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Date

Dec. 4, 2025 at 5 p.m. ET

Call participants

  • Chief Executive Officer — Sanjit Biswas
  • Chief Financial Officer — Dominic Phillips
  • Vice President, Investor Relations — Mike Chang

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Takeaways

  • Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) -- $1.75 billion, up 29% year-over-year, marking a new record high.
  • Net New ARR -- $105 million added, growing 24% year-over-year and 23% in constant currency, representing the highest net new ARR growth rate in seven quarters.
  • Revenue -- $416 million, up 29% year-over-year.
  • GAAP Profitability -- Achieved first-ever quarter of GAAP profitability.
  • $100,000-plus ARR Customers -- 219 added, a quarterly record, reaching 2,990 such customers and over $1 billion in ARR from this group, growing 36% year-over-year.
  • $1 Million-plus ARR Customers -- 17 added, tying a quarterly record, totaling 164 and accounting for more than 20% of total ARR with accelerated growth for the second straight quarter.
  • Multi-product Adoption -- Over 95% of $100,000-plus ARR customers subscribe to two or more products; about 70% use three or more, and 9 of top 10 net new ACV deals included three or more products.
  • Net Retention Rate (NRR) -- Achieved 115% target, led by strong multiproduct adoption and expansion activity.
  • Emerging Products Contribution -- 20% of net new ACV from products launched since last year, up from 8% the previous quarter.
  • Asset Tags Growth -- Asset Tags ARR grew more than 400% year-over-year; Q3 included the company’s largest Asset Tags deal ever.
  • International Growth -- 16% of net new ACV came from non-U.S. regions; Europe delivered its highest-ever quarterly net new ACV mix and posted the fastest ARR growth in seven quarters.
  • Public Sector Momentum -- Public sector net new ACV grew approximately 100% year-over-year, crossing more than $100 million in ending ARR, with record-high mix from this segment.
  • Construction Vertical -- Ninth consecutive quarter as the largest contributor of net new ACV mix among all industries.
  • Non-GAAP Margins -- Q3 non-GAAP gross margin reached 78% (a slight year-over-year increase); non-GAAP operating margin was a record 19%, up 9 percentage points; free cash flow margin was 13%, up 4 percentage points.
  • Q4 Guidance -- Revenue projected between $421 million-$423 million (22% year-over-year growth); non-GAAP operating margin of 16%; non-GAAP EPS range of $0.12-$0.13.
  • Fiscal 2026 guidance -- Revenue guidance of $1.595 billion-$1.597 billion (28% year-over-year growth); non-GAAP operating margin of 16%; non-GAAP EPS range of $0.50-$0.51.
  • AI-powered Features Launched -- Introduced Automated Coaching, Group Coaching, and Workflow Automations aimed at safety, compliance, and operational efficiency.
  • Measured Customer Impact -- Customers using dual-facing AI dash cameras, real-time alerts, and driver coaching achieved a 37% accident reduction after 6 months and a 73% reduction after 30 months.
  • New Large Customer Wins -- Major customer additions included the state of New York, a global oilfield services provider, and a top-five North American school bus operator with deployments across safety and telematics products.
  • Product ROI Example -- A major mechanical contractor reduced safety event rate by 44% and mobile usage by 72% during a pilot using Samsara’s solutions.
  • Partnerships -- Announced a new partnership with Allianz in the U.K. and expanded a partnership with Element Fleet Management to Mexico, supporting regional adoption and customer integration.

Summary

Samsara (IOT +15.16%) delivered record ARR, accelerated net new ARR growth over two consecutive quarters, and attained first-time GAAP profitability, all while maintaining rapid top-line and margin expansion. The leadership cited large customer adoption, expanding use of multiproduct bundles, and robust public sector and construction demand as primary growth drivers. Guidance for both Q4 and fiscal 2026 signals sustained growth, supported by expanding international momentum and successful introduction of new AI-powered solutions targeting operational and safety improvements.

  • CFO Dominic Phillips indicated that "our initial fiscal 2027 revenue guide in terms of the dollars will be higher than where current consensus is right now just given the Q3 outperformance."
  • CEO Sanjit Biswas explained that recent large deals, such as First Student, often roll out revenue in phases over multiple quarters, impacting ARR recognition timing.
  • Management highlighted that 20% of net new ACV coming from new products was "balanced across a number of different products" rather than concentrated in any single launch.
  • Phillips cautioned that "larger deals have inherently longer and less predictable sales cycles, which could introduce more variability into our quarterly ARR results than in the past."
  • International investments and go-to-market scaling, especially in Europe and Latin America, are expected to continue and may fuel medium- to long-term growth potential.
  • Enterprise wins and product expansion opportunities remain sizable, but leadership expects a balance between new customer acquisition and expansion within the installed base to persist going forward.

