Upwork - Q4 2025
February 9, 2026
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Hello and thank you for standing by. Welcome to Upwork Fourth Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are on a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a Q&A session. To ask the question during the session, you will need to press star one one on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. I will now like to hand the conference over to Gary Fuges, Vice President of Investor Relations. You may begin.
Gary Fuges (VP of Investor Relations)
Thank you and welcome to Upwork's discussion of its fourth quarter and full year 2025 financial results. Joining me today are Hayden Brown, Upwork's President and Chief Executive Officer, and Erica Gessert, Upwork's Chief Financial Officer. Following management's prepared remarks, they will be happy to take your questions, but first I'll review the Safe Harbor Statement. During this call, we may make statements related to our business that are forward-looking statements under federal securities laws. Forward-looking statements include all statements other than statements of historical fact. These statements are not guaranteed future performance, but rather are subject to a variety of risks, uncertainties, and assumptions, and our actual results could differ materially from expectations reflected in any forward-looking statements.
For a discussion of the material risks and other important factors that could affect our actual results, please refer to our SEC filings available on the SEC website and on our Investor Relations website, as well as the risks and other important factors discussed in today's earnings press release. Additional information will also be available on our annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31st, 2025, when filed. In addition, reference will be made to certain non-GAAP financial measures. Adjusted EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA margin, and free cash flow are non-GAAP financial measures, and all other financial measures are GAAP unless cited as non-GAAP. Information regarding non-GAAP financial measures, including reconciliations to their most directly comparable GAAP financial measures, can be found in the press release that was issued this afternoon on our Investor Relations website at investors.upwork.com.
Finally, unless otherwise noted, reported figures are rounded, comparisons to the fourth quarter of 2025 are to the fourth quarter of 2024, and comparisons of the full year 2025 are to the full year 2024. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Hayden.
Hayden Brown (President and CEO)
Good afternoon and welcome to Upwork's fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings call. In 2025, we completed a three-year journey to fundamentally transform the business and position Upwork to extend our leadership in the AI era. We reinvented our product, customer experience, and operations to enable Upwork to become the human plus AI solution for the market. Today, we're seeing the early benefits of the new Upwork in our full year 2025 financial performance, which included over $4 billion in GSV, $788 million in revenue, and $226 million in adjusted EBITDA. Both revenue and adjusted EBITDA were at record levels, with revenue growth of 2.4% and adjusted EBITDA margin of 29%. We finished the year with a strong Q4 that included year-over-year growth of 3% in GSV, 4% in revenue, and a 27% adjusted EBITDA margin.
We're entering the year well-positioned to accelerate growth and generate strong margins in 2026 and beyond by capitalizing on the $1.3 trillion market opportunity in front of us. In this new era of work reshaped by AI, Upwork is positioned to lead the shift toward flexible, skills-based talent. I'll unpack our fourth quarter operating achievements across the three growth pillars we shared at our November Investor Day: AI, SMB, and enterprise, and share our 2026 goals for each. Erica will discuss our Q4 and full year 2025 financial performance and 2026 guidance, and then we'll take your questions. There's no doubt that AI is reshaping how work gets done. From what we see every day on our platform, AI and humans do their best work together. Our research published in November shows that human plus agent collaboration increases job completion rates by up to 70% compared to agents working alone.
We're not an outlier. Third-party reports from Anthropic, LinkedIn, and Workday further support Upwork's vision for a future of work that keeps humans at the center, with AI amplifying their results. We're evolving the Upwork marketplace to harness this reality. In Q4, we embedded more AI functionality in the marketplace that helped clients and talent work together more easily, generated more than 50% GSV growth from AI-related work on the platform, and laid the foundation to integrate agents to deliver work outcomes. With respect to Upwork's AI-native marketplace, we continue to advance our search and recommendation functionality and Uma, Upwork's AI agent, to help clients hire faster and more effectively. In total, we estimate that these improvements contributed $100 million in incremental GSV in 2025.
In Q4, we introduced AI-generated work summaries to give clients a richer, multidimensional view of a freelancer's experience and to enable more confident and better-fit hiring decisions. This new feature is already delivering an increased spend per client. By continuously adding AI functionality to our marketplace, we're removing friction between talent and clients and improving monetization in our platform. We're also seeing strong, durable growth in AI-related work as companies move from AI experimentation to execution. As business leaders work to translate AI promises into tangible business impact, many are turning to independent professionals to help with strategy, integration, and implementation. GSV from AI-related work surpassed $300 million on an annualized basis in Q4, up more than 50% from the prior year. This performance was driven by categories like generative AI and creative production and AI integration and automation, which nearly doubled year-over-year in Q4.
Further, in Q4, we saw the number of clients engaging in AI work increase over 50% year-over-year, with GSV from these clients exceeding our average spend per client by about three times. While this is still a minority of the total work done in the Upwork Marketplace, AI work is becoming more material every day and is an exciting indicator of our AI tailwind. Finally, on agents, in Q4, we outlined our AI agent strategy and introduced the Human and Agent Productivity Index, or HAPI, the first of its kind real-world evaluation framework measuring agent performance with humans in the loop. Early learnings validated that human plus agent collaboration delivers superior outcomes to agents alone, and this is shaping our next phase with agent-human pairs already in testing in our product today and rolling out to all customers by year-end.
