinking about that going into the year.
Paul Keel (CEO)
Hey, John. Thanks for the question. Yeah, we didn't say much about VBP because there's really not too much new news to report. But let me recap what we do know. We continue to expect a first-round VBP for ortho and a second-round VBP for implants sometime in 2026, but specific timing has proven to be difficult. In our guidance, we assume a second implant VBP to occur likely in Q2, and the most probable timing for the ortho 1.0 VBP would be the second half. You know, just to give you guys a little bit of a context for why the timing is so uncertain here. Recall that there are dozens of medical VBPs currently underway across China.
To increase the complexity, some of these are specific to one province, some are cross-provincial, some are national, and most of the large hospitals participate in multiple VBPs. You know, all big hospitals have an orthopedic department, a urology department, cardiovascular, dental, et cetera. So it is a complex thing for, for Chinese authorities to, to manage, and why continued shifts in timing are, are certainly possible. But hopefully that gives you a, a flavor for the, the timing piece. Just as a reminder, the way this typically plays out is we see a quarter or two of negative order growth in advance of a VBP go live as the channel draws down inventory to, you know, avoid a restatement penalty. And then you get the opposite of that once the, the VBP gets announced.
You get a quarter or two of order acceleration as the channel replaces that drawn down inventory at the new, new price level.
Jonathan Block (Managing Director)
Got it.
Paul Keel (CEO)
Hopefully that gets at what you were asking.
Jonathan Block (Managing Director)
No, it totally does, Paul. That was very helpful. And the second one, I don't know, I feel like you guys are almost being a little modest. I mean, look, I get it, the 10.8 core is not the new run rate. Hopefully, none of us are gonna go ahead and plug that in the model, and we get it. It had some benefits, like you mentioned, in Easy Comp. But, you know, you guys knew about the Easy Comp. Your 2025 guidance was 4% top line, and it implied, I believe, around 2% core for the fourth quarter of 2025. And again, you knew the Easy Comp. You probably knew most of the stuff around price.
Where I'm just going with this is, like, what deviated to the upside for you guys, for the company in the last three months of the quarter to put up that close to 11 versus the implied 2? And again, I, I get the variables that you are calling out going forward, but it still seems like a notable step function from where your heads were at three months ago. Thank you.
Paul Keel (CEO)
Well, John, both Eric and I grew up in Minnesota, so we think of modest as a compliment. You know, the 2-4, I think you understand why we see that as a proper jumping-off point for 2026. You know, lines up exactly with the medium-term guidance that we gave roughly a year ago and lines up pretty well with the underlying growth. Embedded in your question, we certainly wouldn't want anyone on this call coming off feeling like we're signaling that Envista expects a slowdown in our underlying performance or that we've come anywhere close to realizing the full potential of this business. And we've now posted 5 consecutive quarters of generally accelerating growth, and today we indicated that we expect to build on that momentum in 2026.
We're committed to rebuilding our track record of consistent delivery. I think this is now my seventh earnings call, and it's probably Eric's sixth. And hopefully, you're seeing a pattern develop both of steadily improving performance, but also credible, transparent reporting. And that's what we're aiming to build on here in 2026.
Eric Hammes (CFO)
John, I'll give you just a couple other points maybe to consider. So, you know, we look at the full year 2025, so fourth quarter was good. I take your point fully. For the full year, our...
... sort of normalized growth rate is about 4%. Any quarter could be a little bit more dynamic. Two things did stand out in our fourth quarter growth, maybe differentiated from what we saw going into the quarter. One was the shift in the China ortho VBP. So remember, we were talking sort of going into that call about a December VBP implementation. That meant that the ortho bracket and wire market for us and generally the channel was just stronger, you know, material enough to move our growth by a point or so. And then we had a very good growth result in implants. You saw, you know, mid-single digit plus growth, very, very strong in the sort of the broad digital portfolio that we have.
That's everything from our prosthetic, from treatment planning before that to some of our equipment and guided surgery. I wouldn't call it a surprise. Our teams have been out there, we've been investing in it, but it was certainly a better, a better growth for us than we anticipated, at least, you know, midway through the quarter.
Jonathan Block (Managing Director)
Fair enough. Thank you, guys. I appreciate it.
Operator (participant)
And thank you. Our next question is from Kevin Caliendo with UBS. Please go ahead.