Industry glossary

  • ARR (Annual Recurring Revenue): The current contracted revenue, normalized to an annual term, derived from active subscription agreements at period end.
  • ACV (Annual Contract Value): The annualized value of a customer contract, used for measuring the size of individual deals and cohort growth.
  • Asset Tags: IoT hardware devices used to track location, status, or level of physical assets such as equipment or chemical totes within operational environments.
  • AI Multicam: An application that leverages artificial intelligence and multiple camera angles to enhance safety, compliance, and operational monitoring for fleet operators.
  • FedRAMP: Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program, a U.S. government framework for security assessment, authorization, and continuous monitoring of cloud products and services, referenced for public sector compliance.
  • Net Dollar Retention Rate (NRR): A metric indicating the percentage of recurring revenue retained from existing customers over a period, including the impact of upgrades, downgrades, and churn.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Sanjit Biswas: Thanks, Mike, and thank you, everyone, for joining us today. Samsara delivered another strong quarter of durable and efficient growth. We ended Q3 with $1.75 billion in ARR, growing 29% year-over-year. We also achieved our first quarter of GAAP profitability. In Q3, we added 219 customers with $100,000 plus in ARR, a quarterly record. Our $100,000-plus ARR customers now contribute more than $1 billion of ARR, growing 36% year-over-year. We also added 17 $1 million-plus ARR customers tied for a quarterly record. Our growth is driven by our strategy to partner with the world's largest and most complex operations organizations.

Q3 was a milestone quarter for large customers, and we partner with many new organizations, including the state of New York, one of the world's largest providers of oilfield services and one of the world's largest and most diversified media corporations. We're proud to partner with these industry leaders, driving safer and more efficient operations together. Large enterprises are quickly digitizing their operations, and they're demanding a partner that delivers scale and performance. We've become their platform of choice for a few key reasons. First, we unified data from many disparate systems across all their vehicles, equipment and frontline teams in a single system of record. Second, we solve challenges across their operations with our broad multi-application platform.

Third, we use our massive data asset and AI to deliver actionable insights that save our customers money. Fourth, we provide an enterprise-grade platform that delivers the scalability, reliability and security our customers require. And lastly, we provide world-class support and expertise to help our customers drive change management and deliver outcomes, resulting in clear and fast ROI.

Sanjit Biswas: I'd like to share 2 stories of new customers from Q3 that are using Samsara to transform their operations. The first is in student transportation, which is a complex and highly regulated network responsible for the safe transit of 26 million students every day. After landing First Student, the largest school bus provider in North America, in Q2, we partnered with another 1 of the top 5 largest school bus providers in Q3. They transport over 1 million students today in more than 500 school districts across 30-plus states and provinces. Their initial purchase included our Video-Based Safety, Telematics and AI Multicam products.

They're looking for a highly accurate and reliable AI solution to enforce their 0 tolerance policy on driver mobile use and eliminate in-cab distractions and driver drowsiness. With Samsara, they'll be able to detect, alert and reduce these behaviors. The second example is with one of the largest mechanical contractors in the U.S. They have over 5,000 employees specializing in custom HVAC and plumbing systems for commercial and industrial projects. They help build major sports stadiums and critical medical and research facilities, and they also design and install the complex systems that power many modern data centers as part of the AI infrastructure build-out.

The company is using our Video-Based Safety, Telematics, Connected Training and Driver Qualification products to ensure their complex field operations remain safe and efficient. In their pilot with Samsara, they saw a 44% reduction in the total safety event rate and a 72% reduction in mobile usage. We're proud of the impact we're creating together, and we're excited for the decades-long opportunity ahead.

Sanjit Biswas: Physical operations are the mission-critical infrastructure to keep the world running, representing over 40% of global GDP. These asset-heavy and labor-intensive organizations typically spend around 80% of their revenue on labor and assets. Running these complex operations carries significant inherent risk, from driving large commercial vehicles carrying hazardous materials to deploying frontline workers for services to operating heavy machinery. Unfortunately, a frontline worker dies from a work-related injury approximately every 99 minutes in the U.S. We help our customers protect their workers and support their top safety goals that have a material impact on their financials, brand and talent. This work is critical because accidents and noncompliance directly translates to substantial financial costs, including higher insurance premiums and large payouts.

And these costs are increasing with the rise of large nuclear verdicts and accident litigation. Our customers also care about protecting their reputation to maintain a competitive edge, which can be hurt by a weak safety culture or history of incidents. And lastly, employees stay with companies that demonstrate their commitment to keeping them safe, which is important in a tight labor market. As we look ahead, we see a huge opportunity for AI to transform safety coaching and more broadly, automate coaching across operations. This will help our customers scale their coaching programs without adding more head count.

Sanjit Biswas: We recently added -- we recently launched new AI-powered coaching features: Automated Coaching, Group Coaching and Workflow Automations. Starting with Automated Coaching. This is the first advanced automated coaching to help with the entirety of the driver experience, including safety, compliance, idling and more. Coaches can quickly create their own digital doubles or use premade avatars to create tailored coaching videos for each worker. Next, Group Coaching helps managers recognize and coach front-line workers in group settings using operational data. It uses AI to generate ready-to-use coaching session that highlights positive recognition, fuel efficiency, compliance and safety. Last, Workflow Automations is a no-code workflow builder that uses our data asset to streamline coaching and training processes.

