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NVIDIA Reports $26.4B Q2 Profit as AI, Gaming Demand Surge

by | Sep 2, 2025

NVIDIA Q2 results show $46.7B revenue fueled by data center, robotics, automotive, and ProViz gains as industries scale computing for complex workloads. New platforms boosted computing performance, enabling industries to handle complex workloads at larger scales.

NVIDIA has announced its Q2 FY26 results, reporting $46.7B in revenue – a 6.1% increase from $44.1B in Q1 FY26 – with a profit of $26.4B.

Second Quarter Financial Highlights

  • Data center revenue is $41.1B, up 5% from the previous quarter and up 56% from a year ago.
  • Blackwell data center revenue rose 17% from the previous quarter, signaling adoption of NVIDIA’s AI platform.
  • Gaming revenue rose to $4.3B, up 14% from the previous quarter and up 49% from a year ago.
  • Automotive & Robotics reached $586M, up 3% from the previous quarter and up 69% from a year ago.
  • Professional Visualization (ProViz) reached $601M, up 18% from the previous quarter and up 32% from a year ago.
Eight-quarter financial trends: A comparative analysis of NVIDIA results.

 

Eight-quarter financial trends: A comparative analysis of NVIDIA results.

“Blackwell is the AI platform the world has been waiting for, delivering an exceptional generational leap – production of Blackwell Ultra is ramping at full speed, and demand is extraordinary,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “NVIDIA NVLink rack-scale computing is revolutionary, arriving just in time as reasoning AI models drive orders-of-magnitude increases in training and inference performance. The AI race is on, and Blackwell is the platform at its center.”

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.

Source: NVIDIA

About NVIDIA

NVIDIA Corporation, founded in 1993 and based in Santa Clara, CA, designs and produces graphics processing units, systems on chips, networking hardware and AI software such as CUDA. Its hardware and software support applications in gaming, data centers, autonomous vehicles, professional visualization, robotics, health care and energy. The company pioneered the GPU in 1999 and later expanded into accelerated computing and AI infrastructure. In gaming, its GPUs drive 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 systems. For the fiscal quarter ending January 2025, it reported revenue of $39.3 billion and net income of $22.1 billion.