Via Transportation - Earnings Call - Q3 2025
November 13, 2025
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 delivered above-Street revenue and Primary EPS, with Platform ARR and customer growth reinforcing durable momentum; guidance for Q4 and FY25 implies continued outperformance vs consensus, a potential near-term stock catalyst on “beat-and-raise” optics. Primary EPS (S&P “Primary EPS”) beat by ~$0.07 and revenue beat by ~$2.8m; guidance midpoints are above Street on revenue (Q4 and FY) while maintaining measured loss targets (Adj. EBITDA). Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
- Top-line grew 32% YoY to $109.7m, driven by government customers (+34% YoY) and U.S. strength (+42% YoY); GAAP net loss widened due to IPO-related non-cash items (convertible notes extinguishment and derivative revaluation) even as Adj. EBITDA margin improved to -8% (vs -17% LY).
- Management emphasized operating leverage (opex ratios down YoY), data/AI product velocity, and early traction in the schools vertical; a new Waymo AV partnership could expand TAM and mix-shift toward higher-margin contracts over time.
- Key investor watch items: execution on Q4 revenue/Adj. EBITDA guide, ARR per-customer normalization after schools ramp, cadence of large competitive takeovers (e.g., Mobile, AL) and AV pilots, and public funding cadence (ballot measures, federal/state).
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Broad-based growth: Revenue +32% YoY to $109.653m; U.S. revenue +42% YoY; government revenue +34% YoY, underscoring core public-sector demand.
- Profitability trend: Adj. EBITDA improved to $(8.692)m with margin -8% vs -17% LY; management reiterated path to 50% long-term adjusted gross margin via mix shift and third-partying services.
- Strategic momentum: Announced Waymo partnership to integrate AVs into public transit networks; Chandler, AZ first deployment; management expects higher-margin structure when fleets are sourced externally. “Those contracts tend to be higher margin… very high margin” (CFO).
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What Went Wrong
- GAAP bottom line: Net loss widened to $(36.887)m (vs $(21.276)m LY) primarily from $10.9m loss on extinguishment of convertible notes and $5.2m derivative revaluation associated with the IPO capital structure transition.
- ARR per-customer downtick: Slight sequential dip (~1%) attributed to normal Q3 seasonality (schools/universities/corporates) and new school deployments that started late in the quarter; expected to ramp.
- EBITDA vs SPGI “EBITDA” actual: S&P’s EBITDA actual was weaker than consensus (definition differences vs company “Adjusted EBITDA”); focus remains on company-reported Adjusted EBITDA beat trajectory (-8% margin). Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Via third quarter 2025 earnings 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. To ask a question, simply press star on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, press star one again. We respectfully request that you limit questions to one and one follow-up. Thank you. It is now my pleasure to turn the call over to Via. The floor is yours.
It's so important for a strong city to have an innovative transportation system. A lot of companies and individuals are looking at what public transit options are available before they make that decision on whether they're going to choose Fort Worth. It is so important that we stay on top of that to remain competitive as an economy.
We're one of the fastest-growing cities in the country. As we've grown to now almost 85 sq mi as a city, transit is extremely important. As we've looked at heat maps on some of our on-demand hotspots, Foundation Park has been one of them because we have thousands of jobs out there. Without this SAM reimagined system and program, those employers specifically would not be able to be reaching this workforce. That's one of the first questions some of these large employers are asking us when they look at coming to Sioux Falls and say, "What's your transit system look like?
One of the things we wanted to accomplish was connecting people to work opportunities. We have the newest plant, Johnson & Johnson, that's being built. Go to our community college, which is going to have a biotechnology training facility. You go through that program and you can get into that plant that has an average salary over $100,000 a year. Being able to do that, use Ride to get up there and get a $100,000 job really is going to be life-changing for families in our community.
Gabby McCaig (Chief Corporate Communications Officer and Head of Investor Relations)
Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Via's third quarter 2025 earnings call. I'm Gabby McCaig, Via's Chief Corporate Communications Officer and Head of Investor Relations. With me today are Daniel Ramot, Via's Co-Founder and CEO, and Clara Fain, Via's Chief Financial Officer. During today's call, Daniel will review our Third Quarter 2025 business update before handing it off to Clara to discuss financial results and our guidance for the full year 2025. Daniel will end with some additional comments before opening it up to Q&A. In addition to prepared remarks in this call, additional information can be found on our investor presentation, press release, and SEC filings on our Investor Relations website at investors.ridewithvia.com. Before we get started today, we want to draw your attention to the Safe Harbor statement included in our press release and investor presentation.
Items we discuss today will include forward-looking statements about topics including, but not limited to, our future financial performance, projections, and management's plans and objectives for future operations. Actual results may differ materially from those presented in the forward-looking statements and are subject to risks and uncertainties described more fully in our SEC filings, including our S1 and quarterly report on Form 10-Q. Any forward-looking statements that we make on this call are based on our assumptions as of today, November 13th, 2025. Unless required by law, we undertake no obligation to update or revise these statements as a result of new information or future events. We would also like to point out that our discussion today will include certain non-GAAP financial measures in addition to, not as a substitute for, financial measures calculated in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.
Definitions of these non-GAAP financial measures, along with reconciliations of non-GAAP to GAAP financial measures, are provided in our press release and our investor presentation. Without further ado, I'll now hand it over to Daniel.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Thanks, Gabby, and thank you, everyone, for joining us today. We're delighted to host our first public company earnings call, and we're very pleased to report that Via delivered another strong quarter, exceeding expectations on both top and bottom line performance. In Q3 2025, our revenue grew 32% year over year. Platform annual revenue run rate, which is our quarterly platform revenue multiplied by four, was $439 million. The number of customers on our platform grew to 713, a year-over-year increase of 11%. Our results demonstrate the durability of our growth as we transform a vital and under-penetrated market, and customers increasingly embrace our cutting-edge platform. To provide additional insight into our performance, the increase in revenue in Q3 was driven by strong growth in our government business. Revenue from government customers increased by $26.5 million, or 34% year-over-year. We also saw outstanding results in the United States.
Revenue from our U.S. customers increased by $23.1 million, or 42% year over year. Taking a step back, Via provides the world's most advanced platform of software and services, transforming antiquated public transportation systems into efficient digital networks. We've built a single, unified platform that replaces fragmented legacy systems across multiple transit verticals. Our platform automates key workflows, consolidates operations across verticals that have historically operated as distinct silos. Via's vertical stack is deployed globally. It can be configured to support the broad and diverse local requirements of our customers without the need for software customization. We are fundamentally transforming the way governments and cities operate through automation, advanced algorithms, data, and AI. Transit is a critical public service. In the United States alone, public transit systems provide 8 billion trips each year, and yet 45% of Americans do not have access to transit.
