
NVIDIA has announced its Q1 FY27 results, reporting $81.6B in revenue – a 19.8% increase from $68B in Q4 FY26 – with a profit of $58.3B.
First Quarter Financial Highlights
- Data center revenue reached $75.2B, up 21% from the previous quarter and up 92% year over year.
- Edge Computing revenue reached $6.4B, up 10% from the previous quarter and up 29% year over year.
- Entered production with NVIDIA Dynamo 1.0, open-source software that improves generative and agentic AI inference on NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs.
- NVIDIA introduced the Vera Rubin system architecture, including the Vera CPU and BlueField-4 STX for agentic AI data center infrastructure.
- NVIDIA expanded autonomous vehicle work with Hyundai Motor Company, Kia and Uber using NVIDIA DRIVE technologies.
- NVIDIA signed multi-year agreements with Coherent, Corning and Lumentum for advanced optics technologies.
- NVIDIA released DLSS 4.5 Dynamic Multi Frame Generation and previewed DLSS 5 for neural rendering.
- Data Center compute revenue reached $60.4B under NVIDIA’s previous sub-market structure, up 18% from the previous quarter and up 77% year over year.
- Data Center networking revenue reached $14.8B under the previous sub-market structure, up 35% from the previous quarter and up 199% year over year.


“The buildout of AI factories – the largest infrastructure expansion in human history – is accelerating at extraordinary speed,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “Agentic AI has arrived, doing productive work, generating real value and scaling rapidly across companies and industries. NVIDIA is uniquely positioned at the center of this transformation as the only platform that runs in every cloud, powers every frontier and open source model, and scales everywhere AI is produced – from hyperscale data centers to the edge.”
A detailed chart outlining the financial results is available here, providing a comprehensive breakdown of key metrics and performance indicators for better insight into the company’s financial standing.
About NVIDIA
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NVIDIA, founded in 1993 and headquartered in Santa Clara, CA, designs and manufactures graphics processing units, systems on chips, networking hardware, and AI intelligence software such as CUDA. Its products serve industries including gaming, data centers, autonomous vehicles, professional visualization, robotics, health care, and energy. The company introduced the GPU in 1999 and later expanded into accelerated computing and AI infrastructure. In gaming, its GPUs support high-performance rendering, while in AI and high-performance computing, its systems provide the infrastructure for training and deploying large-scale models. NVIDIA also develops tools for robotics and autonomous driving.