Turning to our second growth pillar, SMBs remain a major growth driver for Upwork, and we're seeing strong traction here with Business Plus, our purpose-built SMB solution. Since launching at the end of 2024, Business Plus has scaled quickly, demonstrating the strength of the product and its fit with this segment. In Q4, we kicked off new targeted marketing efforts with the launch of our first dedicated campaign going after small businesses. This campaign highlights how Business Plus addresses SMBs' most pressing needs, from access to top talent to team-based hiring and credit-based payment terms. In Q4, active Business Plus clients grew 49% sequentially, with 38% of these clients being new to Upwork. Business Plus is one of our fastest-growing products ever, and its clients spend almost 2.5 times more than our marketplace average.
These results position Business Plus as a scalable, high-value growth engine at the center of our SMB strategy. Turning to enterprise, 2025 was a pivotal year with the introduction of Lifted. Enabled by the acquisition of two companies, Lifted's offering is designed to support every major contingent work contract type and integrate directly into the workflows used by the world's largest companies. Enterprise customers tell us they want these capabilities and can't get them from anyone else in the market today. In Q4, we focused on bringing teams and platforms together and finalized and launched the first phase of a go-to-market strategy to expand with existing customers and pursue a focus set of about 3,000 prioritized enterprise accounts, each with more than $50 million in annual contingent spend. Today, Lifted has built a strong pipeline, including dozens of existing and new logos, and is already seeing early success.
Lifted has already won two new clients. Given that enterprise sales cycles can take a year or more, we're encouraged by this early progress and remain confident in our ability to execute on the ambitious growth targets for Lifted that we outlined in our Investor Day. Looking ahead to 2026, we're continuing to build on the progress we made last year across our three growth pillars. In AI, we're taking our AI-native marketplace to the next level. In 2025, Uma was like Tesla's self-driving mode: powerful, capable, and ready to take the wheel. In 2026, Uma will become a Waymo chauffeur for clients and talent, transforming a client's goals into job requirements, postings, and recruiting plans, coordinating with talent and AI agents, and managing projects from inception to delivery. We're launching a fundamentally different customer experience powered by our growing data moat.
This means customers can get more complex, higher-value work done even more easily on the platform, leveraging the data and insights we've built over time. We're also continuing to nurture growth in our AI work categories. Demand for AI-skilled talent continues to increase. Our recent in-demand skills report found that demand for top AI-enabled skills more than doubled year-over-year and that human expertise commands a premium across work categories. We're helping talent develop and deploy deeper AI skills, including through our partnership with OpenAI to offer AI training, certifications, and upskilling to global independent professionals on Upwork. Through a range of ecosystem partners like OpenAI, we see an opportunity to continue to extend our reach in new ways. With respect to AI agents, in 2026, we will deepen human-agent collaboration across the marketplace.
Our work with third-party agent developers will enable us to offer a differentiated human and AI experience for delivering high-quality work outcomes. Our unique human and AI agent benchmark provides both a critical training ground for agents and a quality bar for ensuring great work outcomes. With spend on AI agents projected to reach $120 billion by 2028, we're positioning Upwork to capture a meaningful share of this emerging market. For SMB, 2026 is about expanding and scaling our offering. We're doubling down on SMB-specific features for onboarding, team hiring, and AI-driven curation, and running targeted marketing programs for Business Plus to drive broader adoption. As we said in our November Investor Day, our goal for Business Plus is to double in GSV, to represent over 5% of our total annual GSV in 2026.
At the end of Q4, we're already pacing ahead of plan to reach these 2026 targets, underscoring our early progress in capturing more of the $530 billion SMB market. Finally, in enterprise, our 2026 playbook also remains consistent with what we shared at our Investor Day. Our focus of the first half of the year is on integration and implementation of the Lifted platform as we continue to nurture the growing pipeline of enterprises interested in this solution. On the back of sales efforts that are already underway, we expect ramping the Lifted business in the second half of this year and then driving scale in 2027 as we unlock the $650 billion enterprise market opportunity. In parallel, we'll look to accelerate our roadmap and time to market through targeted acquisitions.
Through thoughtful M&A over the last two and a half years, we successfully raised our game in AI and enterprise. We'll continue to look for strategic investments that further accelerate our AI, SMB, and enterprise growth initiatives. 2025 marked the capstone year in our transformation of Upwork. We rebuilt the company for the age of human plus AI work while demonstrating strong financial performance. Now we're positioned to lead as the operational backbone for customers navigating this new era. The opportunity ahead is massive, and we're entering 2026 prepared to build on our momentum. With that, I'll turn it over to Erica.
Erica Gessert (CFO)
Thanks, Hayden. Before reviewing our Q4 and full year 2025 results, I would like to take a minute to say how proud I am to be a part of the fantastic Upwork team. Our team's executed relentlessly over the past three years, working with discipline and speed to transform Upwork, preparing us to lead in the future of work. We grew GSV to over $4 billion in 2025, with fourth quarter GSV accelerating to 3% growth year-over-year at over $1 billion. We continue to evolve the Upwork and Lifted platforms to serve the highest-value customers and use cases, which is showing up in key leading indicators on our platform. In addition to the AI and Business Plus growth metrics Hayden shared, average GSV per active client increased throughout the year, growing 7% year-over-year in Q4 to a record level of over $5,100.