For anyone who cannot afford a car, this gap severely limits their ability to get to jobs, educational opportunities, and healthcare. We believe that after decades of underinvestment in technology, cities across the globe are poised to upgrade and digitize their transit infrastructure. This transformation is already in progress and will only accelerate in the coming years. In our core geographies of North America and Western Europe, our serviceable addressable market is estimated at $82 billion, based on a report commissioned by us from a major consulting firm. Today, we capture less than 1% of this market. We also estimate that there are approximately 63,000 potential Via customers in North America and Europe. As of Q3 2025, we had 713 customers on our platform, representing approximately 1% of these potential customers.
As the established category leader, we're extremely well-positioned to capitalize on the digital transformation taking place within our core markets, and we are still in the early innings of capturing this very large opportunity. More than 90% of our revenue is derived from selling our solutions to cities, transit agencies, and similar government organizations. Public transit generally, and Via services in particular, are in the unique position of enjoying broad bipartisan political support. One way to visualize this: in the U.S., 55% of Via services are in red congressional districts, and 45% are in blue congressional districts. This bipartisan support has helped ensure that, as reported by the American Public Transportation Association, funding for public transit has grown an average of 4% per year since 2012.
This trend appears to be continuing with the Trump administration's latest 2026 budget proposal, including a $310 million increase in federal funding for public transit. Bipartisan support for transit extends well beyond the federal government. This is critical since more than 80% of government funding for Via services is provided at the state and local levels. We have consistently seen a broad consensus by voters in support of public transit in local elections. Earlier this month, 16 of 19 public transit ballot measures successfully passed, approving a total of $11.8 billion in transit funding. In addition, several major pieces of legislation in support of public transit have recently been passed by state and local legislatures, including in Illinois and Oregon, where billions of dollars in transit funding were approved. Importantly, we have not seen any impact from the federal government shutdown on Via services.
At the Federal Transit Administration, it is our understanding that no employees were furloughed during the shutdown. Let's take a couple of minutes to deep dive into the Via platform. Over the past 13 and a half years, we have, in a very deliberate way, through organic investments and strategic acquisitions, built a comprehensive end-to-end category-defining platform of software and services for public transit. Our platform is highly modular and can support the transit needs of any size city or community, from rural to suburban to major metropolitan centers. We provide software that allows transportation planners to design more livable cities, a one-stop shop for planning and scheduling both fixed route and dynamically routed transit networks. Transit planners can leverage models trained on billions of data points to rapidly quantify the impact as they make changes to their network.
Once a city or transit agency has planned its transit network, it can, with a click of a button, begin operating that network using our operating software. Via's operating software supports multiple transit verticals, including microtransit, paratransit, school transport, and non-emergency medical transportation. Our software is powered by advanced algorithms and AI, which are used by customers to digitize and automate work streams across passenger reservations, dispatch, customer support, program eligibility, government reporting, and compliance. We also provide consumer-grade mobile apps and web-based interfaces for passengers to seamlessly plan, book, and pay for their transit journeys across multiple modes of transit. When customers adopt our platform, their ability to visualize their data and derive actionable insights from that data greatly expands. This improved access to data can be transformational. Our analytics tools include pre-built dashboards that allow customers to track their essential KPIs.
Our customers can also easily build their own reports directly within our product to create bespoke analyses or to meet specific funding and compliance obligations. These tools are intuitive and easy to use, even for those who may not be as data or tech-savvy. In addition to software, our platform includes a suite of technology-enabled services, which facilitate and accelerate adoption of our software. 100% of our customers buy our software. Approximately 20% elect to also procure services. These services are delivered to our customers by a curated ecosystem of third-party providers, or in some cases, directly by Via. Our ability to provide services alongside our software is a critical element of our customer-centric go-to-market strategy. Our services enable adoption of our software, allowing us to win customers who lack the staffing or expertise to use the software or leverage its full capabilities.
Our services also increase the stickiness of our products and accelerate growth. By broadening our platform and reach, they represent a strong point of differentiation in the marketplace. Via's platform is the product of an investment of hundreds of millions of dollars and over a decade of intensive efforts in research and development. Our data is derived from multiple sources: publicly available data sets, such as demographic information from the U.S. Census, and proprietary data produced by our hundreds of services across the globe. Over the years, we have collected billions of data points from over 150 million trips. As we expand our customer base, we also continue to scale our data advantage.
We have leveraged this data to create the world's first LLM for cities, an AI model trained on our proprietary data, which provides multiple capabilities that can meaningfully improve the way transit planners design their networks, from ridership modeling to bus speed prediction to proactive and conversational transit planning recommendations, a transit planning co-pilot, if you will. A recent and incredibly exciting example of Via's platform in action comes from Springfield, Ohio. I love this case study as it illustrates the power of our end-to-end platform. First, using our transit planning software, the city was able to rapidly analyze their existing transit system and model the impact of potential changes to their network. What became very clear very quickly was that in Springfield, there simply is not a sufficient population density to support buses.
You can see the bus network on the left with the circuitous routes typical of a transit system trying to use buses to provide transportation in low-density areas where buses do not really work. The small black icon you see on the map, surrounded by a small blue area, is Jane. We have dropped Jane in East Springfield and asked, how far can she travel using public transit? With the original bus system, it is clear that she cannot go very far at all. When the buses are replaced by Via's microtransit system, the picture is very different. Now, on the right, Jane can access a much larger area of Springfield using transit, and a car is no longer a prerequisite to having a job or getting to school. Needless to say, this has real impact for Jane and, more importantly, since Jane is fictional, for the residents of Springfield.
Based on this analysis, Springfield decided to fundamentally redesign their transit network, replacing all of their buses with a microtransit system powered by Via's platform. Now, for the same annual operating budget, the city is able to provide transit access to 40% more of the city and has dramatically improved the passenger headways, reducing them by a factor of four. For those of you who aren't transit nerds, passenger headway is the average time a passenger has to wait for a trip. This is a remarkable transformation for Springfield and its residents. Even more importantly, we know it is applicable to so many more cities in America. Our business is characterized by consistent and durable revenue growth. This growth is driven by landing new customers and by expanding within our existing customers.
Expansion within existing customers is driven by both volume expansion, as customers add more vehicles or vehicle hours to the platform, and upsell, as customers increase the number of modules included in their solution. In Q3 2025, we continue to land multiple new and strategic customers. The launch of our microtransit service in Omaha is a great example of a partnership that goes well beyond the transit authority and extends into the local community. In this case, the service has received key support from a local non-profit that is keen to expand access to jobs and other opportunities for Omaha residents. The early success of our Omaha service rapidly led to another opportunity in neighboring Council Bluffs, Iowa, demonstrating the potential for strong regional network effects for our platform. Council Bluffs will launch a new and modern paratransit service leveraging Via's platform in Q4.
