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TWILIO INC (TWLO)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Revenue and EPS beat: Q3 revenue was $1.30B vs S&P Global consensus $1.25B, and non-GAAP diluted EPS was $1.25 vs $1.07, driven by broad-based strength in Messaging (high-teens growth) and accelerating Voice (mid-teens) with strong voice AI cohort growth; FY25 guidance for revenue, profitability and FCF was raised .
  • Gross margin headwind: Non-GAAP gross margin fell to 50.1% (−280 bps YoY, −60 bps QoQ) primarily due to $20M pass-through Verizon A2P carrier fees; Q4 assumes $22M pass-through fees, with management emphasizing no impact on gross profit dollars/FCF from the gross-up .
  • KPIs improved: Dollar-Based Net Expansion Rate rose to 109% (from 105% YoY), and Active Customer Accounts reached 392k (from 320k YoY), reflecting healthy expansion across ISV and self-serve channels (both >20% YoY) .
  • Capital allocation and strategic tuck-in: Q3 share repurchases were $349.8M (YTD $656.7M) and Twilio announced a definitive agreement to acquire Stytch to augment identity/authentication for AI agents; management characterized the acquisition as <$100M and immaterial to the P&L .
  • Potential stock reaction catalysts: Raised FY25 targets, continued high-teens Messaging and mid-teens Voice growth, AI-related adoption (voice AI, Verify >25% growth), and stepped-up buybacks could support sentiment; carrier fee dynamics and gross margin trajectory remain watch points .

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

What Went Well

  • Broad-based growth and record profitability: “Twilio had a great Q3, reaching $1.3 billion in revenue and $235 million in non-GAAP income from operations, another record for both… we’ve raised our revenue, profitability, and free cash flow targets for the full year” .
  • Product momentum: Messaging grew high teens for the second consecutive quarter and Voice accelerated to mid-teens, its fastest in >3 years; Verify grew >25% YoY; voice AI cohort growth was ~60% YoY with top 10 voice AI startups up >10x .
  • Go-to-market execution and large win: Management highlighted “a nine-figure renewal spanning multiple products with a leading cloud provider, the largest deal in our company's history” and strong traction in ISV and self-serve (both >20% YoY) .

What Went Wrong

  • Gross margin compression: Non-GAAP gross margin declined to 50.1% (−280 bps YoY; −60 bps QoQ) largely from $20M Verizon A2P pass-through fees; management is taking pricing actions and efficiency initiatives to stabilize margins .
  • Carrier fee visibility: Q4 guidance embeds $22M carrier fee pass-through revenue; while no additional actions by AT&T/T-Mobile are forecasted, management acknowledged potential for similar increases that would pressure gross margins (gross-up effect) .
  • Early-stage RCS and voice AI mix: RCS adoption remains “early days” and, while accelerating, voice AI is still a relatively small portion of the business, tempering near-term margin uplift from higher-margin products .

Financial Results

Core financials vs prior periods and estimates

MetricQ3 2024Q2 2025Q3 2025Notes
Revenue ($USD Billions)$1.134 $1.228 $1.300 Q3 2025 beat S&P consensus $1.252*
GAAP Diluted EPS ($)-$0.06 $0.14 $0.23
Non-GAAP Diluted EPS ($)$1.02 $1.19 $1.25 Q3 2025 beat S&P consensus $1.07*
GAAP Operating Margin (%)-0.4% 3.0% 3.1%
Non-GAAP Operating Margin (%)16.1% 18.0% 18.0%
Non-GAAP Gross Margin (%)52.9% 50.7% 50.1% Verizon A2P fees drove decline

S&P Global consensus comparison (Q3 2025):

  • Revenue consensus $1.252B vs actual $1.300B → bold beat (+3.8%)*
  • Primary EPS consensus mean $1.07 vs actual $1.25 → bold beat (+17%)*
  • EBITDA consensus mean $236.1M vs actual $89.4M → miss on EBITDA definition vs company’s operating metrics; Twilio emphasizes non-GAAP income from operations (record $235M) rather than EBITDA . Values with asterisk retrieved from S&P Global.*

Free cash flow and cash from operations

MetricQ3 2024Q2 2025Q3 2025
Cash from Operations ($USD Millions)$204.3 $277.1 $263.6
Free Cash Flow ($USD Millions)$189.1 $263.5 $247.5
FCF Margin (%)17% 21% 19%

KPIs

KPIQ3 2024Q2 2025Q3 2025
Active Customer Accounts>320,000 >349,000 >392,000
Dollar-Based Net Expansion Rate105% 108% 109%

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious GuidanceCurrent GuidanceChange
Reported Revenue Growth (%)FY2510% – 11% 12.4% – 12.6% Raised
Organic Revenue Growth (%)FY259% – 10% 11.3% – 11.5% Raised
Non-GAAP Income from Operations ($USD Millions)FY25$850 – $875 $900 – $910 Raised
Free Cash Flow ($USD Millions)FY25$875 – $900 $920 – $930 Raised
Revenue ($USD Billions)Q4 2025N/A$1.310 – $1.320 Initiated
Y/Y Organic Revenue Growth (%)Q4 2025N/A8% – 9% Initiated
Non-GAAP Income from Operations ($USD Millions)Q4 2025N/A$230 – $240 Initiated
Non-GAAP Diluted EPS ($)Q4 2025N/A$1.17 – $1.22 Initiated

Additional guidance nuances:

  • Q4 assumes $22M pass-through revenue from incremental U.S. carrier fees (vs $20M in Q3), which gross-up revenue and COGS but do not impact gross profit dollars or FCF .