Kevin Caliendo (Healthcare Equity Research)
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. In the fourth quarter, implants were up mid-single digit in both premium and value. Do you think how do you think that was compared to the market? And just kind of get a sense of how much you think your new products actually contributed to your growth. Meaning, was it Envista's new products? Was it the market? Was it your positioning already, you're capturing more share? I'm just trying to get a sense, because we have new products again coming next year, and I'm trying to also gauge how much of your top line growth might be coming, or you think might be coming from your new product launches.
Paul Keel (CEO)
Yeah, thanks for the question, Kevin. We think that global implant market is, you know, growing mid-single digits, call it 5%. We were a little bit north of that in Q4, which was good, good for us. That's the first quarter since I've been here, where I think we did outgrow the market in implants in total. So that's also now five straight quarters for premium growth and generally accelerating quarter sequentially. So building good momentum in implants. Maybe two parts of your question, you asked what do I think is going on with the what do we think is going on with the market, and then how do new products play into that? The market, I would say we don't yet see any credible evidence that the market has changed.
You know, we'll learn more in the coming weeks as our peers report, but we don't think market acceleration was a driver of our acceleration. We think a couple of things played into our advantage. The first is, again, we made a significant investment in this business in 2024. You know, we put $25 million into the commercial front end, to our customer training, and then into new products. Now, a year or so past that investment, we certainly see a return on the commercial front end of it, of that and on the customer training. I made some mention of that in my prepared remarks. I don't think we yet see the new product impact of that.
We have a number of products we've now advanced through our pipeline that will launch in 2026, and we'll tell you guys more about those as they come to market, but I don't think that new product piece was in the 2025 result. The other piece I would point to, consistent with the broader Envista, is that we did take price in 2025, and the tariff environment, you know, aided that. So I think we were advantaged in 2025 by a little bit of extra pri-- tariff price.
Kevin Caliendo (Healthcare Equity Research)
That you don't expect to continue. Is that, is it, that's sort of what you're saying, right? There isn't necessarily any of that built into the 2-4.
Paul Keel (CEO)
Correct. Our guidance for this year assumes that the mid-year increases from last year carry forward for the first two quarters, then we lap them, and without any further information on tariffs, we've assumed that market dental inflation returns to kind of that, what I consider more normal 0.2%-1.5% in the second half. So, you know, I think it was Brandon's question to kick us off. We do see pricing as an upside, but it's not in the guide.
Kevin Caliendo (Healthcare Equity Research)
Understood. Thank you so much. Super helpful.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Our next question is from Jeff Johnson with Baird. Please go ahead.
Jeffrey Johnson (Senior Research Analyst)
Yeah, thanks. Good evening, guys. Can you hear me okay?
Paul Keel (CEO)
We can.
Jeffrey Johnson (Senior Research Analyst)
All right. Sorry about that. I'm driving, so if you hear any crashes or anything, just ignore it. I'll put you on mute. But so just a question on Spark. This quarter, the high single digit growth, obviously, is still gonna be above market, but I think last quarter, pre-deferrals, you were up high teens. Just any change in competitive positioning and/or market trends in the quarter? And then, Eric, maybe you can help us just understand, you know, last quarter was the first quarter you swung to profitability on the Spark side. Did we see further improvements on top of that in Q4? And how should we think about the gating over the next 3 to 6 to 8 quarters or something like that, on how we get to that fleet average that you've talked about someday getting to on the Spark side? Thanks, guys.
Paul Keel (CEO)
All right, I'll take growth. Eric will take profitability. Yeah, we think we outgrew the market again. That's many, many consecutive quarters now that we've done that. Now, with the two biggest players on the ortho side having reported, you know, pretty decent numbers, maybe that suggests that the clear aligner market is getting a little bit of a boost. Maybe that helped a bit. And we did have a very big new product year in 2025, and we had four real new product introductions, and several of those were completely incremental growth. So our retainer offering, for example, that's all incremental on no replacement. So I think all of those things, you know, really helped us.
I haven't seen, or we haven't seen any material change in the competitive landscape. In the orthodontic segment, where we compete, there's three main players. All of them are good. All of them are, you know, competing aggressively, and I think that's good for customers and ultimately good for the market. Eric, you want to talk about the profitability side?
Eric Hammes (CFO)
Yeah, just a couple points, Jeff. So, I mean, we talked last quarter about turning profitable. We won't, you know, give you kind of specifics on the call here, but we were certainly profitable again in fourth quarter, at consistent levels with where we were in third quarter. So nothing of a, you know, dramatic departure. And in part, you know, it's because now we're sort of getting into this period where every quarter sequentially will depend really on underlying Spark profitability, improvement, operations, unit costs, design, and less, of course, about the roll-through of the deferral. Although, you know, both have contributed to the profitability path over the last year.