We have also seen an exciting acceleration of our business in the U.K., where a government initiative to bring transit networks under control of regional authorities is meaningfully expanding the pool of potential customers seeking Via solutions, with Birmingham representing a key customer. In Q3, we also continued to grow rapidly within our existing customer base through both volume expansion and upsell. The city of Mobile, Alabama, launched Via's microtransit solution in March 2024. Building on that successful launch, the city adopted Via's planning solution, which allowed it to critically analyze the performance of its transit network, unearthing that only 45% of residents and 55% of the city's jobs were accessible by bus. In Q3 2025, the city added Via's fixed route scheduling and paratransit solutions and committed to implementing a full network redesign with a focus on streamlining bus service, expanding microtransit, and hugely increasing access to jobs.
In a year and a half, we've grown revenue with this account by 17 times. Looking ahead, we believe Via wins through innovation, and more specifically, by continuing to innovate across three key areas: one, broadening our platform; two, deepening our vertical stack; and three, being nimble and creative on our go-to-market strategy. Broadening our platform, both through organic product development and strategic acquisitions, allows us to increase our competitive advantage, grow our share of existing customers' wallets, and drive margin expansion through new, higher-margin software products. As we develop new product capabilities and features for our customers, this deepening of our vertical stack drives customer satisfaction and increases the stickiness of our platform. Investing in go-to-market innovation allows us to reach new government customers and reduce our customer acquisition costs.
We believe this growth framework is key to our continued success, and we consistently evaluate opportunities and initiatives through this lens. One area where we have been investing in broadening our platform is our newest vertical, student transportation. Q3 was a very strong quarter for this vertical, which saw more than two times growth in the number of customers subscribing to our solutions. Our efforts in the schools vertical are still nascent, but we're very encouraged by the initial results and believe this can be an engine for growth in the future, as well as a template for expansion into other new verticals. In Q3, we added multiple new product capabilities and features to our platform. These new capabilities have been extremely well received by customers. We are relentless about innovation and continue to invest in all parts of our product, even those that provide well-established functionality to our customers.
Last quarter, we rolled out major upgrades to our core dispatching interface, allowing dispatchers to more intuitively visualize vehicle routes, handle passenger queries, and cope with delays and disruptions in real time. Whether they're a parent, case manager, or front desk staffer at an adult daycare center, our Caregiver app allows caregivers to manage trips and receive real-time trip updates for the individual in their care. In our Agent AI suite, new features help our customers streamline tedious manual processes. Tools like the Eligibility application scanner automate the processing of paper applications into digital files for assessment. Our Agent chatbot is helping to automate how our customers handle passenger calls. We continue to roll out advanced self-service capabilities for our customers, shortening the loop between planning a new transit system and deploying it. We're also very pleased to announce the launch of our European Advisory Council.
The goal of the council is to bring together prominent leaders from the transit, technology, and academic worlds to generate thought leadership on how integrated digital networks will transform the modern European public transport landscape. The three-member board is chaired by Dr. Rolf Erfurt, CEO of Toll Collect, who previously served as a Chief Operating Officer and board member for the BVG, the public transit authority of Berlin. Additional founding members include Professor Andreas Herrmann, Director of the Institute for Mobility at the University of St. Gallen, and Professor Barbara Lentz, Senior Advisor and former Director of the Institute of Transport Research at the German Aerospace Center. We believe this high-profile board can play a key role in advancing transit innovation and digitization in Europe and ensure public budgets continue to be directed towards this important area.
Last, but certainly not least, we were pleased to announce a new strategic partnership with Waymo to advance the use of autonomous vehicles in public transit. There's no question Via has a key role to play in the introduction of autonomous vehicles into public transit, and our partnership with Waymo is a step in that direction. Through this partnership, government agencies using Via software can now incorporate Waymo's AVs directly into their public transit networks. Chandler, Arizona, is the first city to benefit from this framework, integrating Waymo's service into the city's Chandler Flex microtransit service. Public transit riders and the government agencies who serve them are too often the last to have access to cutting-edge technology. We're delighted that this partnership with Waymo paves the path for AVs to become accessible to millions of global public transit riders, enhancing mobility, lowering operating costs, and improving safety outcomes.
With that, I'll pass it over to Clara to review the financial highlights for the quarter.
Clara Fain (CFO)
Thank you, Daniel. We are very pleased with our performance in Q3, where we exceeded expectations across top and bottom-line metrics. Now, let's dive into our results. In Q3 2025, our platform annual runway revenue, which was defined as our quarterly platform revenue multiplied by four, was $439 million, representing a year-over-year increase of 32%. As a reminder, we generate revenue primarily through recurring subscription fees for access to our platform. Our customers subscribe to one or more solutions, which consist of a combination of software and tech-enabled services tailored to each customer's needs. All of our customers subscribe to our software, and approximately 20% of our customers bundle tech-enabled services. Contracts with our customers are typically multi-year and structured with a committed budget and a volume-based component.
Pricing is generally based on a number of factors, such as fleet size, minimum number of vehicles, or total vehicle hours. Each contract comprises one bundle price for the combination of software and any tech-enabled services selected by the customer. We are very pleased with our revenue growth of 32% this quarter. As you can see on our historical performance, our quarterly revenue growth can fluctuate quarter to quarter. Our business is mostly driven by public procurements, which have a certain cadence and happen when their existing contracts terminate, which is not always consistent throughout the year. Our revenue is highly predictable. The unique nature of our market customers, combined with our leadership platform position, the contracting nature of our revenue, and mission criticality of our products provide us with significant visibility into future revenue.
At any given time, over 90% of our projected revenue for the next 12 months is contracted. This is a testament to the high quality and durability of our business model. Our rapid revenue growth is driven by landing new customers and expanding with existing customers. We delivered strong results on both fronts this quarter. In Q3 2025, the number of customers leveraging our platform was 713, representing a year-over-year increase of 11%. As you can see, our year-over-year growth in new customers has historically ranged between 8% and 12%, which aligns to the cadence of our unique market. We also continue to experience rapid growth with our existing customers, driven by a combination of volume and product growth, as well as continued stickiness of our platform.
In Q3 2025, the majority of our 32% revenue growth was driven by growth with our existing customers, in line with our historical performance as a private company. In particular, I want to highlight our strong momentum in the United States and with our core government customers. In the long term, we expect that our business will generate consistent and durable revenue growth as we continue to digitize one of the last pen-and-paper industries and penetrate our $82 billion serviceable addressable market. Our sales and marketing efforts are highly efficient for a number of reasons. We're addressing a very large market, which provides many opportunities for growth with both new and existing customers. The breadth of our platform and our position as the category leader provide Via with a strong competitive advantage and drive meaningful expansion opportunities.