Overall spend per contract increased 10% year-over-year, resulting in the highest-ever average spend per contract over any 12-month period at Upwork. While marketplace GSV growth was relatively flat in the fourth quarter over last year, this was driven primarily by fewer low-value, high-volume contracts. Given the positive fundamentals around larger clients, we expect positive GSV and revenue growth in each quarter of 2026. We ended the quarter with 785,000 active clients. GSV per new client increased 5% year-over-year and 3% quarter-over-quarter, representing our sixth consecutive quarter of annual growth for this key value signal. Our churn rate declined over the course of 2025, with fourth-quarter churn reaching its lowest level in over eight quarters. Churn in Q4 was over 130 basis points lower than the churn rate in Q4 2024.
These improving churn rates, as well as growing yields in our acquisition marketing, mean that we expect to resume sequential active client growth in Q1. Our Q4 results reflect the success of several key customer experience improvement initiatives, starting with GSV from Business Plus, which increased 24% quarter-over-quarter. Revenue from Freelancer Plus grew 29% year-over-year, helping to drive total ads and monetization revenue growth of 24% year-over-year. These and other enhanced value proposition strategies enabled us to grow our marketplace take rate to 19.0% in Q4 2025, up from 18.1% in Q4 2024, which helped drive 5% year-over-year growth in Q4 2025 marketplace revenue. Enterprise revenue decreased 3% year-over-year in Q4 as anticipated, following our 2025 pause in selling our legacy enterprise plans as we shifted to our new strategy with Lifted.
As discussed at Investor Day, we are targeting 25% GSV growth for our enterprise business this year, with significant acceleration in the second half when integration is complete and we onboard and ramp customers onto the new Lifted platform. As Hayden discussed, we are seeing strong signals of customer interest, and we're focused on executing on our integration plans with speed to capture this opportunity. As such, we continue to expect Lifted to ramp in the second half of 2026 and to be meaningfully accretive to GSV, revenue, and adjusted EBITDA in 2027. Gross margin was 78.0% in Q4 and a record high at 77.8% for the full year 2025 as we continue to execute disciplined cost management across every part of our business.
Non-GAAP operating expense was $107 million in the fourth quarter, or 54% of revenue, on par with Q4 2024, even as we absorbed approximately $6 million in incremental operating expenses and integration costs from the two acquisitions supporting the Lifted strategy. For the full year, non-GAAP operating expense was $405 million, or 51% of revenue, compared to 57% of revenue in 2024, reflecting our strong execution and cost management with our business. Adjusted EBITDA was $53 million in the fourth quarter, exceeding the high end of our Q4 guidance range and reaching a record fourth-quarter adjusted EBITDA margin of 27%. For the full year, adjusted EBITDA was a record $226 million and reached our highest-ever annual EBITDA margin of 29%. Free cash flow for the fourth quarter was $57 million.
We generated a record $223 million in free cash flow in 2025, which we expect to use to support organic growth initiatives, M&A to accelerate our growth strategies, and additional share repurchases. In the quarter, we used $34 million in cash to buy back approximately 2 million shares and used a total of $136 million in 2025 to purchase more than 9 million shares as part of our commitment to driving long-term shareholder value. Cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities were approximately $673 million at the end of the year. Now, turning to guidance. For the full year 2026, we continue to expect GSV growth in the range of 4%-6% and revenue growth in the range of 6%-8%, or between $835 million-$850 million.
Starting in Q2, we expect GSV, total take rate, and revenue to increase sequentially throughout the remainder of 2026, driven in part by Lifted completing its integration efforts and beginning to ramp GSV and revenue in the second half of the year. We also continue to expect full year 2026 adjusted EBITDA margin of approximately 29%, or between $240 million-$250 million. While we were incurring about two percentage points of margin dilution from investments in the Lifted growth strategy in 2026, we are maintaining our margin rate on a year-over-year basis. We expect to exit 2026 at a margin in the low 30s as a number of longer-term cost optimization strategies start to bear fruit in the back half of the year. We expect full year 2026 Non-GAAP diluted EPS to be between $1.43 and $1.48.
For the first quarter of 2026, we expect to generate revenue in the range of $192 million-$197 million. In 2025, we delivered major platform improvements and a return to growth through our focus on higher-value clients and more complex work. The key long-term growth levers we've identified on our Upwork platforms, AI, SMB, and enterprise, are all progressing well, including the growth metrics across Business Plus, the AI category, and other leading growth indicators that Hayden and I shared today. This gives us confidence in achieving our top-line growth outlook for the year while also continuing to invest in growth and optimize our cost base. For adjusted EBITDA in the first quarter, we are guiding to a range of $45 million-$47 million, which represents an adjusted EBITDA margin in the range of 23%-24%.