It allows for the intelligent management of compliance and safety programs, automatically directing lower priority events to the driver for self-review while ensuring that high priority incidents are flagged for manager coaching. We're excited to introduce these new AI-powered features for our customers. All of our innovation is translating to real-world customer impact. We recently released our safety report, which analyzed data from over 2,600 Samsara customers operating medium and large fleets. Fleets using are dual-facing AI dash cameras, real-time in-cab alerts and driver coaching saw an aggregate 37% reduction in accidents after the first 6 months, and this increased to a 73% reduction in accidents after 30 months.

These are life-saving outcomes that show our platform is transforming safety culture and demonstrating measurable results for our customers.

Sanjit Biswas: Now I'd like to turn to the international growth opportunity. I've met with dozens of customers in our international markets this year. Every time I meet with them, I'm inspired by the long-term opportunity to expand our impact. There are a few reasons for this. First, the international market is very large. There are more assets and frontline workers in Europe, Canada and Mexico than in the U.S. Second, the international market is less penetrated than the U.S. and earlier in its digitization journey. Third, we believe the opportunity for impact and customer ROI is similar to the U.S. These customers are achieving similar savings from insurance payouts and premiums, fuel costs, improve worker retention and asset utilization.

Over the last few months, we hosted our annual Go Beyond customer events in London and Mexico City. At Go Beyond U.K., we announced a new feature for our European customers, Samsara Smart Compliance. This helps fleet use in-cab audio alerts to prevent costly driving time infringements before they occur. We've also continued to strengthen our ecosystem through industry-leading partnerships in the U.K. and Mexico. This quarter, we announced a new partnership with Allianz, one of the largest general insurers in the U.K. This partnership gives Allianz insured commercial customers preferred access to Samsara's AI safety cameras and our connected operations platform. Also, building on our successful relationship with Element Fleet Management, we extended our partnership to the Mexico market.

Together, we are providing organizations with an integrated full life cycle solution that drives down operational costs and enhances safety and efficiency in the region. We're excited about the impact we're making for our customers every day, transforming their operations to be safer, more efficient and more sustainable. We're just getting started and look forward to the multi-decade opportunity ahead. We're also proud that our long-term growth potential was recognized by Fortune this quarter, ranking us seventh on their Fortune Future 50 list. We want to thank all of our Samsarians, customers, partners and investors for joining us on this journey. I'll now hand it over to Dominic to go over the financial highlights for the quarter.

Dominic Phillips: Thank you, Sanjit. Q3 was another quarter of durable growth and improved profitability. The quarter was highlighted by strong performance across several key metrics, including 23% year-over-year net new ARR growth in constant currency, our highest growth rate in the past 7 quarters; 219 $100,000-plus ARR customers added, a quarterly record; and 17 $1 million-plus ARR customers added, tying a quarterly record; 8 $1 million-plus net new ACV transactions in Q3, also tying a quarterly record; 20% of net new ACV from emerging products launched since last year; and achieving our first quarter of GAAP profitability. More broadly, our durable and increasingly efficient growth demonstrates the large yet still early opportunity for digital transformation across physical operations.

Looking ahead, we believe Samsara is well positioned to deliver durable growth and create long-term shareholder value for several key reasons. First, we have a unique defensible data advantage. By instrumenting physical assets with IoT devices, we generate a large and growing proprietary data asset that cannot be easily replicated or sourced elsewhere. Second, AI is accelerating our innovation, enabling us to release new products and meaningful features at a faster pace, driving higher customer engagement and usage. Third, our business model scales with fiscal assets rather than head count or knowledge workers and aligns us with end markets poised to benefit from major initiatives such as the global AI infrastructure build-out.

Fourth, our products have a differentiated value prop and mission-critical workflows, delivering fast, tangible ROI and quick payback periods that make us essential to our customers' operations. And lastly, we're targeting the large and less discretionary operations budget, which represents approximately 80% of our customers' revenue on average. And because we help them optimize the significant and durable cost base, we have a large opportunity to drive customer impact and long-term growth.

Dominic Phillips: Okay. Now turning to our results. Q3 ending ARR was $1.75 billion, an increase of 29% year-over-year. Within that, we added $105 million of net new ARR, an increase of 24% year-over-year or 23% in constant currency, resulting in the second consecutive quarter of accelerating sequential growth and the highest net new ARR growth rate in the past 7 quarters. And Q3 revenue was $416 million, growing 29% year-over-year. Several factors drove our strong top line performance in Q3. First, large customer momentum is leading to higher growth at scale. In terms of large deals, we signed 8 $1 million-plus net new ACV transactions in Q3, tying a quarterly record.

This reflects the success of our R&D and go-to-market investments to support these larger customer opportunities. At the same time, these larger deals have inherently longer and less predictable sales cycles, which could introduce more variability into our quarterly ARR results than in the past. In terms of large customers, we ended Q3 with 2,990 $100,000-plus ARR customers, a quarterly record increase of 219. ARR from $100,00-plus customers exceeded $1 billion, increasing 36% year-over-year, resulting in accelerating sequential growth at a larger scale. $100,000-plus ARR customers now represent 60% of total ARR, up from 57% 1 year ago.