We were down year over year in unit costs, so we've, I think, given sort of a view in past calls about how much did we have our cost per aligner down year over year. We were down mid-teens year over year. We were modestly down sequentially, so a little improvement quarter to quarter, but, but mostly year over year. And as we see the cadence for the business going forward, I'd say you can depend on two things. One would be, you know, just the annualization, if you will, into 2026, so the business sort of reaching profitability. We've told you that third quarter, fourth quarter was a good, like, absolute level of business to depend on, but that means that next year we've got just a nice carryover from that improvement trend.
And then, you know, fleet average is still the best way to think about it on an operating level, and our improvement will come from really, you know, sort of the four things we've mentioned, right? Continued focus on automation and manufacturing cost out. Growth will be a portion of it, but it's not fully dependable on it, or dependent on it. Portfolio, as Paul just talked about, you know, we've been very focused on new products and making sure that we have, you know, the best play both for customers but also for profit levels. And then design costs. We've been bringing our, you know, design costs down consistently. That's aided actually by one of the products that Paul mentioned, or had on the slide rather in the earnings call, which we call StageRx.
That simply helps us translate efficiencies from the front end at the clinician level into our treatment planning and design and then ultimately into manufacturing. Jeff, we'll send you a transcript, so hopefully you're not taking notes while you're driving.
Jeffrey Johnson (Senior Research Analyst)
Thanks, guys.
Eric Hammes (CFO)
Yeah.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Our next question is from Elizabeth Anderson with Evercore.
Elizabeth Anderson (Senior Managing Director)
Hey, guys. Good afternoon. Thanks for the question. I was wondering if, you know, Paul, as you said, this is your seventh call, and, you know, I think, you know, there are obviously a lot of immediately, like, fires that have to be put out, and then you sort of—and then you did a great job stabilizing the business and sort of getting it to where we are now. As we kind of, you know, think about the business and the market maybe being a little bit stable, I know you've talked about some new products and things that you're excited about rolling out as we think about 2026 and beyond. How do you kind of think about, like, where your focus areas are for, like, here to 2024? Is it sort of continuing to refine sort of things that you've talked about before?
Is it new vectors of growth in terms of maybe either organic or, or M&A driven? Maybe just sort of at a high level, help us think through that as, as you know, things are, you know, moving, everything moving in the right direction, you're kind of thinking about the next leg.
Paul Keel (CEO)
Yeah. Thanks, Elizabeth. You know, both Eric and I grew up in dental. You know, we were pretty familiar with the Envista portfolio before we joined. We had, you know, bid against the assets when we were at 3M, and then we competed against the business. And so we had a pretty good understanding of what a strong fundamental business it was. And as I think we've talked about on previous calls, you know, there were a couple of pieces that were disrupted in that kind of 2023 and 2024 time period, and I'd put them into three buckets.
The first is, you know, I felt we had inappropriate guidance in the market, and, being a highly accountable company, you know, we did what good companies do when they miss, which is anything they can to not miss again. So we were chasing the quarter, which caused us to cut back on investments, which then gets you on that kind of downward spiral in a high-margin business like this. If you don't invest in growth, you lose growth, and then you lose gross margin, and then you lose ability to fund future growth.
So the first thing we needed to do was get the flywheel turning back in the right direction, and the $25 million you know investment that we made in 2024 in retrospect looks like it did that.
... the second thing related to that is, you know, we're a 130-year-old company, and if you go back over time, every period of sustained growth was because we had a heavy focus on new products, not just development, but also commercialization. And so we've been very intentional, you know, not just in Q4, not just in 2025, but I think every quarter that Eric and I have been here, to make an aggressive but measured investment in new product development. Some of that has already hit. We talked about the Spark piece of that. Many of those programs were underway before we arrived.
But I, but we have more in the pipe that I think you guys are going to hear about in 2026 and beyond, that, that should be encouraging. And then the third, Elizabeth, was organizationally. You know, there was a lot of turnover at the higher ranks in the business, and that cascaded down through the organization. So at the same time that we're hopefully rebuilding confidence with the investors, you know, job one for us is to rebuild confidence with our employees. Fortunately, you know, these are good, high-quality products, and we never lost the confidence with our customers, so we had that stakeholder, you know, in decent shape. But, but I think, over the last several quarters, we've rebuilt that confidence in our employee base.