Our margin outlook in Q1 is lower than is typical for our business due to the rapid pace of our Lifted integration projects, investments to support growth on the Lifted platform, and some incremental marketing investments to support additional growth opportunities in the marketplace. With the long-term cost optimization initiatives we have implemented, we have strong confidence in our 29% margin outlook for the year and in our ongoing progress toward our long-term 35% margin target. We expect Q1 2026 Non-GAAP diluted EPS to be between $0.26 and $0.28. In closing, Upwork is well-positioned for accelerating multi-year growth starting this year. I'm excited about the growth opportunities ahead and look forward to building on our current momentum in 2026. We are entering the year with strong progress on our key growth levers, on a highly profitable foundation, and with a very strong track record of producing operating leverage.
We have proven our commitment to growing shareholder value, and our strong balance sheet and tremendous free cash flow yield give us flexibility to maximize value and continue to solidify our market leadership. I know I speak for everyone at Upwork when I say we are excited about 2026 and the great growth prospects for our business. With that, we would be happy to take your questions.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, as a reminder to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone, then wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from the line of Eric Sheridan with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.
Eric Sheridan (Managing Director)
Thank you so much for taking the question. Maybe one, just putting a finer point on the way you're framing 2026. When you think about the investments you're making exiting 2025 and moving into the front half of 2026, whether it be AI features on the platform or Business Plus expansion or even Lifted, how should we think about those investments scaling as you move deeper into 2026? But more importantly, how should we think about some of the contributions to GSV and revenue growth building and momentum as you get deeper into 2026 and the exit velocity of 2026? Thanks so much.
Erica Gessert (CFO)
Thanks, Eric. This is Erica. We've always anticipated when we guided to the 4%-6% GSV growth and 6%-8% revenue growth at our Investor Day, we always anticipated a ramp throughout the year in kind of both GSV and revenue. As we mentioned on the call, the investment side of Lifted we're engaging in right now, really moving as quickly as possible with our integration. That includes kind of initial investments in kind of sales and marketing there, as well as finalizing our national entity structure. We expect to onboard and ramp new customers and existing customers onto Lifted platform in the back half of the year. And so we're going to see some acceleration there on the enterprise side. Similarly, on the marketplace side, we have very strong kind of growth trajectory of our growth levers.
The AI category growing over 50% year-over-year, Business Plus growing 24%. Actually, its ramp into Q1 is even stronger than we expected when we planned for the year. We feel very, very good about the growth trajectory of these growth levers and expect them to ramp throughout the year and exit at our high point for growth rates on both Lifted and the marketplace.
Eric Sheridan (Managing Director)
Great. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Please stand by for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Ron Josey with Citi. Your line is open.
Ron Josey (Managing Director)
Great. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to ask a little bit about the search and recommendation functionality that Hayden, I think you talked about from an AI perspective. Just wanted to hear about the early benefits here and help us understand how these search and recommendation functionalities can improve overall visibility. And then, Erica, back to sort of Eric's question on visibility on the margin side. Talk to us about the sales and marketing initiatives that you were running from a Business Plus perspective and the results you've seen thus far. Thank you.
Erica Gessert (CFO)
Ron, on the AI and search side, we've made a few types of investments here that already started having impact for us last year and will continue to ramp this year, both in terms of features that are live and new features we'll be shipping. To give you a little bit of color on that, we launched Uma Recruiter as one example, which is a key feature currently in the Business Plus plan that's really accelerating time to hire by getting clients to a short list of really high-fit candidates very quickly. We've also been launching some features around things like conversational search and messaging, where we can get a much richer idea of a client's goals and needs and then go into our tremendous house file and kind of target the right prospects for that based on that more enriched search experience.
Some of those things are already live and having impact, and we'll continue to ramp across our customer base this year. Then, of course, we're also doing more this year to take the investments in the Uma platform and really make some changes to the user experience, both on the side of kind of pre-hire, so the search and match side, as well as the collaboration and project management area. Those are places where we're investing this year. We're shipping new experiences that really are transformative and are much more AI-powered, with Uma at the center of those experiences. What we're seeing in early testing is they really are having a positive impact for customers as they go through our funnel and are able to offload more of the work to Uma and move more quickly towards their goals.
That's work that's ongoing and is definitely going to propel our results this year.
Hayden Brown (President and CEO)
Hey, Ron, to your question on marketing and specifically on Business Plus, we did start to have some Business Plus dedicated campaigns launching in Q4 and have continued some of those into Q1. The great thing about Business Plus is these customers spend 2.5x the platform average in GSV, and new customers who onboard onto Business Plus have a higher spend profile than the average. So these are very good investments for us. One of the reasons we're stepping our kind of marketing up a little bit around the marketplace side in Q1 is because we are seeing some very nice yields in terms of the spend that we've been doing.
And so the great thing about kind of how we've been managing our cost base is we will have capacity this year to spend a little bit more on the sales and marketing side because we have other longer-term kind of cost optimization projects coming through that we expect to benefit the back half of the year. That includes some back-end automation we've been working on for a couple of years now, as well as a location strategy to hire in kind of lower-cost locations. So all those things will benefit us in the back half, enable us to kind of continue to grow our margins and invest in marketing.
Ron Josey (Managing Director)
That's great. Thank you, Erica. Thank you, Hayden.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Please stand by for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Brent Thill with Jefferies. Your line is open.
