
NVIDIA has announced its Q1 FY26 results, reporting $44.1B in revenue – a 12% increase from $39.3B in Q4 FY25 – with a profit of $18.8B.
First Quarter Financial Highlights
- Data center revenue reached $39.1 billion, up 10% quarter-over-quarter and 73% year-over-year.
- Gaming revenue rose to $3.8 billion, marking a 48% quarterly increase and 42% growth year-over-year.
- First-quarter Automotive revenue was $567 million, down 1% from the previous quarter and up 72% from a year ago.
- AI infrastructure demand remained strong, with AI inference token generation increasing 10x over the past year.
- Non-GAAP EPS (excluding H20 charge) came in at $0.96.


“Our breakthrough Blackwell NVL72 AI supercomputer – a ‘thinking machine’ designed for reasoning – is now in full-scale production across system makers and cloud service providers,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “Global demand for NVIDIA’s AI infrastructure is incredibly strong. AI inference token generation has surged tenfold in just one year, and as AI agents become mainstream, the demand for AI computing will accelerate. Countries around the world are recognizing AI as essential infrastructure – just like electricity and the internet – and NVIDIA stands at the center of this profound transformation.”
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 Corporation, based in Santa Clara, CA, is a U.S. technology company specializing in the design and production of graphics processing units (GPUs). It’s hardware and software solutions support a range of applications and simulation. Operating for over 30 years, NVIDIA has seen strong financial growth, reporting $39.3 billion in revenue and $22.1 billion in net income for the fiscal quarter ending January 2025. Its headquarters are designed to promote a flat organizational structure that encourages open communication and collaboration between leadership and staff across industries. In gaming, its GPUs power high-performance visual rendering. In artificial intelligence and high-performance computing, NVIDIA provides the infrastructure needed for training and deploying large-scale models. The company also contributes to the automotive sector with systems for autonomous driving and supports robotics with tools for AI-based perception.