We also ended Q3 with 164 $1 million-plus ARR customers, tying a quarterly record increase of 17, $1 million-plus ARR customers contributed more than 20% of total ARR, and year-over-year ARR growth from this cohort accelerated sequentially for the second consecutive quarter at a larger scale.

Dominic Phillips: Second, our customers increasingly utilize Samsara as a system of record for physical operations by subscribing to multiple applications on a single unified platform. Over 95% of our $100,000-plus ARR customers subscribe to 2 or more products, and approximately 70% subscribe to 3 or more products. In Q3, 10 of the top 10 net new ACV deals included 2 or more products and 9 of the top 10 included 3 or more products. In Q3, we signed a large expansion with one of the world's largest home improvement retailers.

In the quarter, they increased their total licenses for video-based safety, vehicle telematics and Connected Equipment after achieving significant ROI, including a more than 50% reduction in total auto liability claims by leveraging Samsara's AI detections. In Q3, they also added Connected Workflows to digitize and streamline operational processes for vehicle life cycle management and driver activities, covering everything from preventative maintenance and incident review to vehicle disposal and ride-along compliance. As a result of our strong multiproduct adoption, we achieved our target dollar-based net retention rate of approximately 115%.

Dominic Phillips: And third, we demonstrated strong execution across several frontier markets. In terms of emerging products, 20% of our net new ACV in Q3 came from our new products launched since last year, including AI Multicam, Asset Maintenance, Asset Tags, Connected Training and Connected Workflows. 34 transactions in Q3 included more than $100,000 in emerging product net new ACV. 8 of the top 10 net new ACV transactions included an emerging product, and Asset Tags ARR grew more than 400% year-over-year. Also, Q3 included our largest ever Asset Tags deal with a global leader in chemistry solutions and engineered equipment for the oil and gas industry.

The company manages thousands of reusable chemical totes but has historically lacked visibility into where these high-value assets are deployed, how long they remain at customer sites and overall inventory levels. By adopting Samsara's Level Monitoring Asset Tags, they'll gain real-time visibility for the first time, unlocking the ability to improve their tote fleet efficiency by 25% and through the elimination of excess inventory and more efficient utilization. Additionally, the customer expects to cut the manual labor required for quarterly inventory checks by more than 90%, driving immediate productivity gains and significant cost savings.

Dominic Phillips: In terms of end markets, we saw strong momentum across construction and public sector. Construction contributed the highest net new ACV mix of all industries for the ninth consecutive quarter and public sector contributed its highest ever net new ACV mix with wins across Texas, New York, Massachusetts and Chicago. Also, public sector net new ACV grew approximately 100% year-over-year, its highest growth rate in almost 3 years and crossed more than $100 million in ending ARR. And in terms of international, 16% of net new ACV came from non-U.S. geographies.

Europe contributed its highest ever quarterly net new ACV mix, and year-over-year net new ACV growth in Europe accelerated for the second consecutive quarter, resulting in its highest growth rate in the last 7 quarters. And as a result, Europe's overall ARR growth rate also accelerated for the second consecutive quarter.

Dominic Phillips: In addition to driving strong top line growth, we continue to deliver operating leverage across our business as we scale. Non-GAAP gross margin was 78% in Q3, a slight increase year-over-year. Non-GAAP operating margin was a quarterly record 19%, up 9 percentage points from 1 year ago, and free cash flow margin was 13% in Q3, up 4 percentage points year-over-year.

Dominic Phillips: Okay. Now turning to guidance based on FX rates as of November 1. For Q4, we expect revenue to be between $421 million and $423 million, representing 22% year-over-year growth or 21% growth in constant currency; non-GAAP operating margin to be 16%; and non-GAAP EPS to be between $0.12 and $0.13. For full year FY '26, we expect revenue to be between $1.595 billion and $1.597 billion, representing 28% year-over-year growth; non-GAAP operating margin to be 16%; and non-GAAP EPS to be between $0.50 and $0.51. And finally, please see the additional modeling notes in our shareholder letter.

Dominic Phillips: So to wrap up, in Q3, we delivered high growth at scale while also delivering operating efficiency gains. Looking ahead, we believe Samsara is well positioned to sustain durable and efficient growth because we generate a unique defensible data asset that powers differentiated AI innovation and deeper customer engagement. We are aligned with secular growth in physical operations that is poised to benefit from major initiatives such as the global AI infrastructure build-out, and we deliver tangible ROI through mission-critical workflows, helping customers achieve fast payback periods on their investments. We look forward to building on this momentum as we help our customers operate more safely, efficiently and sustainably at a greater scale.

And with that, I'll hand it over to Mike to moderate Q&A.

Mike Chang: Thanks, Dominic. We will now open the line up for questions. [Operator Instructions] The first question today comes from Michael Turrin with Wells Fargo, followed by Alex Zukin with Wolfe.

Michael Turrin: Sanjit, the large customer momentum, really standing out the past couple of quarters here. Can you just speak to what's enabling that from a product perspective and how significant a competitive advantage that is becoming for Samsara here?