You can see engagement going up, and you can feel the energy around here. And so looking forward to you know, what are we focused on now? We just put out the new plan a year ago, so we're squarely focused on executing against that. The three priorities of growth, operations, and people. And we're you know, we now have a building sample set of when we deliver against those priorities, it's reflected in the financial output. So, the plan seems to be working, and as they say, we'll keep working the plan.
Elizabeth Anderson (Senior Managing Director)
Sounds like a good plan. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We have our next question from Steven Valiquette with Mizuho Securities. Please go ahead.
Steven Valiquette (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Sorry, I was on mute for a second there. Sorry. A couple questions here, I guess just first on, really more of a geographic question. I guess, really across kind of global dental orthodontic markets, some of your competitors are highlighting, you know, better end markets in Europe and APAC, but still suggesting challenging end markets in North America in various product categories. But you guys seem to be, you know, posting pretty strong growth in North America, really across all your key product categories. So I guess I'm just curious, I don't know if you think about it this way or not, but, you know, is there a key variable you can point to in your go-to-market strategy in North America that's leading to these results?
Whether it's, you know, DSO relationships or something else, or is it just strong execution across each key product area that's just adding up to overall North American result? Just any color, if you think about it that way, might be helpful. Thanks.
Paul Keel (CEO)
Yeah, Steven, if I understood the question correctly, it's about any geographic differences. So let me answer the question for Q4 and for 2025. In Q4, no, we did not see any major differences by geography. We had strong growth in North America, in West Europe, and in emerging markets. And then, as I think Eric mentioned, we had extra high growth in China because of that comp from ortho VBP preparation in Q4 2024. So 2025 Q4, we saw strength across all regions. The answer is about the same for 2025. We weren't as strong on a full year basis in China, but North America and Europe were very similar. And then a couple of emerging markets were double digits as well.
You're back on mute, Steven.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Our next question comes from Lily Lozada with JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Lilly Quezada (Senior Branch Manager)
Great. Thanks so much for taking the question. One, on margins, you showed a lot of SG&A leverage, so can you talk through some of the sources of leverage you saw there in the quarter, and how you're thinking about SG&A as a driver of margin expansion in 2026? And on R&D, that's been pretty consistently increasing as a percentage of sales, and so should we think about that continuing to outpace revenue growth in 2026?
Paul Keel (CEO)
Yeah, I can take that, Lily, appreciate it. So, so the first part, if you look at our adjusted EBITDA margin bridge, I'll just give you the high points on that one again. So overall margins improving in the quarter. I would say the quarter was fairly indicative of what we've seen in each quarter this year, or most quarters this year, and then for full year 2025. So volume benefits, price benefits. We delivered good productivity across most of our businesses. Our Spark margin improvement year-over-year was significant for us. And then, as you mentioned, within kind of the bundling of SG&A, G&A in particular was strong for us in the quarter, as it was for the full year 2025, we were down 11%.
All of that effectively is helping us to offset tariffs and a little bit of FX penalty, and then reinvest in the business. I would say if you sort of go back to the first question that was asked post prepared remarks, our guide for next year is not too dissimilar. We'll continue to get margin expansion from growth and productivity. We'll continue to use that to invest in the business at the pace of our performance... and maybe the only difference into 2026 is that we expect FX to be a benefit, just given the first half transaction costs that we, that we had.
And then sort of the third part of your question on sales, marketing, R&D, I would say, you know, expect us to continue to invest in R&D at a not too dissimilar pace, improving each year and likely improving at a rate higher than growth, so long, so long as we can generate productivity, obviously, to, to be able to do that. Sales and marketing, probably more, you know, flat to maybe modestly increasing as an intensity. You know, that's a nod to percent of sales, but certainly less so than, than R&D.
Lilly Quezada (Senior Branch Manager)
Great. That's really helpful. And then just another follow-up on VBP. Appreciate it's kind of tricky to call the timing, but I was hoping we could get a bit more color on how you're thinking about the impact when it does eventually come. I think last time you framed it as a net positive to revenues for implants, and so how would you characterize it this time around? Any color on the size of the businesses being impacted, the magnitude of the potential impact, and whether you're seeing it being a net headwind or tailwind after taking into account the potential volume impacts would be helpful.