John Byun (SVP of Equity Research)
Hi. Thank you. This is John Byun for Brent Thill. Maybe two questions. One, in terms of the Q1 guide on maybe revenue and GSV, are there any special seasonal factors there? Given I think people expect a little bit more in Q1, excuse me, excluding the ramp in Lifted, especially, I guess, in the marketplace segment. And then second, sorry about that. Second, on the top of funnel, if you could talk about any impact from SEO versus GEO and performance marketing, that'd be great. Thank you.
Hayden Brown (President and CEO)
John, I'm so sorry. Could you repeat the question? We were having some technical difficulties on our end.
John Byun (SVP of Equity Research)
Okay. Yeah. I did hear the echo. Yeah. The first question was on the Q1 guide for GSV and revenue. I mean, wondering if there are any special seasonal factors, given I think people expect a little more. I mean, I know you're ramping Lifted more in the second half, but I don't know if there's any other factors in the marketplace segment. And then at the top of the funnel, I don't know if you've seen any impact still in SEO versus GEO and the different performance marketing channels. Thank you.
Hayden Brown (President and CEO)
Q1 guide. For the first question on the Q1 guide, and I apologize, we're having a little bit of audio difficulty here on our end, but hopefully, everyone can hear me. On the Q1 guide, look, Q1 is manifesting as we expected when we guided at our Investor Day in November. This was always going to be a little bit of a bridge quarter for us, first and foremost, as you referenced on the enterprise side with the investments upfront in Lifted and really the acceleration revenue in GSV coming when we start to transfer people onto the platform. On the marketplace side, we have been focusing on growing these larger customers with longer-term relationships, and that's been extremely successful for us. It's showing up across our platform in our lowering churn rates and other things like that. But there is some ramp to the spend with these customers.
And so if there's been kind of any kind of smaller impacts on the margins to volumes, it's really been at the very lowest end, smallest contract types, kind of sub-$100 contracts. Every leading indicator on our platform for future growth, including GSV per active, up 7% year-over-year, spend per contract, up 10% year-over-year, and importantly, spend per new customer continues to grow, which is a very important value signal for us. So we feel really good about the underlying growth trajectory of our business and are confident in our guide for the year. On the top of funnel question on SEO and GEO, I think we actually have seen some very, very good initial yields on the GEO side, but it's super early days. These are very, very new channels for everyone. And I also think there's some interplay still between SEO and GEO.
So we feel really confident and positive about what we're seeing from a signal point of view on that side of the house, but it's also very early days.
John Byun (SVP of Equity Research)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Please stand by for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Maria Ripps with Canaccord. Your line is open.
Maria Ripps (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Great. Thanks so much for taking my questions. First, can you maybe expand a little more on active client trends in Q4? And I guess, what are some of the dynamics that you are seeing that should drive active client growth starting this quarter? I think you mentioned marketing campaign, but is there anything else to highlight?
Hayden Brown (President and CEO)
Yeah. So obviously, we talked it on the call. Our churn rate's been coming down kind of sequentially throughout 2025 and down 130 basis points throughout the year, year-over-year in Q4. So the ongoing benefits to churn rate, this is if you the active client number is a trailing 12-month number. So those are going to continue to compound and benefit us as we go into 2026. So that is one of the dynamics helping us, as well as the fact that we are seeing some good top-of-funnel yields as we go into Q1. And so we're feeling pleased with also the kind of top-of-funnel acquisition, which is going to benefit us and help to resume active client growth.
Maria Ripps (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Got it. That's helpful. And then so given expanding demand for AI work, do you feel like you have sufficient AI talent on the platform? I guess, is that a bottleneck in any sense? And are you doing anything different to maybe attract AI talent to the platform?
Erica Gessert (CFO)
Sure, Maria. We are really pleased with the AI category growth that we've already seen, upward of 50% year-over-year. This is our fastest-run category. And subcategories within the AI group are really on fire, which is exciting for us. We expect this to continue to be a trend throughout this year and into the future years. We are not seeing strong indications of talent gaps on the platform. However, we're always looking at making sure we have exactly the right talent to do this work, augmenting the pool we have of 250,000 AI experts already working with our clients in the last year alone. And that's where we're doing things like the partnership with OpenAI, where we're helping them on the side of certifying 10 million talent that they've committed to with their OpenAI for Jobs initiative.
We're definitely excited to be a place where those talented individuals can come and find work. We're not seeing a bottleneck here. We're excited about the growth. We think it's extremely durable based on what we're seeing in the ecosystem. We're investing into this in 2025 and 2026, rather.
Maria Ripps (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Got it. Thank you so much.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Please stand by for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Matt Condon with Citizens. Your line is open.
Matt Condon (Director of Equity Research)
Thank you so much for taking my questions. My first one is just it's great to see the two new clients on the enterprise side of the business. But is there any color you can give on just existing clients' demand that you're seeing from them, whether it be test budgets or any other signals that would give us confidence as we move into the back half of the year? And then my second one is just on the variable Freelancer fee. Just wanted to see how that's progressing as you roll that out more broadly across the marketplace. Thank you so much.
