Meta Platforms, Inc. (NASDAQ: META) reported first-quarter 2026 results on April 29, 2026, posting $56.31 billion in revenue — a 33% year-over-year increase from $42.31 billion in Q1 2025 that cleared analyst consensus of $55.45–$55.56 billion. GAAP earnings per share of $10.44 included a large one-time tax benefit; even adjusted, the operational beat was meaningful.
Revenue and Advertising Beat
Meta’s advertising engine delivered across every key metric. Advertising revenue reached $55.02 billion, up 33% year-over-year, within Family of Apps total revenue of $55.91 billion. Ad impressions delivered across Meta’s apps grew 19% year-over-year while average price per ad rose 12% — a combination that is unusual, as higher inventory supply typically compresses unit pricing. The simultaneous gains reflect AI-driven improvements to ad targeting and delivery that sustained advertiser return on spend.
Average revenue per person came in at $15.66 for the quarter, above the $15.26 analyst estimate, though down sequentially from $16.56 in the prior quarter — typical post-holiday seasonality. Reality Labs, Meta’s hardware and VR segment, contributed $402 million in revenue (down 2% year-over-year) and posted an operating loss of $4.03 billion, narrower than the $4.21 billion loss in Q1 2025.
Metric
Q1 2026
Q1 2025
YoY Change
Total Revenue
$56.31B
$42.31B
+33%
Advertising Revenue
$55.02B
$41.4B
+33%
Ad Impressions
—
—
+19%
Avg Price Per Ad
—
—
+12%
Family DAP
3.56 billion
3.43 billion
+4%
Reality Labs Revenue
$402M
$412M
-2%
Family daily active people (DAP) reached 3.56 billion for March 2026, up 4% year-over-year but below the analyst estimate of 3.62 billion. Meta attributed the sequential decline to internet disruptions in Iran from the ongoing U.S.-Iran conflict and a government restriction on WhatsApp access in Russia — both reducing active counts in established markets.
Earnings Quality and the Tax Benefit
GAAP net income was $26.773 billion, or $10.44 per diluted share, up 61% and 62% respectively from Q1 2025 ($16.644 billion, $6.43 per share). However, the Q1 2026 GAAP results include an $8.03 billion income tax benefit recognized under U.S. Treasury Notice 2026-7, which addressed Corporate Alternative Minimum Tax treatment of previously capitalized R&D costs. Excluding this benefit, diluted EPS would have been $3.13 lower — approximately $7.31 per share — which still beat the analyst consensus of $6.65–$6.72 by approximately $0.60.
EPS Measure
Q1 2026
Analyst Consensus
vs. Consensus
GAAP Diluted EPS
$10.44
~$6.65–$6.72
Beat
Adjusted EPS (ex-tax benefit)
~$7.31
~$6.65–$6.72
Beat ~+$0.60
Operating income was $22.872 billion, up 30% from $17.555 billion, with a GAAP operating margin of 41% — unchanged year-over-year despite total costs rising 35% to $33.44 billion. Research and development expenses grew the fastest, up 46% year-over-year to $17.70 billion, driven by AI infrastructure and the buildout of Meta Superintelligence Labs. Free cash flow for the quarter was $12.39 billion. Meta held $81.18 billion in cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities against $58.7 billion in debt.
The Capex Surge: What Spooked Investors
Q1 2026 capital expenditures, including principal payments on finance leases, totaled $19.84 billion. Despite this quarterly spend running below the $27.57 billion analyst estimate, Meta raised its full-year 2026 capex guidance to $125–$145 billion, up from the prior range of $115–$135 billion — a $10 billion increase at the midpoint. CFO Susan Li attributed the revision to higher component pricing and expanded data center requirements for future-year capacity.
The full-year total expense guidance of $162–$169 billion was left unchanged, meaning the capex increase is being absorbed within the existing cost envelope.
CEO Mark Zuckerberg stated in the earnings release: “We had a milestone quarter with strong momentum across our apps and the release of our first model from Meta Superintelligence Labs. We’re on track to deliver personal superintelligence to billions of people.” Investors interpreted the higher capex commitment as an escalation with no near-term ceiling, particularly given AI investments have not yet produced discrete new revenue lines beyond improved advertising efficiency.
Q2 2026 Guidance and Outlook
Meta guided Q2 2026 revenue of $58.0–$61.0 billion (midpoint $59.5 billion), in line with analyst consensus. The implied growth rate of approximately 25% at the midpoint represents a deceleration from Q1’s 33%, though it remains above the company’s multi-year average. Full-year expenses of $162–$169 billion are unchanged.
Key variables for the remainder of 2026: whether DAP recovers in Iran and Russia as geopolitical conditions evolve; whether simultaneous growth in ad impressions and ad pricing is sustainable; and whether Meta Superintelligence Labs can generate monetization pathways beyond advertising efficiency gains.
Key Signals for Investors
Even excluding the $8.03 billion one-time tax benefit, adjusted EPS of $7.31 beat consensus by approximately $0.60 — the operational performance, not the tax item, drove the beat.
Full-year capex raised to $125–145B from $115–135B; the $10 billion midpoint increase, coming on top of Q1’s $19.84 billion spend, signals AI infrastructure investment with no near-term deceleration.
Operating margin held at 41% despite 35% cost growth, but R&D surging 46% to $17.70 billion warrants monitoring for margin compression if revenue growth decelerates toward Q2’s guided pace.
DAP of 3.56 billion missed the 3.62 billion estimate; Iran/Russia disruptions are the stated cause, but recovery timing is uncertain and represents the primary user metric risk heading into Q2.
Q2 revenue guidance of $58–61B meets consensus but implies ~25% growth — a step down from 33% in Q1 — and will test whether advertising momentum is structural or benefiting from unusual Q1 dynamics.