Sanjit Biswas: Sure. So we've been investing in the sort of scale and security and infrastructure needed to serve large customers for a number of years, both on the R&D and the go-to-market side. I would say on the product side, it's our ability to just manage these massive amounts of data, also customize the product to the needs of these large complex organizations and their org structures. And then on the go-to-market side, we really operate as a true partner to these companies, understanding their business, figuring out how to unlock the most value for them, and then we tailor the use of the product to meet those needs.

I think the combination of those 2 has been the big unlock, and we're seeing it come through in the numbers now.

Michael Turrin: Just to follow on, Dom, I know it's early, but you have a fairly good level of visibility in this model. Is there any high-level commentary you're willing to give us on fiscal '27 that's just helpful as we're rolling through some of the results from the rest of the year here?

Dominic Phillips: Yes. So look, yes, we're not in a position obviously to give formal guidance for next year. Q4 tends to be our seasonally largest quarter, and so we really need to get through the next couple of months before we finalize our FY '27 plan. I will say that based on our current outlook, I would expect that our initial FY '27 revenue guide in terms of the dollars will be higher than where current consensus is right now just given the Q3 outperformance.

Mike Chang: The next question today comes from Alex Zukin with Wolfe Research, followed by Keith Weiss with Morgan Stanley.

Aleksandr Zukin: Sanjit, maybe for you. The contribution from new products, that jumped to 20% of net new ACV from 8% last quarter. Maybe just dig a little bit deeper of kind of what went better or what's outperforming your expectations to drive that kind of inflection. And then I've got a quick follow-up.

Sanjit Biswas: Sure. So we launched a number of new products at the customer conference earlier this year, and I think it took a few months for customers to trial them out, see how they worked. And it's been great to see the contribution early on from these new products. So that 20% up from 8%, I think, reflects growth across a number of different products. So it was no single product but really kind of balanced across a number of different products.

Aleksandr Zukin: Perfect. And then, Dom, maybe for you. It's a little bit -- it's great and rare to see sequential growth in net new ARR for you guys in a Q3, particularly given some of the mechanics around some deals pushing out from 1Q to 2Q. So maybe can you just highlight like what drove that strength? Maybe comment on the First Student deal. Was that more impactful in Q2 or Q3? And anything else that we should keep in mind?

Dominic Phillips: Yes. Thanks. So yes, so Q2, obviously, we talked about this 3 months ago, and we had the benefit of some of the deals from Q1 that slipped into Q2, and we closed those in May at the beginning of the quarter. And so we called that out last quarter. In terms of First Student, that was a deal that we signed in Q2. It's going to be a phased rollout. So the ARR will be added over time. That's very common for our large deals to do these phased rollouts. We actually added more ARR from that deal in Q2 than we did in Q3, so it really wasn't much of a contributor to this quarter.

Q3 was really driven by things like the record number of large customers that we added, both $100,000 and $1 million plus, we tied the quarterly record again for $1 million-plus net new ACV transactions, strength across emerging products, strength in international. It was just -- it was really strong across the board kind of firing on all cylinders versus kind of one thing that drove the second consecutive quarter of accelerating growth.

Aleksandr Zukin: Congrats, guys.

Mike Chang: The next question comes from Keith Weiss with Morgan Stanley, followed by Matt Bullock with BofA.

Keith Weiss: Congratulations on a really solid quarter. I wanted to dig in on sort of the 20% from emerging products. It seems like with the broader product portfolio that you guys have put out there, now you're seeing traction across multiple products. You're seeing those multiproduct deals really hit. Any sense you could give us on kind of the latent opportunity, if you will, within the customer base? Like how expansive could these products be within existing customers? How much further can you go in terms of growing existing customers with the expanded product portfolio?

Dominic Phillips: Yes. I mean most of our net new ACV or slightly more of it generally comes from expansions to existing customers, even within our core products, and so that's definitely also the case in these emerging products. We're really just scratching the surface. Again, these are products in totality that have been rolled out going back to the beginning of last year, but they're really allowing us to land larger in some of these customers. We called out that 9 of the top 10 net new ACV deals included 3 or more products. So that includes things outside of our core products.

And that just wasn't the case before the beginning of last year, and so we're really seeing good momentum from the emerging products. And Sanjit said, it's not any one given product. We're really seeing good uptake across the board.

Keith Weiss: Got it. I mean is there any kind of rule of thumb that you could kind of point us to if your average like $100,000-plus customers paying you $350,000 per year, today, if they fully buy in across the solution portfolio? Can that go to $700,000? Like is it like a 2x, 3x uplift potential from the expanded solution portfolio?

Dominic Phillips: I don't think there's like a really good rule of thumb for that. Some customers may have more assets out in the field or more frontline workers than they do commercial vehicles. Some of these deals are more of the net new ACV is coming from the emerging products than the kind of the core products. And so there's not really one rule of thumb, but it's just giving us more opportunities to land broader, again, really thinking about Samsara as a system of record and providing more kind of full-scale ROI for the customers.

Keith Weiss: Got it. And then maybe just as a follow-up. Taking the combination of the first 2 questions that my colleagues asked. The last 2 quarters have been pretty remarkable in terms of the acceleration and the net new ARR growth. It sounds like it's a combination of like more products hitting into the existing accounts and large customer go-to-market motion hitting. Is that it? Like is it just like your initiatives are sort of compounding against each other to drive that? Or is there something else under the hood that's enabling you guys to see this type of acceleration in the net new?