The mission criticality of our platform and ability to generate meaningful ROI for our customers, combined with our ongoing investment in innovation, drive that stickiness of the platform. Last but not least, the particular nature of our customer base, governments, and government agencies create a virtuous cycle of growth through word of mouth and referrals. In Michigan, you can see on the slide, we have begun to experience a flywheel effect where the success of existing customers in the state is driving new customer opportunities without the need to invest further in sales and marketing. As you can see, we have witnessed a 200% increase in revenue per head in that state and a 20% decrease in S&M as a percentage of revenue, highlighting the incredible efficiency of our team in this market. Let's dive into our operating expenses, which we're presenting on an adjusted basis.
As of Q3 2025, we spent 14.1% of our revenue on sales and marketing, compared to 15% in Q3 2024. Over time, we expect to continue to invest efficiently in S&M to capture our market opportunity. As of Q3 2025, we spent 14.4% of revenue on G&A, compared to 16.7% in Q3 2024. Our research and development efforts have been our number one area of investment since the foundation of Via 13 years ago. We have invested over $500 million in R&D, and as of Q3 2025, R&D expenses represented 19.1% of revenue, compared to 24.7% in Q3 2024. We are now harvesting a decade-long investment in R&D, and as we continue to adopt AI, automate our processes, and expand our product suite, there's a significant opportunity to increasingly drive efficiency in our R&D spend.
As of Q3 2025, our adjusted gross margin was 39.6%, compared to 39.2% in Q3 2024. In the near term, we are focused on landing our market opportunity and penetrating our customer base further. In the medium to long term, we reiterate our commitment to an adjusted gross margin of 50%, driven by three levers: one, transitioning lower-margin services to third parties; two, continuing to expand our platform with higher-margin products, notably our software offering through internal development; and three, continuing to expose strategic and accretive M&A. As a reminder, we have established a playbook to execute on M&A with the Remix and Citymapper acquisitions, which were both highly successful on all counts. Our industry is highly fragmented, and there are many point solutions which will not make it as standalone companies in the long term and might be excellent additions to our platform.
Our IPO was a powerful moment for brand awareness and has generated significant inbound interest for potential M&A targets. With mature customers, we have a proven track record of successfully being able to increase gross margins over time. In this example from a customer in the Western U.S., the customer started with a software and services microtransit solution in 2019. In 2022, the customer had richer maturity, whereby they were able to contract for certain services directly rather than through Via. We were also able to add additional product upsell to the partner for several higher-margin SKUs. In the past three years, we have been able to double run rate revenue on this account while expanding gross margin from 40% to 50%. We believe that this is a formula we can successfully replicate with other customers as their accounts reach maturity.
While generating rapid and durable revenue growth, we have benefited from significant operating leverage in the business. This operating leverage supported a continuous improvement in net loss margin and adjusted EBITDA margin. In the last year alone, between Q3 2024 and Q3 2025, our adjusted EBITDA margin improved from negative 17% to negative 8%. We are pleased about our continued ability to deliver operating leverage as the business scales. Now, turning to guidance. For the fourth quarter, we expect platform revenue to be between $114.6 million and $115.1 million, representing 25%-25.5% year-over-year growth. We expect adjusted EBITDA to be between negative $7.5 million and $8.5 million and adjusted EBITDA margin to be between negative 6.5% and negative 7.4%. For the full year 2025, we expect platform revenue to be between $430 million and $430.5 million, representing 30%-30.2% year-over-year growth.
We expect adjusted EBITDA margin to be between -8% and -7.8%, compared to -16.1% in 2024. Now, I'll pass it to Daniel for some concluding remarks.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Thank you, Clara. I just want to reiterate again how pleased we are with this quarter's performance and to express my confidence in our ability to maintain strong performance as we continue to transform our massive and hugely important market. Our team remains incredibly passionate about building best-in-class technology for those that the tech industry has long neglected: local governments and some of their most vulnerable citizens. We believe that our financial success is directly correlated to the meaningful impact that our solutions deliver. In the course of our IPO, I had the opportunity to discuss with some of you our views on the importance of making sure that governments are not left behind in the AI revolution.
Our customer is not, by nature, an early adopter of new technology, and for good reason. The government agencies responsible for providing public transportation operate in complex and demanding environments where risk is rarely rewarded. The use of machine learning and AI has always been core to Via, but given the complex environment in which our customers operate, we believe it is our responsibility to help them gain access to this new technology. As we continue to broaden our platform, AI will enable our customers to generate a virtuous cycle of planning, operating, and optimizing their entire networks, leading to smarter and more efficient transit. As the category leader, we believe we're very well positioned to capitalize on the AI and autonomous vehicle opportunities in our space.
We're excited to continue to work hard to help our government customers adopt new technologies and meaningfully increase the value they deliver to their constituents. With that, I wanted to thank you all again and turn it back to the operators so we can take some questions.
Operator (participant)
As a reminder, to ask a question, simply press star one on your telephone keypad. We respectfully request that you do limit questions to one and one follow-up. Our first question comes from the line of Adam Hotchkiss with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.
Adam Hotchkiss (VP and Emerging Software Equity Research)
Great. Thanks so much for taking the questions, and it's great to speak with you all in a public forum. Daniel, you mentioned the 63,000 customer opportunity. How would you characterize both the catalyst but also maybe the barriers you've experienced as you think about the next steps in converting more of that opportunity?
Clara, just briefly, how do you balance growth and investment within that context? Thanks so much.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Adam, thanks so much. Great to speak with you here. You know what? I think when we focus on the opportunity ahead of us, the barriers are similar to what we've experienced historically. Primarily, the customer that we're dealing with has an aversion to risk fundamentally and a reluctance to change, and that is usually the highest barrier for us to overcome. I will say that over the years and certainly in this last quarter, we have seen that barrier start to come down, and we're able to accelerate our ability to convince our customers to adopt new technologies.
Certainly, when we look at regions in which we have established any presence, and even more so when we have established a meaningful presence, that barrier can come down meaningfully and really help us accelerate through these regional network effects that we talk about. Fundamentally, the same. We need to keep doing a really good job explaining the value of the ROI to our customer and showing them how it works in nearby cities. That is always very helpful, and that, I think, will help us continue to accelerate the progress.
Clara Fain (CFO)
Hey, Adam. Great to reconnect, and thanks for the question.
When it comes to the investment, we are very focused on putting the dollars where the growth is, and we have a very detailed framework of investment behind the new products that we're launching, focused on our core geography of North America and Europe and some of the products that we went through together, including obviously our microtransit product, our paratransit product, but also some fixed-route products, but also some new products, notably around the schools business and some other interesting opportunities that we've identified. Definitely putting the dollars behind the customer opportunity.
Adam Hotchkiss (VP and Emerging Software Equity Research)
Great. That's really helpful. And then just on the quarter itself, how would you frame the makeup of the 24 net new customer additions sequentially you had? It was the largest number I think we've had in recent company history. Was there anything notable about these customers, either from a product or geography perspective?
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Did student play more of a role? Or is it just where RFPs happened to fall in the calendar year? Any more detail on that makeup would be helpful.