Paul Keel (CEO)
Sure. Why don't I take that one? So again, there's two VBPs that we anticipate. The first VBP in ortho, and then the second VBP in implants. So let me just comment on each, in turn. So for VBP ortho, we expect it to look a lot like VBP one for implants. What we saw there was kind of a 40%-45% price decrease. That was then met with an equal inverse volume increase, so a 100% volume increase to offset the 40%-45% price increase. And for us, it was a net benefit to total revenues. So we expect something similar in ortho. Of course, there are nuances to ortho, and I'd mention two.
The first is, in implants, it's easier for the market to expand volume. It's a faster procedure and easier, easy for me to say anyway, easier to train a dentist to do it. So we saw a more rapid expansion in the patient demand. I think we're going to see less of that on the orthodontic side. You know, it's typically an 18-month procedure treatment, so a little bit harder to expand. And certainly on the traditional bracket and wire side, harder to expand that available supply through orthodontists, as quickly. The other nuance worth mentioning is specific to us. You know, there's both the traditional and the clear aligner VBP. We're a large player on the traditional side in China. We're smaller on the clear aligner side.
So the clear aligner question is gonna impact some of our peers greater in China. Coming on to the anticipated second VBP for implants, it'll be much smaller, we think, maybe in the 10%-20% price decrease level. It benefited us greatly in VBP one because those with large market shares going in tend to get even larger market shares coming out. Because in the case of premium to challenger implants, that price differential was compressed. And when the difference is smaller, we found more clinicians just trading up to premium. So we were a benefactor of that. Hopefully, that gives you a little flavor, Lily, of the two VBPs that should be coming here in 2026.
Lilly Quezada (Senior Branch Manager)
Yep, very helpful. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Our next question is from Allen Lutz with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Speaker 11
Hey, thanks for taking the questions. This is Dev on for Allen. I just want to maybe double-click on the diagnostic and equipment growth in the quarter and just, you know, looking at what that looks into next year. Granted, this may be a tough, a tough one to parse out, even in your seat, but just curious how you think about underlying growth for equipment, call it, versus more one-time-ish benefits. You know, I'm thinking here sort of, you know, pent-up demand, maybe an impetus from the advantageous tax code recently or level of inventory in the channel. How do you see underlying equipment, diagnostic, market volume growth in 2026, and then maybe in Envista specifically?
Paul Keel (CEO)
So diagnostics, I'll talk in general. So equipment is a bigger category. Equipment includes chairs, handpieces, et cetera. We exited that part of the business previously. So we participate in three categories within diagnostics. We participate in 2D and 3D imaging. You know, you're familiar with that. You sit in the chair, they take a picture of your anatomy. We participate in intraoral scanning, IOS, which is a different image capture technology, and then we participate in the software piece, the treatment planning, as well as the image management, piece. Those three categories tend to be the faster-growing part of the broader equipment. We had double-digit growth in our diagnostics business in Q4, but that was aided by the easy comp from Q4 2024 that Eric mentioned.
I think, right now I would call it a low single-digit growing category, and we have outpaced the market for the last couple of quarters. I would expect something similar in the first half of 2026, low single-digit growth, us doing a little bit better than that. And then, we'll just have to see how that, you know, whether that growth catches and the market moves to more sustainable growth. So I'm gonna hold off forecasting market growth in the second half for now.
Speaker 11
Got it. That's helpful. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. That is all the time that we have for questions today. I will now turn the call over to Paul Keel, CEO, for closing remarks.
Paul Keel (CEO)
Okay, thanks, Vanessa, and thanks everyone for tuning in. Maybe I'll just quickly underline a couple of quick thoughts to put a wrap around the quarter and the year. First, Q4 was another encouraging step forward for Envista, with double-digit sales, adjusted EBITDA and EPS growth, and that capped off a strong 2025, with 6.5% core growth, also converting to double-digit EBITDA and EPS growth for the full year. Our second comment is that our performance was broad-based, with all major geographies and businesses once again in positive territory, and a good contribution from volume, price, and new products. We also drove two points of margin expansion and returned over $160 million to shareholders. Third, we continue to focus on executing the value creation plan that we shared at our Capital Markets Day last March.
And I think we are seeing encouraging progress on all three of our main priorities: growth, operations, and people. Which brings me to 2026. Our guidance for this year reflects our confidence on, in building on this momentum. Guidance for core growth and free cash flow conversion are right in line with our medium-term objectives, and guidance for EBITDA and EPS are above that medium-term plan. I think that pretty much covers it for today. Thanks, everyone. Have a great day and a great remainder of the week.
Operator (participant)
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This concludes today's conference call. We thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.