Dominic Phillips: Yes. I mean, yes, and if you go back to Q2 where we had accelerating net new ARR growth versus Q1, obviously, again, we had the benefit of the Q1 deals that slipped in and we talked about First Student with Alex' question, Q3 was just really strong across the board. Again, quarterly record number of large customers added, tying a quarterly record in terms of largest deals, strength across emerging products, strength in international. It was just -- it was really strong across the board kind of firing on all cylinders versus kind of one thing that drove the second consecutive quarter of accelerating growth.

Mike Chang: The next question comes from Matt Bullock with BofA, followed by Matt Hedberg with RBC.

Matthew Bullock: Excellent. I wanted to ask a quick follow-up to Alex' question to clarify some of the math I've done over here because I have to admit, looking at the initial stock reaction relative to that reported net new ARR number, I'm a little bit confused here. So even in our more aggressive upside model, $105 million in net new ARR was well above our estimate when you adjust for that approximately $5 million in incremental net new ARR tailwinds that you had in 2Q from the Liberation Day slippage. Am I correct in saying this will be the first sequential growth quarter in 3 years at about 5% plus or so when you do some of that math?

Or do I have my numbers correct there?

Dominic Phillips: Yes. I don't think we've like commented exactly on what the Q1 Liberation Day kind of impact was. We did say mid-single digits, and that is an amount that slipped out of Q1 and we landed in Q2. And so that definitely had an impact. I think if you look back over the last couple of years, even beyond that, Q3 has been a little bit below Q2. And so I think sequentially, that's one way to look at it. The other way is obviously just the overall net new ARR growth rate. It's not only is it the second consecutive quarter of accelerating. It's the highest net new ARR growth rate in the last 7 quarters.

So again, not one thing to call out that really drove that strength. It was really across the board.

Matthew Bullock: Awesome. And then a quick follow-up if I could. On the First Student deal, obviously, a huge amount of vehicles, 46,000. You're attaching video, telematics, commercial NAV, impressive deal. But over the long term, it looks to me, even when you underwrite conservative pricing assumptions, this could be $30 million, $40 million-plus ACV customer. Maybe just help us think about how deals of this magnitude typically roll out, right? Obviously, they're staged rollouts. But what percentage of those 46,000 you think can be deployed in the first 6 months to a year?

Dominic Phillips: It really depends. It's customer by customer. I mean some customers can deploy a lot faster. There's a lot of change management, project management required internally at the customers to deploy these systems, and so it really is customer by customer in terms of how long they will get rolled up. But many customers of this size or our largest deals get phased out over several quarters.

Mike Chang: The next question comes from Matt Hedberg with RBC, followed by Jim Fish with Piper Sandler.

Matthew Hedberg: Great. I'll offer my congrats as well. I mean seeing this kind of growth at scale and GAAP profitability is elite to say the least. Sanjit, I wanted to ask about international, something that we've been -- and you have been focused on over the last several years, and it's great to see the progress there. I think you said Europe accelerated now for the second straight quarter. It's still early clearly from an international perspective, less penetrated in the U.S. If you were to sort of like look at a scorecard and say we think we're in the X inning of this journey, where are we?

And as we think forward in the future, I mean, this feels like it could be a significant driver of total ACV growth. Just thoughts on kind of where we're at in this international journey.

Sanjit Biswas: Yes. Matt, I would agree with you that we're early. For us, international has always been an exciting long-term opportunity. We talked about this on the prepared remarks. There are more assets. Basically, there's more physical operations out in Europe, Mexico and Canada than there are in the U.S., so more vehicle count and so on. That being said, they're earlier in their digitization journey, so they're maybe kind of earlier on how they're piloting these technologies, how they're implementing them. So we're kind of in the early innings is the way I would put it, and we're investing for the long term. We want to make sure we have a great product market fit.

We're spending time out in the field with those customers. I referenced our local customer conferences. They've been awesome. So we're going to continue to invest there, but it really is against that long-term opportunity to digitize operations at a more global scale.

Matthew Hedberg: Got it. And then on AI, you continue to roll out new products at your user conference. I'm just curious, like philosophically speaking, how do you think AI itself contributes to growth? Like is it additive to growth? And I guess, in the future, do you see pricing and packaging evolving when you continue to layer on more AI and GenAI features?

Sanjit Biswas: Well, I think of AI as just being an incredible unlock for this customer value. So we have this data asset that we've been compounding that gives us a lot of visibility into the physical operations, but it's way more data than any team of people can look at. And so I talked about automations, for example, being able to scale the impact of this product using AI, that's powered by LLMs, GenAI and a bunch of the newer technologies you've been hearing about.

So again, I think of it as an unlock of what's going to make it possible for these industries to digitize in a practical way without having to add a ton of head count, get value from that data. So that both improves our ability to deliver the existing products that enhances them, and it creates a possibility for some of the newer products that we launched beyond. So it really is sort of being applied across the board on both existing and new products.

Mike Chang: The next question comes from Jim Fish with Piper Sandler, followed by Kirk Materne with Evercore.