Clara Fain (CFO)
Yeah. How did you break it down further for you? As you saw, we're very pleased with the performance in North America. Continuing to see very strong demand there, and that is reflected in the customer growth. We're also seeing some good traction around new products, including the schools product, which has driven some of that growth as well. I would say both of these are definitely drivers of the customer growth.
Adam Hotchkiss (VP and Emerging Software Equity Research)
Great. Thank you very much.
Clara Fain (CFO)
Thanks, Adam.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Thanks, Adam.
Operator (participant)
The next question comes from the line of Josh Baer with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.
Josh Baer (Executive Director and Software Equity Research Analyst)
Great. Daniel, Clara, Gabby, the whole team, congrats on a strong quarter and welcome to the public markets.
I know you have great visibility on the pipeline. I was hoping you could share some of what you're seeing with us from an RFP perspective or customer decision and implementation timing perspective. Ultimately, what do we need to look out for from the customer ads over the next several quarters? My follow-up, Clara mentioned the IPO as a branding moment more from an M&A perspective, I think. I'm wondering if you've noticed a change in inbound conversations from customers as well. Has the IPO changed awareness and interest in the platform?
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Hey, Josh. Thanks so much. We're happy to be a public company. It's exciting. Looking at the customers and looking forward, I think we're continuing to see very positive trends across all of our markets. We are seeing a—and I think it ties to your follow-up question too.
We are feeling that the IPO was a moment for us. It's hard to quantify, but the reception on the customer side definitely feeling a sort of different timbre to it, if you will. I think that's helping us also develop the pipeline and continue to push in that direction. As Clara mentioned, the U.S. in particular, we've seen really strong dynamics, and that's been true for the quarterly results and looking ahead at pipeline. We are very pleased with that. We are seeing some good dynamics in Europe too, as well, especially in the U.K. Looking ahead, I think that's a market we're very interested in focusing on.
Josh Baer (Executive Director and Software Equity Research Analyst)
Great. Thank you.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Thanks, Josh.
Clara Fain (CFO)
Thanks, Josh.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from the line of Michael Turrin with Wells Fargo. Your line is open.
Michael Turrin (Managing Director, Equity Research Analyst, and Software)
Hey, great. Thanks very much. Good morning.
Thanks for taking the questions, and my congrats as well on the first quarter as a public company for Via. I want to go back to the customer metric. I think given you had some commentary, we've been fielding questions around central government shutdown impacts. It does not sound like there was any real impact there, but I'm just curious how much of the bigger sequential adds you're seeing is tied back to some of the commentary Daniel's making around just increasing referenceability and just your view on us assessing that as a good leading indicator for the durability of future revenue growth or maybe other indicators you would point investors towards as they're getting to know the company.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Hey, Michael. Thanks for the question.
I do think the referenceability is key, and I know we've been talking about that quite a lot, but the way that we are approaching this market, those proof points that we can point to for customers, whether it's in new conversations and also when we're talking to existing customers about expanding, the fact that they can see what's happening nearby is extremely important. I think we talked a lot about the Mobile example a bit earlier. I think the fact that in Mobile, they were able to see what we did in Sioux Falls just as an example and were able to visit, that is incredibly impactful when they're making, what is, frankly, a huge decision from their perspective to pass on to us, basically management and the design of their entire transit system.
I think the influence that these types of conversations that they can have with peers is incredibly important. That referenceability is really key. Our hope is that we can continue to build on that over the coming years to really drive the rapid adoption.
Michael Turrin (Managing Director, Equity Research Analyst, and Software)
Just on the Waymo partnership and autonomous in general, I think that sounds exciting and maybe a bit more advanced than we tend to think about within public transit agencies. Can you just expand on how you're thinking about the evolution of that opportunity and what that does for Via's TAM overall over time? Thanks very much.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Yeah. Thanks. I think autonomous is a huge opportunity for us. I also think it's incumbent on us to play this role on behalf of our customers and help them adopt this new technology. We're working very hard to build.
Obviously, the partnership with Waymo is exciting. Chandler, Arizona is a first step, but I think with Waymo expanding around the country and now into Europe, lots of opportunity there to continue to expand that partnership. We are looking to broaden our partnership base so that we can be that partner to our customers who enables them to adopt autonomous vehicles. We are seeing, interestingly, quite different dynamics in the U.S. versus Europe. U.S. very focused on robotaxis, and we can bring the public sector in. Europe, we are seeing much more of a top-down sort of drive from the governments to push autonomous vehicles in the public transit sector. That may actually be an early adopter of autonomous vehicles and lots of funding going into that. I think a lot of opportunity in Europe from the autonomous vehicle space.
Overall, what we've seen is when we help our customers reduce their costs, they're willing to invest more, and they see the ROI. If autonomous vehicles can bring down costs, certainly improve safety. There's just a lot of opportunity there from our perspective.
Michael Turrin (Managing Director, Equity Research Analyst, and Software)
All sounds pretty encouraging. Thanks very much.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Thanks.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Brad Zelnick with Deutsche Bank. Your line is open.
Brad Zelnick (Managing Director)
Echo my congrats to you all as well. Exciting to finally be out and a great quarter to start. Mike, I've got two questions, and ironically, they piggyback on Michael's last question. First, on customer count, just given the very strong customer additions this quarter, how should we think about the cadence of customer count going forward? Please remind us of any seasonality here or anything else that we should keep in mind.
Then I've got a follow-up.
Clara Fain (CFO)
Hey, Brad. Thanks for the kind words. We're very pleased with the results this quarter out of the gate. Thank you for this report. On the customer count, you've seen the chart, and we've discussed this quite a lot. There's some cadence to the market. We have certain quarters that are very strong on customer additions, some quarters that are strong but maybe lower. The general range for customer additions is 8%-12%. When you look back at the last 10 quarters, that's been fairly consistent. I would expect that we continue to remain in that range. This quarter was very strong. Some of our new products could be seasonal, but we are very early in the penetration of those markets.
There is still a lot of white space overall across the platform, and I feel very good about that range.
Brad Zelnick (Managing Director)
Okay. That is very helpful. Actually, I am going to pivot. I was going to ask a Waymo question, but I will save that for another time. Maybe bigger picture for you, Daniel, not that you do not already have an enormous opportunity to pursue, but when you talk about leveraging billions of proprietary data points to bring AI to government and delivering LLMs for cities, what is the even broader potential over time, perhaps even in addressing needs that are adjacent to transit? Thanks very much.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Yeah. Thanks very much, Brad. I think that is a great question. We are very focused on our current market, which, as you mentioned, talked about a lot, is huge, and we are not seeing that kind of opportunity for durable growth diminish anytime soon in our view.