Erica Gessert (CFO)
Sure, Matt. On the Lifted side, we are very pleased that we're tracking to plan with this work. And yes, we've seen both the new client interests, including the two clients we referenced, which given the sales cycle on enterprise is so long, we're very pleased to already have those two clients coming on board with us. But you're right. We're also in conversations with our existing customers who are looping us in for RFPs and contracts that we would not have been in contention with before. And so our funnel is quite healthy, and that's a mix of both new demand and folks that are really new to our story, but also existing customers who now are considering us for work that was previously really not in the cards for us.
All the signs there are extremely promising in terms of the green shoots, and we see a really clear path to accelerating this business over the course of the year.
Hayden Brown (President and CEO)
Yeah. And then just on the variable freelancer fee, Matt, we are really excited about the strategy. We had some real success with the very early testing that we did in 2025. We are going to be rolling out the variable freelancer fee to more categories starting in Q1 and kind of doing more of a gradual rollout throughout the year. And so that's another reason that we have a lot of confidence in the ramp for the year from a revenue point of view and GSV, because we are kind of rolling this out gradually and will continue to test.
But this has been a super successful strategy for us and actually really speaks to the strength of our data science bench here, which has been really creative and come up with something that is using the supply and demand dynamics on the platform to drive both GSV and revenue.
Matt Condon (Director of Equity Research)
Thank you so much.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Please stand by for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Bernie McTernan with Needham. Your line is open.
Bernie McTernan (Senior Analyst)
Great. Thanks for taking the questions. Appreciate it. Maybe just to start on Business Plus, it was the large number, 38% of clients are actually being new to Upwork. I was just surprised it seems like it's a pretty strong acquisition tool, while I thought it might be more of an existing sell-in. So maybe you just talk to the go-to-market there and what you're seeing that's successful. And then just a clarification on the fourth quarter, given the marketplace take rate of 19%, I think it implies the enterprise GSV was up a lot year-over-year. So basically, should we expect a step down in 1Q before a ramp back up throughout the year? Just how to think about the shape of the GSV trends on enterprise. Thank you.
Erica Gessert (CFO)
On the side of Business Plus, you're right. This has actually proven to be an extremely effective client acquisition strategy. I think we're still very early in kind of fully deploying the opportunity around that. I mean, we did this first targeted SMB marketing campaign in Q4. We saw some really positive results from that. We are seeing great acceleration both in terms of client volume, 49% client growth quarter-over-quarter, and the spend, which is really important because this is a key part of our strategy for moving upmarket to larger small businesses. Those that maybe have 50+ employees have much more sustaining spend, are looking to get more complex work done. This is really the sweet spot for that product.
We're already ahead of plan as we enter Q1 in terms of the contribution of Business Plus to GSV against the target we have of exiting the year with 5%+ GSV coming from Business Plus. All signs are really showing that this is something that's appealing to both new and existing customers. I think there's a lot of run room for us to continue to both expand the value proposition but also execute the marketing and other things behind that growth that's going to be durable this year and beyond.
Hayden Brown (President and CEO)
Yeah. And on the GSV trends on enterprise, there obviously is some contribution from the acquisitions in terms of the year-over-year growth. But overall, overall kind of enterprise revenue, we are in sort of a holding pattern right now in terms of the revenue that we're recognizing from our legacy business. Just to remind everyone, we stopped selling new enterprise plans. And actually, we stopped both the land and expand motion on legacy enterprise at the beginning of 2025. And so to the extent there is some minor churn at the low end on enterprise right now, we don't have new customers coming on the platform right now to replace it. So in Q1, we do expect there to be some kind of slight decline in overall enterprise revenue sequentially.
That's all in anticipation of the build on Lifted and really ramping up very quickly once we light up the new platform.
Matt Condon (Director of Equity Research)
Understood. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Please stand by for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Rohit Kulkarni with Roth MKM. Your line is open.
Rohit Kulkarni (Managing Director)
Hey, thanks. Does data point on AI clients spending 3 times your average spend per client? Can you comment on what's specifically driving that higher spend? Is it higher rates, longer duration, more scope of projects, more projects at the same time? And then just to clarify on this, when we reconcile your first quarter and full-year guide, it implies a path where revenue growth exits this year and possibly mid-teens from where you are right now. So pretty significant back-and-loaded acceleration. Can you talk about whether that's a fair way to think about it? And apart from enterprise, is there something that gives you confidence to that stronger second-half growth?
Hayden Brown (President and CEO)
Yeah, sure. In terms of the AI category, Rohit, so several of the factors you mentioned are true about the spend on the AI category. First and foremost, the average kind of hourly wage or hourly rate or wage in the AI category is about 40% higher than kind of average kind of tech wages on the platform. So it is a significantly higher rate. There is also just higher volume of work. So if you think about some of the spend and actually where we're seeing very fast growth, it is in kind of AI infrastructure work, also generative AI kind of prompt engineering type work. And some of these are quite big or long-term projects. So yeah. So overall, there's a good reason to believe that this is going to continue to grow. And we're really seeing no end in sight to the growth in that category.
In terms of, I think the other question was the exit rate for revenue growth. Yeah, enterprise is a big factor here because the 25% year-over-year GSV growth that we're targeting for enterprise, that's really all in the back half of the year. So that is ramping quickly in the back half of the year, like we said, once that platform lights up. But we also have a lot of confidence, and we do expect that marketplace GSV and revenue will continue to ramp from a growth rate point of view throughout the rest of this year. And the reason for that is that we are all of these kind of growth drivers in the platform are scaling up. Business Plus continues to grow and scale every single quarter.