James Fish: Nice quarter. Maybe just going back to the school bus example. I mean, it's the second big school bus provider win. I guess, is there a way to think about how big of a vertical this is today? I assume very small, but really the crux of my question is how big of an opportunity in the U.S. alone it is as we think about your TAM.

Sanjit Biswas: I don't have an exact number for you in terms of how big the school bus vertical is off the top of my head. One of the exciting things we've seen is once these industry verticals start to open up, they really go. So we've seen this with construction as we've gotten adoption. We've seen it in segments like building materials. And now with student transportation, I think landing the largest -- landing another top 5, we're really starting to see the entire industry say, "Hey, this is a technology we need to implement because it massively improves safety. It helps us be competitive".

So we look forward to seeing more growth in the student transport industry, but unfortunately, I don't have a specific number off the top of my head for you.

James Fish: All good. And just on the newer products, I mean, Asset Tags ended -- ending ARR growing over 400%. I assume that's a reacceleration, albeit off of a smaller base. Is there a way to think about how that sizing now compares to that $10 million ARR given at Beyond? And more on the emerging products, how commercial navigation is going at this point?

Dominic Phillips: We'll give Asset Tag kind of ARR as we cross like important milestones, but you're right. I mean it was very strong growth. And I think one thing that's really helping to open that up is that we're really expanding what Asset Tags can do. We rolled out the kind of first version of it last year. And then this year, we rolled out the tank level monitoring aspects in addition to kind of the Bluetooth location. And so we'll continue to add more and more products on to the Samsara network, and that's just another kind of extension, which has allowed us to -- again, to win our largest deal, Asset Tags deal ever in Q3.

Mike Chang: Great. The next question comes from Kirk Materne with Evercore, followed by Dylan Becker with William Blair.

S. Kirk Materne: Sanjit, I want to follow up a little bit on Matt's question earlier about AI. And I was kind of curious, when your customers are thinking about their budgets next year, are they thinking about apportioning part of that towards AI? And do you guys get the benefit from that as a platform that obviously sort of future proofs them when it comes to that technology longer term? I'm just kind of curious if the discussions with bigger customers are actually benefiting from the fact that you're a platform that sort of will embed AI for them over time.

Sanjit Biswas: Yes. I think, first of all, the budget we sell into is the operations budget. That tends to be the largest operational budget in these companies, and they are really thinking about how do they get value. Where is the ROI going to come from? AI is, I think, intuitive to a lot of buyers now. This is going to be an unlock, but ultimately, they want to see savings when it comes to safety and efficiency and kind of the core tenets of their operation. So I do think it's a nice tailwind for us in some of these deals. It helps us articulate why it is possible now to see this kind of value unlock.

But I wouldn't say that they're pulling from a discrete AI budget within their own budgets.

S. Kirk Materne: Okay. That's helpful. And then, Don, just a follow-up for you. Obviously, international, another nice quarter. What's sort of the thought process on expanding go-to-market reach in those territories as you go into next year? And kind of how should we think about that from an investment perspective for you all?

Dominic Phillips: I think it will be very similar to what we've done over the last couple of years. We tend to invest a little bit more internationally. Again, as Sanjit alluded to in his prepared remarks, there are more physical operations assets and frontline workers in Europe and Canada and Mexico, and those markets are even less penetrated than what we see in the U.S. So we still see a lot of white space opportunity in our core market in the U.S., but these international markets are going to be -- continue to be more important as we think medium and long term and the durability of the growth.

And so we will be making more investments in terms of our R&D go-to-market resources in international going into FY '27.

Mike Chang: The next question comes from Dylan Becker of William Blair, followed by Alex Sklar with Raymond James.

Dylan Becker: Appreciate it. Maybe, Sanjit, just starting with you on the public sector strength. I think it's 100% growth in kind of new ACV or net new ARR there. I know we've got a dedicated team in place, and we've kind of worked through the FedRAMP process. But maybe if you could kind of double click on what that continues to unlock, how we should think about kind of what the public sector opportunity looks like and how we would expect sustained momentum from this segment in particular.

Sanjit Biswas: Sure. So one thing that's worth noting is in the public sector for physical operations, most of the work is actually done on the state and local level. So that's where the physical operations are taking place, whether it's maintaining roadways or sort of all the other work that happens. So we're excited to have wins like the City of Los Angeles and Chicago. I think state of New York was another big one. And what's exciting about that is that these state and local customers, they're not competitive with one another. In other words, they share notes.

They're happy to share win stories of how they're getting value, and so that's been a big part of the unlock, is kind of growing momentum that this is now possible. You can fundamentally improve safety. You can improve efficiency of asset use. And so it's not about a Fed opportunity as much as it is SLED in our business at least.

Dylan Becker: Perfect. Okay. No, that's very helpful. And then maybe for Dom on the enterprise traction piece. Obviously, another very strong quarter with $1 million and $100,000 customers, continues to accelerate and become an increasingly larger share of the overall mix. I guess, how should we think about kind of sustainability? Obviously, the opportunity is significantly large here but within that enterprise cohort and maybe how that helps drive conviction in your guys' outlook or confidence in the durability of the growth framework.