I think with AI and the ability to become much more efficient in developing products, which I feel like in the last quarter we're starting to see, we're starting to see an acceleration of our product roadmap. In part, I attribute that to our ability to develop code more quickly using these tools. You could imagine that given the customer relationships we have and the opportunity ahead of us, we could more quickly expand into other areas in the government technology space. I don't think that's necessarily an immediate thing that we would work on, but definitely something on our minds as far as the broader opportunity and how quickly we can move into it.
Brad Zelnick (Managing Director)
Excellent. Thanks again.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Thanks so much.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from John DiFucci with Guggenheim. Your line is open.
John DiFucci (Senior Managing Director)
Thank you. I'd like to offer my congrats to the team too.
These are really impressive results across all metrics. Clara, thanks for that customer example going from 40% to 50%. It really helps with that bridge, a real-life example there. My questions, my first question anyway, is more on the growth. It has been brought up several times here. This is the greatest sequential increase in customer count we've seen, and our model goes back almost three years. If I wanted to look for anything that may raise questions from investors, the ARR per customer actually declined a little bit sequentially for the first time in eight quarters. Is that simply because you added so many customers that did not have a full quarter's worth of revenue in there since your ARR calc is just simply revenue times four?
Or is there something else affecting that that we should be thinking about, perhaps the new school product, and maybe that's a lower ASP? Or how should we be thinking about that?
Clara Fain (CFO)
Absolutely. Thanks, John. This is a great question, and happy to give you more color on ARR per customer. First, we're very pleased with the customer ads this quarter, very strong demand across the board, and revenue growth as well. You were right. Platform ARR per customer declined slightly quarter over quarter in Q3 versus Q4, some 1%. That's generally driven by, one, normal seasonality patterns of our existing contracts. In Q3, we tend to have universities, schools, corporate contracts that have lower volumes during the summer. That slight seasonality drives lower ARR per customer in Q3.
Then the growth in our schools business, where we saw a significant increase in number of customers, and the schools' product is relatively new. These customers launched their services in Q3, coinciding with the start of the academic year, and therefore contributed to more limited revenue in that quarter. That drove the slight decline in ARR per customer. Over time, we expect these customers to ramp up.
John DiFucci (Senior Managing Director)
Okay. Great. Thanks for that, Clara. Daniel, you said there was no impact from the federal government shutdown in this quarter, but we've been just looking closely at all the government funding. Do you see any impact from COVID-era funding that I think in some cases is going to start expiring over the next year or so? Perhaps maybe you can share your experience in similar situations when there are funding pressures.
Where does mass transit sit as far as priorities among competing alternatives for funding?
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Thanks, John. Thanks. That's a great question. Maybe I'll try to answer that in a few different pieces. Specifically to the government shutdown, we haven't seen any impact at all so far, and we don't expect to see any impact from that. The way that funding for transit works, it's long-term funding, typically appropriated at the federal level, appropriated every five years. This sort of, it was a very long shutdown, obviously, but we don't believe that it will have any impact on our business, even as it ends and looking into this quarter and the next quarter. That's specifically to the shutdown.
I think more generally, you're asking a general question of what is happening with transit funding, especially some of those funding bills from the previous administration start to expire and longer term. There's sort of, I'd say, some puts and takes there. There's some of this funding that's expiring. There's some other funding that we talked about, whether through ballot measures or other sort of state legislature approvals that is coming in that is growing the overall pot. Overall, I think what's key for us and what we've seen consistently is that we just need to identify, and it's a little bit on a city-by-city and transit agency-by-transit agency basis. We need to identify where they are in their budget cycle. At any point there, you're going to look to see there may be an overall trend. We talked about it.
Maybe in Germany, there was a period last year or so where the overall trend was downward. There are still some cities that have more budgets, some cities that have fewer. The U.S., I do not think the overall trend is downward. I think it is actually continuing to go up overall. Within that, there are still individual cities or transit agencies that may be in their budget cycle sort of up or down. The key for us is to identify where they are in the budget cycle so we can honestly provide them with the right solution, adapt our pitch, if you will, if you are thinking from a sales perspective, but in reality, find the right solution for them. If they are in a downward trend, we need to help them save money. We need to help them become more efficient. I think we are extremely well-positioned.
Sometimes, kind of counterintuitively, that's our biggest opportunity because they have to change something. They're under budget pressure, and that's where we can come in with our solution and really help them avoid service cuts while they're reducing their budgets. Obviously, in an expansion kind of phase, that's also a great opportunity. We can launch new microtransit services. We can do lots of stuff with them. It's really about identifying where they are versus being worried about the budget going up or down. That makes sense?
John DiFucci (Senior Managing Director)
That does make sense, Daniel. Thank you. Got it. And nice job, team.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Thanks very much, John. Pleasure.
Operator (participant)
Your next question is from the line of Patrick Walravens with Citizens. Your line is open.
Patrick Walravens (Head of Technology Equity Research)
Oh, great. Thank you. Let me have my congratulations with him. Terrific debut.
Can you guys comment on, and I know you'll guide next quarter, so we're not asking for that, but can you just comment on what the durability of the growth looks like in this model and also what the pace of margin expansion looks like? Just sort of any broad points you can share with us would be super helpful.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Hey, Pat, thanks for the question. We feel very good about the durability of the growth long-term, just given the scale of the market, our very limited penetration, and the fact that it's not we don't see our current cohort of customers as being any different from the next cohort of customers, if you will. I think I talked about Springfield, Ohio, and that opportunity. There are so many cities like Springfield.
It is not that there is something unique about our current customer that will not apply to the next 100, 200,000, 2,000 customers. We really believe that there is a tremendous opportunity to continue doing what we are doing today just at a much larger scale. Now, if you add on top of that all the product innovation that we are driving, the new products, other opportunities, we are very optimistic about what is possible here.
Patrick Walravens (Head of Technology Equity Research)
That is fantastic. And Clara, maybe pace of margin expansion?
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Yeah. I will leave that to Clara.
Clara Fain (CFO)
Thanks. Thanks for the kind words as well. In the immediate term, we are focused on organic operational improvements to enable modest gross margin expansion, and we achieved that successfully this quarter with a 0.4% margin expansion. In the medium to longer term, we are working to improve gross margins to three levels. One, transitioning our lower margin services to third parties.
Two, continuing to expand our platform with higher margin products, notably our software offering, which we're investing heavily into. Three, continuing to express strategic M&A. We've established a playbook with Remix and Citymapper acquisitions, which were both highly successful on all counts. The industry continues to be highly fragmented, so there's an opportunity to acquire point solutions, which may not make it as a standalone company, but have excellent products and teams and maybe very creative additions to the platform. We reiterated on this goal the commitment to the long-term target of 50% and our commitment to margin expansion. Again, we'll take two phases, but the first phase where we continue to land customers with modest gross margin expansion, and then the second phase where we start to see the impact of the three levers and have more meaningful staff function expansion of the margin.