The AI category growing 50% year-over-year, we have visibility into that and expect that to at least continue the current growth rates throughout 2026. And then, like I said, things like the variable freelancer fee, which will also be ramping, all of these are drivers to enable the growth of GSV and revenue throughout the year.
Rohit Kulkarni (Managing Director)
Okay. If I could ask a question, a big picture question to Hayden on agents, fascinating stuff in the prepared remarks. When you say human-agent collaboration, can you elaborate what does the workflow actually look like in practice? On Upwork, where do you see humans add value, and where do you see agents fully automate tasks? How does Upwork actually end up benefiting on either of those two sides?
Erica Gessert (CFO)
So there's this, I'd say, raging debate about is it AI or humans, or is it AI and humans? And we are looking at the data on our platform on this every single day. And it is very clear that the solutions that are winning the market today bring together the best of what agents can do with human judgment, with human as an overlay and a supplement to what the AI agents are capable of, even the most powerful ones. We launched this benchmark last year called the HAPI benchmark, which really is benchmarking humans and agents together. And that really showed that when you bring a human into the mix, agents are able to complete work with a 70% or more success rate than when they're just operating alone. So there's a big step up when you bring humans into the equation.
So all of that is a backdrop for our strategy, which is really about bringing our incredible asset in terms of a talent network that is skilled, that is capable, that is AI equipped alongside agents, whether they are our own agents like Uma, but also the huge and growing ecosystem of third-party agents so that those humans and agents can collaborate seamlessly to deliver outcomes for our clients. And you're right, Rohit. This is not a user experience that exists anywhere else. And we are really building it from the ground up here at Upwork. We have a product in testing today where clients can submit jobs or submit work they're trying to get done, and human and agent pairs collaborate on delivering those results.
That's the experience that we are using as kind of the initial framing for what we'll be rolling out over the course of this year, where we bring humans and agents together as collaborative workers inside of our ecosystem delivering work for customers. But our view is that this is, we are in the early innings of a huge opportunity. I think it's up to $130 billion of agentic spend by 2028. And we believe we can participate in a meaningful part of that by enabling third-party agents and our talent to collaborate together to deliver incredible work outcomes right here on our platform.
Rohit Kulkarni (Managing Director)
Great. Thank you both.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Josh Chan with UBS. Your line is open.
Josh Chan (Executive Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Hi, good afternoon, Hayden and Erica. Just two questions from me. I guess the first question is on EBITDA. I was wondering if you could bridge us from the $59 million to almost $60 million of EBITDA you did in Q3 to the $53 million in Q4 and then the Q1 guide. I know that revenue is a little bit lower, but just curious to hear what moving pieces are leading to that EBITDA cadence over the last couple of quarters. And then I guess secondly, on enterprise, what are some of the milestones that you are looking for to achieve in order to hit your kind of 2026 aspirations? I know you mentioned winning two clients. So how many clients do you need to win by mid-year to get there?
Just something to help us understand the pace of what we should be looking for would be helpful on that side. Thank you.
Hayden Brown (President and CEO)
Yeah, Josh. On the EBITDA bridge, in Q4 is when we really, in Q3, we closed the Ascen deal and so had only about, I think, a half a quarter of their cost base in our results. So we had a full quarter of the two cost bases. But more importantly, we started to incur a number of kind of integration costs that are temporary in nature in order to kind of enable that business largely on the kind of platform enablement side. Similarly, in Q1, I think we're projecting about $6 million of investment in Q1, much of which is temporary in nature as we kind of invest in the final international entity structure and other things for the Lifted platform. Also, in Q4, it tends to be a slightly lighter adjusted EBITDA quarter.
That's largely because of kind of bonus accruals and other things that happen in that quarter.
Erica Gessert (CFO)
On the side of the enterprise milestones, Josh, we feel great about where the pipeline is right now in order to achieve those growth goals that we have for later in the year. Just to give you a sense, we're going after a target set of about 3,000 enterprise customers who all spend each $50 million or more on continued labor. And so the shift in our strategy now that Lifted is coming into fruition really lets us go after much bigger customers with much bigger contracts than what we were eligible for in the past. And so to hit our growth goals, we don't need hundreds of customers to onboard. We need a small number of high-quality clients who are ramping their continued programs with us. And that's what we're very focused on. And we see the signs that that's happening.
So key milestones that we look out across the year, the first one will be launching and migrating clients onto the Lifted platform once our integration work is complete. And we're targeting the middle of the year for that. And then, of course, on the back of those migrations and turning on both new and existing customers with that functionality, we will see those step up in GSV and revenue that we're expecting in Q3 and Q4.
Josh Chan (Executive Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Great. Thank you both for the call.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Please stand by for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Brad Erickson with RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Brad Erickson (Equity Analyst)
Hey, guys. Thanks. Two for me. One, you shared you talked a lot today about all the ways AI is driving growth, GSV active customers, etc. So when we kind of put that in the context of GSV up 3% in Q4, what are the parts of the marketplace business that are still kind of seeing headwinds? And any help you can give us there about kind of the persistence of that? And then I have a follow-up.