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicPrevious Mentions (Q1 & Q2)Current Period (Q3)Trend
AI/voice AI adoptionSignal showcased Twilio’s role as infrastructure for CX; focus on combining communications, data, and AI . Double-digit revenue growth momentum .Voice grew mid-teens, fastest in >3 years; voice AI cohort +~60% YoY; top 10 voice AI startups >10x; Verified adoption >25% YoY .Accelerating adoption, still early-stage mix
Carrier fees & gross marginRaised FY targets; noted carrier fees impact and margin actions in prior quarters .$20M Verizon A2P in Q3; Q4 assumes $22M; non-GAAP gross margin down 280 bps YoY; pricing and efficiency initiatives underway .Incremental headwind; mitigation in progress
Product performance (Messaging/Voice)Communications revenue +14% YoY Q2; high-teens Messaging in Q2; Segment flat .Messaging high teens 2nd straight quarter; Voice mid-teens growth; software add-ons (Verify) >25% YoY .Improving breadth
RCS rolloutPlatform capability expansion and GA for RCS highlighted in July .RCS GA globally; volume more than doubled QoQ; branded experiences help trust; adoption still early days .Building, early adoption
Go-to-market & ISV/self-serveISVs and self-serve strong in Q1/Q2; cross-sell and upsell focus .ISV and self-serve both >20% YoY; agent productivity solution launched; large nine-figure renewal with cloud provider .Strengthening channels
Capital returnsBuybacks authorized up to $2.0B; Q1 repurchases $130.2M; Q2 $176.7M .Q3 repurchases $349.8M; YTD $656.7M .Ramping buybacks
Identity & authenticationEmphasis on trusted communications; Verify momentum in Q2 .Definitive agreement to acquire Stytch; tuck-in < $100M; augments developer-first authentication for AI agents .Expanding identity stack

Management Commentary

  • CEO framing: “We’ve raised our revenue, profitability and free cash flow targets for the full year… customers ranging from startups to enterprises to ISVs continue to choose Twilio to power their customer engagement” .
  • Product/AI narrative: “Our voice business accelerated to mid-teens revenue growth… voice AI customers accelerated to nearly 60% year over year… Verify grew more than 25% year over year” .
  • Strategic win: “A nine-figure renewal spanning multiple products with a leading cloud provider, the largest deal in our company's history” .
  • Margin/fees disclosure: “We incurred carrier pass-through fees of $20 million associated with increased Verizon A2P fees, which drove the sequential decline in gross margin” .
  • Acquisition rationale: “Stytch… will augment Twilio’s platform roadmap… small tech and talent tuck-in… less than $100 million… immaterial to our financials” .

Q&A Highlights

  • Voice AI adoption and trajectory: Management sees more voice AI agents going into production, with strong growth but still a relatively small contributor; Voice AI accelerating self-serve and enterprise adoption .
  • Carrier fees and margin implications: Verizon A2P fee impact quantified ($20M Q3; $22M Q4); potential for other carriers to follow; gross-up has no impact on gross profit dollars or FCF .
  • Net customer additions and pricing: Ending free tiers for email/marketing APIs converted smaller accounts to active; no churn observed from June price increases; strong self-serve adds (voice up ~40%) .
  • RCS demand: Early-stage adoption with experimentation, especially for branded marketing use cases; expected to build over time .
  • Sales capacity and efficiency: Heavy internal use of AI assistants in pre- and post-sales to drive productivity, enabling efficient scaling of go-to-market .

Estimates Context

  • Q3 2025: Revenue consensus $1,252.4M vs actual $1,300.4M → bold beat; Primary EPS consensus $1.07 vs actual $1.25 → bold beat; EBITDA consensus $236.1M vs actual $89.4M (company emphasizes non-GAAP Op Income $234.5M) . Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
  • Forward estimates: Q4 2025 consensus revenue ~$1,316.7M and Primary EPS ~$1.23; Q1 2026 consensus revenue ~$1,288.9M and Primary EPS ~$1.24*. These levels are broadly consistent with company Q4 guidance ($1.310–$1.320B revenue; non-GAAP EPS $1.17–$1.22), with carrier fee pass-through embedded in revenue guidance . Values retrieved from S&P Global.*

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Q3 was clean across the board: revenue and EPS beat, record non-GAAP Op Income and strong FCF, supported by high-teens Messaging, mid-teens Voice, and >25% Verify growth .
  • FY25 guide raised across revenue (reported and organic), profitability, and FCF; Q4 guide embeds carrier fee pass-through, which is neutral to gross profit dollars and FCF but creates optical margin pressure .
  • Mix shift toward higher-margin products (Voice, software add-ons) and solution bundling (agent productivity) should support durable gross profit dollar growth despite carrier fee noise .
  • KPI momentum (DBNR 109%, Active Customer Accounts 392k) and strong ISV/self-serve channels (>20% YoY) indicate healthy underlying expansion and entry points for multi-product adoption .
  • Buybacks are stepping up ($350M in Q3; $657M YTD), adding per-share support; tuck-in of Stytch strengthens identity/authentication capabilities for AI agents without financial drag .
  • Watch items: further carrier fee increases by other U.S. carriers (margin optics), holiday season usage variability (usage-based model), and pacing of RCS/voice AI contribution to margins .
  • Near term, narrative favors momentum (raised guide, product strength, buybacks). Medium term, thesis hinges on continued mix shift, margin stabilization via pricing/efficiencies, and AI-driven multi-product adoption .

S&P Global disclaimer: Asterisked values are from S&P Global consensus/actuals via GetEstimates. Values retrieved from S&P Global.*