Patrick Walravens (Head of Technology Equity Research)
Wonderful. Thank you.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Thanks, Pat.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from Scott Berg with Needham & Company. Your line is open.
Scott Berg (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Hi, everyone. Really nice quarter here on the gate. Pardon me. I wanted to probably take Brad's Waymo question here. I think the partnership is super interesting. Knowing how those contracts are constructed within the microtransit area, how do your contracts change in that type of scenario? Are these contracts probably, my guess is they're more weighted on the software side of what that offering looks like than some of the peer services side. Just trying to understand how that may or may not shift in that scenario. Thank you.
Clara Fain (CFO)
That's a great question, Scott. That's absolutely right. When we partner, we think of Waymo as one of our potential fleet providers. We can have a human-driven vehicle with a fleet.
We could have a Waymo vehicle, and those would be equivalent solutions for our customers, and we offer them both. In that contract, basically outsourcing to Waymo, the fleet and vehicle means outsourcing a large chunk of our cost to a third party. Those contracts tend to be higher margin. Obviously, we have a small sample today, so there's some room to explore there, but they're very high margin and allow us to bring this incredible technology to our customers with our vertical software layer on top so they can actually use it as part of their transit system.
Scott Berg (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Understood. Helpful. Thank you. Then many comments on strong customer additions in the quarter.
I guess as you think about the growth algorithm over the near term, maybe two to four quarters out, does that algorithm kind of shift towards more net new customer opportunity or more revenues coming from net new customers or the really predictable cross-sell model? Is that still the way we should think about maybe the next several quarters?
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Yeah. Great question. From our point of view, the growth algorithm stays pretty much the same. We're very focused on continuing to grow within our existing customers and also add new customers in the same way that we talked about. If I'm looking forward a few quarters, the feeling is that it should stay about the same as what you've seen in our historical results as far as the distribution between the two.
Scott Berg (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Excellent. Thanks, Porter. Thanks again.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Thanks. Thanks so much.
Your next question comes from Brian Schwartz with Oppenheimer. Your line is open.
Brian Schwartz (Managing Director of SaaS and Applications Software Equity Research)
Thank you for taking my questions this morning. Echo great results out of the gate. Two questions. First, for Daniel on AI. I know it's early, but how do you envision discussing pricing for AI functionality with your clients? Clearly, it's a differentiator of the business, but is it all about stickiness of the platform? Can it help you take up price since you're giving clients more value? Just thinking about as you bring in more AI functionality into the product suite and your core offerings moving forward.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Hey, Brian. Thanks so much. Great question. I think we can do so much with AI to continue to evolve and transform the product into something that's increasingly even more useful to our customers. There's definitely a lot of value that we're delivering there.
On price specifically, at least for now, we are trying to be extremely customer-centric. Our customer is very sensitive to feeling that they're in any way being nickeled and dimed. Our approach has been for our entire history to say we deliver a solution, and we will continuously upgrade that solution for you so that you're extremely happy with that product. That makes it very sticky. It builds real trust with our customer. We have so much other opportunity to grow with them beyond simple price increases to our software that that's been our philosophy. I think that should apply to additional AI features that we're adding into the platform, despite the fact that I do agree they can contribute enormous amounts of value to the customer.
Now, that said, in parallel, we're able to use AI to launch what I think of as sort of new products. And those, I think we can sell separately as individual SKUs, increasing the revenue that we're able to generate from each one of our customers. These are also very high margin, to Clara's point earlier. I would separate from taking existing functionality, upgrading it, sometimes very significantly with AI, at least in the short to medium term, that really isn't our philosophy to try to charge for that. I think it's had a lot of value. Some new products, I think, are real opportunities.
Brian Schwartz (Managing Director of SaaS and Applications Software Equity Research)
Thank you, Daniel. One question for Clara, following up on Pat's question, but maybe specifically about the gross margin line. We saw a nice lift to gross margin this quarter and over the past four quarters, too, for the business.
Beyond scale, are there other drivers for greater gross margin efficiency that you can foresee taking hold for the business over the next 12 months or maybe over the medium term? Thanks again for taking my questions.
Clara Fain (CFO)
Thanks, Brian. Very thoughtful question. So happy to address it. I think there are several drivers that we're looking at to continue to drive gross margin beyond scale and beyond the three levers that we just discussed. One is obviously the mix shift towards higher margin contracts we're seeing. And you saw this great case study of a customer that went from 40% to 50% gross margin and is continuously improving. That customer's revenue growth would drive further margin expansion.
Continuing to look at the mixed shift, which is a really nice driver of near-term margin expansion, is quite interesting and focusing on those customers where we can drive an uptick in margin through changes in operational metrics. Second, we are continuing to work on cost improvement on our cost to serve our customers. AI has brought a lot of new opportunities to reduce costs in our cost to serve. While on the top line, Daniel just discussed, we're just adding more value to our platform and bringing and continuing to penetrate our TAM, which will drive a lot of revenue growth going forward and hopefully durable growth, strong durable growth. On the cost line, we're actually using AI to reduce our costs.
That is valid for obviously our costs and our OpEx and trying to continue to generate examples, obviously customer support, customer success, infrastructure costs, the ability to better manage and control those costs has increased substantially with AI tools. We are definitely focused on that, and I think that will drive margin expansion.
Operator (participant)
Your next question is from the line of Brian Peterson with Raymond James. Your line is open.
Brian Peterson (Financial Advisor)
Thanks for taking the question and congrats on the really strong results here. I wanted to double-click on the schools opportunity. It is encouraging to hear the momentum there. Is there any way to help frame that opportunity relative to what you have today, either in terms of fleet size or spend?
As we think about that go-to-market, is that more of a net new dynamic where you're selling to a new buyer, or is there a cross-sell potential relative to some of your existing public sector customers? Could you guys unpack that a bit?
Clara Fain (CFO)
Yes. Thanks, Brian. Happy to give more color on that opportunity. I would start by saying that we've been investing in the product and the technology for that end market for a significant amount of time, and the go-to-market motion is still very nascent for schools. We're in the early stages of capturing this opportunity. To answer some of your question, that opportunity is quite meaningful and is part of our overall TAM and definitely very attractive across all fronts. The way we look at it is the buyer can be different. It depends.
We're looking at, in general, we tend to go to school districts or DOEs or head of schools. They are definitely different than the mayor or the head of the transit agency in terms of who is actually buying the platform. That is definitely a new customer and a different buyer in most cases. However, there is a high-load effect and the reference stability of our platform within a city. There are certain cities where these may be kind of living together, these various functions, and these people may be sitting together and discussing their solutions. There are other scenarios where they're quite separate.
I would say there's a bit of a range of buyers, but I would say in most cases, it's a slightly different buyer, although once we have existing presence in that region or that city, we definitely benefit from the network effect and the reference ability of our platform. More to come on that as we continue to grow that business.