Erica Gessert (CFO)
Sure. We are really excited about the momentum we see in the AI categories. I would say we continue to see on the flip side a minor impact from categories like writing and translation, which for many quarters and now even years have been declining due to automation broadly and AI more recently. So that's one small factor. But I'd actually say the bigger factor behind some of our more modest growth rates in the immediate term is really just like it's a transition quarter for us. We've really been launching our enterprise sales strategy. That's ramping. The SMB strategy around Business Plus, that's ramping. Those things are really coming into effect over the course of this year. And at the same time, I'd say on the margin, this is a labor market that's not great. It certainly hasn't improved.
We saw in December the lowest BLS data on job openings since September of 2020. I think that's just indicative of the slowness in the market overall, which, of course, tracks through to our platform to an extent, even though we're growing faster than competitors, even though we're growing when folks like staffing firms are reporting negative growth numbers still. I think the comparison is we're taking share. We're positioned well with our growth strategies. A lot of these tailwinds are going to be very durable, like AI. We're very focused on executing a plan that's already working.
Hayden Brown (President and CEO)
I would just add, Brad, real quick to this, which is that if we're seeing headwinds, it's not so much on a category level aside from writing and translation, which has been consistent on our platform for a while. But we see some kind of a little bit of negative growth on these very, very small, very transactional projects, kind of sub-$300 or more or less. And so honestly, that just reinforces the power of our strategy to focus on these longer-term relationships, which are durable. They ramp over time. They improve our churn rates. And we maintain these relationships for a long time. So I think this is going to be the winning strategy. It's really been working for us.
You can see it in the leading indicators in our base with GSV per client, GSV per contract, GSV per new customer, all of these things going up into the right. We feel good about it.
Brad Erickson (Equity Analyst)
Yep. That's great. That makes a lot of sense. And then second, just I think you mentioned M&A in your prepared remarks. Just curious kind of what's interesting there between maybe product type of acquisitions or maybe better access to certain channels or maybe something else strategic. Just help us kind of what do you guys spitball as a management team around potential M&A?
Erica Gessert (CFO)
Sure. So our guidance and our outlook for this year is definitely not predicated on any additional M&A. We are going to achieve our plans just based on our organic levers that are working for us. However, we have done some fantastic and very beneficial M&A over the last two and a half years. That includes AI-related acquisitions and enterprise-related acquisitions. And so we will continue to run a playbook that's working for us. And if we see targets out there that are really lined up against our AI, our SMB, or our enterprise strategies, those are the places where we would get more interested.
Brad Erickson (Equity Analyst)
Got it. Thanks, guys.
Operator (participant)
Thanks, Brad. Okay. Stand by for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Marvin Fong with BTIG. Your line is open.
Marvin Fong (Equity Research Analyst)
Hi. Good evening. Thank you for taking my questions. Maybe to start with, on the two new Lifted customers, it's a great sign of validation of the strategy. Just very early days, I understand. But would love to hear anything you could say about these two clients. I mean, to the extent you're able to speak to how much they spend on contingent labor or just how many employees they have in general or even if you can't give us that, just anything on how that sales process evolved. Did the deals close as you'd expected on the timeline you'd expect? And then I have a follow-up.
Erica Gessert (CFO)
Sure. So we can't disclose too many specifics on these customers. But I can tell you they're really in the sweet spot of that ideal customer profile we have with $10s of millions of contingent work spend with programmatic work happening through this part of their business, the contingent work program. And I'd say they, like many of the other customers that are in our funnel, they have really lit up when we pitched them on this Lifted proposition and the fact that we could provide a differentiated solution that gave them compliant contracting across all five different types of contingent work through a single platform with the highest quality talent that's out there. So they really were, I think, indicative of the product-market fit that we've been building towards with the Lifted strategy.
And we have many more customers like them in our funnel, which we're pleased to be nurturing over the year. We know this is a long sales cycle. Some of these buyers only make a decision once annually around going with a vendor in the space. So we're nurturing those relationships. It's working. And we're very excited about what that's going to do in the back half of the year.
Marvin Fong (Equity Research Analyst)
Great. Thank you. And my follow-up, just on the Q1 guidance, just trying to square all the points being made. I think you said clients would be up sequentially, yet the revenue guide is down sequentially. Is there something going on with the GSV per client? Or I know you also said enterprise revenue would be down sequentially. Any more color on the moving parts would be great. Thank you.
Hayden Brown (President and CEO)
Yeah. So enterprise revenue, we do expect to be down sequentially. And again, this is really as we kind of invest for the future and make the Lifted platform kind of transaction ready. Overall, I think we're very comfortable with the guide for Q1. And the reality is that when customers join us on the platform, right, as new customers come on, their spend ramps over time. So we do expect that our kind of new customer account will resume growth sequentially in Q1. But it takes time for those customers to kind of dip their toes in the water and then ramp with us. So we don't get as big of an impact in Q1 from kind of increasing new customer accounts.
Marvin Fong (Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. Perfect. Thank you both.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, I'm showing no further questions in the queue. That does conclude today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.