Brian Peterson (Financial Advisor)
No, that's great to hear, Clara. Maybe just sticking on the reference ability point, Daniel, I know you mentioned the European Customer Advisory Board. You're very strong in Germany. The tone on the U.K. is not lost on us. I'm just curious, as you think about those proof points in those markets, how do we think about a potential groundswell into other geographies? Thanks, guys, and congrats on the strong results.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Thanks so much, Brian.
I think specifically within Europe, maybe I'll just give an example on the school bus. That's a market where school bus operates quite differently. They don't have yellow school buses while in the U.S., yellow school buses, there are more buses if you just count the number of buses than there are transit buses. So it's a huge opportunity. In Europe, typically, school bus is much more integrated. They don't have the yellow school bus, much more integrated into their sort of traditional public transit system with a lot of special education school transport being provided. There there's an opportunity, and that gets the reference ability to sell the school bus product to the same customer, to the customer that we already work with. That's a much more direct sale. There's a lot of product work that's still complete there to make that opportunity accelerate.
I think that's an area that we could see some really good growth. Overall, I do think that while, yes, every place you go, they say, "Oh, no, no, here, we're different than we are in this other country." There's no question that when we have success in one region, it influences all the other regions as well.
Brian Peterson (Financial Advisor)
Great to hear. Thank you.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Your next question is from Jonathan Ho with William Blair. Your line is open.
Jonathan Ho (Partner)
Hi. Good morning. Let me echo my congratulations as well. Maybe just starting out with the strength you saw in the US market this quarter, what maybe stood out or maybe surprised you in terms of win rates or utilization? Just want to understand the drivers for that geographic strength.
Clara Fain (CFO)
Thanks, Jonathan. Good to connect with. From our perspective, Q3 was business as usual.
We saw very strong demand for the platform across all metrics and across all of our solutions. You can see historically there is a cadence to the market. There are certain quarters that can be very strong, certain quarters are a bit slower, and this quarter turned out to be very strong with lots of additions and growth. The growth algorithm is the same, and the opportunity continues to be very large, supporting durable growth. We continue to be very excited and confident in this opportunity. I think Q3 is no different than the prior quarters and really a strong testament of that market opportunity.
Jonathan Ho (Partner)
Got it. In terms of the timing for ballot measures that you referenced, what is the timeframe for that to translate into contracting and potentially RFP opportunities? It would just be helpful to understand what that process typically looks like. Thank you.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Yeah. Thank you, Jonathan. Great to connect. Great question. That is worth clarifying. That is a very long-term process. It takes months, sometimes years, for that funding to really become available. There is the procurement process and so forth. We are looking at, and then the funding is often over many years that it is available, depending on the specific ballot measure. We are looking at a very long-term impact. Generally, in our business, everything we are doing is fairly long-term, and we are always thinking ahead. In many cases, we are increasingly finding ourselves involved in these ballot measures and helping to support them and maybe even initiate them in some cases. I think that is something that we will look to do more of and really thinking 1, 2, 5, 10 years ahead in some cases as to when it will have a material impact on the business.
That's sort of the timescale that we need to think of.
Jonathan Ho (Partner)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Your final question comes from Alexander Zukin with Wolfe Research. Your line is open.
Alexander Zukin (Managing Director and Software Equity Research)
Yeah. Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the question and congrats. Maybe, Daniel, first one for you. The Waymo partnership feels like a seminal moment, partially because it seems like it enables you to kind of even more maybe aggressively fulfill your vision for solving what seems to be an extraordinarily difficult kind of algorithmic and services challenge for your customer base. Maybe just elaborate, if you can, both the potential marketing and pipeline opportunity that that partnership is driving from awareness in terms of your customer base, and then from both an accretion perspective to the contract, which I think you guys mentioned earlier.
How do we think about as more of potentially these autonomous contracts roll out across your customer base? How do we think about the revenue uplift opportunity? And then we've got a quick follow-up.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Thanks, Alex. Really appreciate it. I agree with you. I think there's a real opportunity in autonomous. It's just starting, but I agree with everything you said. I think there can be a real impact both in the way that our customers perceive this opportunity. I would say what I've seen from talking to customers, and that's true here and in Europe, as these autonomous vehicles become available, the demand for them from the public transit sector is very high. I think it's really just limited by the availability of these vehicles. There are even some of our customers that have indicated that, and sometimes it's not even yet a budget matter.
It's just a matter of wanting to be ahead on this technology, that they would be willing to launch certain services with autonomous vehicles that may take them a lot longer to agree to launch with human-driven vehicles. I feel that the opportunity is very large. Totally agree with you. It really is at the moment dependent on the availability of these autonomous vehicles. As quickly as they can become available in the different geographies, I think we'll see an acceleration.
Alexander Zukin (Managing Director and Software Equity Research)
Perfect. Maybe, Clara, the large upsell that you guys talked about for Mobile, Alabama, it feels like that was also a competitive displacement of a larger or a large competitor.
Maybe just talk through, as you continue to take share, when does that kind of click happen in the mind of a customer to really move and scale from a legacy operator to Via in those situations?
Clara Fain (CFO)
Alex, again, thanks for the question. You're absolutely right. This was a takeover. I mean, some of the expansion was a takeover from a legacy player in the transit space. It's a really interesting market that we're in. It's probably the last pen and paper industry in terms of technology. You have a number of very large legacy players that are all obviously very large in scale that have been established in this market for a very long time. It is a process to displace them and displace them with these very large contracts. I would say demand for these very large contracts is the strongest it's ever been.
We're starting to see a halo effect of some of the takeovers. We've taken over several of those contracts already, and the performance is extremely impressive in terms of both taking transit systems that absolutely do not work, that our ridership is declining, cost is increasing, consumers, residents are not aware of it and not happy with it, and turning that around within a year or two. We're starting to see outstanding results for those very large takeovers. As we see more, as we get more data around that, we are seeing the reference ability kick in and the flywheel effect work. Today, we have probably the strongest pipeline in this type of opportunities we've ever had. Obviously, it's on us to execute on that. There's a sales cycle, so it will take some time.
But we're very confident in our ability to continue to push on that front and get very large contracts for the business over time.
Alexander Zukin (Managing Director and Software Equity Research)
Excellent. Thank you, guys.
Clara Fain (CFO)
Thanks, Alex.
Alexander Zukin (Managing Director and Software Equity Research)
Congratulations.
Clara Fain (CFO)
Thank you.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
This concludes the Q&A session for today. I will now hand the call back to Via for closing remarks.
Daniel Ramot (Co-Founder and CEO)
Thanks very much. Thank you all for listening and for the great questions. As we said, we're very pleased with our first quarter results as a public company. We're excited for the road ahead. Look forward to doing many more of these calls with you. Thanks, everybody.
Operator (participant)
Thank you again for joining us today. This does conclude today's presentation. You may now disconnect.