Dominic Phillips: Yes. Yes, this is enterprise or strategic areas that we've been investing in for several years, again, from an R&D perspective to make sure that our platform is scalable and secure and that we have more than 350 technology integrations and then on the go-to-market side, making sure that we have the right kind of strategic AE resources but also the kind of the front-end sales engineers and customer successes required to really service these really large enterprises. So a lot of investment, a lot of -- is driving a lot of the momentum. And we feel really good about the size of the opportunity and this continuing to be a big driver of growth for us over time.

I will say that, obviously, as I kind of mentioned in my prepared remarks, these larger deals, they're a little bit longer. They're a little bit less predictable on a kind of quarter-to-quarter basis. And so the kind of the timing of when they close could be a little bit different than more of our mid-market customers that just have a lot more predictability in terms of what the sales cycle links. So I think if you're looking at the growth rate over an extended period of time, maybe multiple quarters over a year, we feel really good about the durability. There may be some more variability on a quarter-to-quarter basis.

Mike Chang: The next question comes from Alex Sklar with Raymond James, followed by Derrick Wood with TD Cowen. Alex? Okay. Let's ask...

Alexander Sklar: Sorry. Sanjit, just first one for you, following up on Dylan's question. Just given some of the success verticalizing that public sector sales force, has that changed your thought process at all on go to market for some of your other end markets?

Sanjit Biswas: Well, in general, we are always relooking at what's the best way to sell to these different kinds of customer segments. Nothing specific to announce at this point, but we've been happy with the public sector team. It is quite a different buyer persona and industry vertical than some of the others we sell into. But every year, as we go through the planning process, we have a number of different debates and discussions about how to organize.

Alexander Sklar: Okay. Great. And Dominic, just a follow-up for you. Just given the traction on newer products we've talked about, any change to how you're thinking about the expansion motion as part of that 115% NRR framework? Is that something we could see step up as you continue to add products to the overall platform?

Dominic Phillips: Our business has been very consistent over the last several years and very balanced in terms of roughly half of the business -- roughly half of the new bookings in a given period coming from new logos and the other roughly 50% coming from expansions. I think there's clearly a lot of expansion opportunity in front of us with some of these larger customers and phased rollouts and all of the newer products that we're releasing, but there's still a lot of opportunity on the new logo side as well.

And so I think I would expect it to be pretty balanced going forward, but again, on the expansion side, still a lot of opportunity to grow within the existing customers we've landed.

Mike Chang: The next question comes from Derrick Wood with TD Cowen, followed by Mark Schappel with Loop Capital.

James Wood: Congrats on my end. Sanjit, the -- I just wanted to ask about the new tariffs that went into effect in November on foreign trucks and truck parts. Just are you seeing this shape customer demand one way or the other? Like does this drive more companies to turn to Samsara to extend lifespan of assets owned? Or just curious how this may have had any impact on end market behavior.

Sanjit Biswas: Yes. So Derrick, I was out on the road a lot last quarter, and I asked many of our customers what they thought about the tariffs, how it impact their operations. And really, they didn't think it was going to have much of a change in how they were behaving. You mentioned extending asset life spans. That is something we've seen interest in really for the last several years, which is these trucks have been getting more and more expensive over time. But they're also possible to run for a few more years if you maintain them well. So we launched Connected Maintenance, for example.

We have a lot of fault code insights and other AI that we're applying to helping extend asset lifespan. So that is, I think, more of an evergreen thing that we're seeing in the customer base, where they're always trying to figure out can we run these assets a little bit longer by maintaining them in a smarter way but not linked to the recent tariff needs at all.

James Wood: Got it. Dom, in your prepared remarks, you called out selling into areas like construction, field services, energy, utilities. These are all impacted by physical AI infrastructure build-out. So could you double click on what you're seeing in that arena, how all the investments in CapEx on AI data centers may be impacting demand from those verticals and how you see that playing out over the next couple of years?

Dominic Phillips: Yes, definitely. I mean we called out that construction was our largest industry in terms of net new ACV mix for the ninth consecutive quarter and it's obviously a direct beneficiary of the AI build-out. I think even more broadly, though, just the digital transformation for these physical operations businesses in all these industries really transcends what's going on in kind of in the broader economy. And so I think both of those are contributing to continued success in the industries you mentioned.

Mike Chang: Our last question today comes from Mark Schappel with Loop Capital.

Mark Schappel: Sanjit, could you share more detail on what you're currently seeing in the telematics market, including any evidence of an accelerating replacement cycle? And then also, too, along those lines, is it fair to assume that you're still seeing high win rates versus some of the legacy providers there?

Sanjit Biswas: Yes, absolutely. So I would say telematics, it's part of the market that's been around for some time, really since probably the late '90s, early 2000s. So we are seeing sort of aging incumbents that haven't been able to keep up. Customers are kind of looking for other solutions, and we're very well positioned for that. So that's really this kind of modernization going on. And then more broadly, safety is driving a lot of these new expansions and then new wins. So that's an area where we've seen a lot of strength. And the legacy telematics vendors that have been truly point solutions, they've either partnered for that or have implemented kind of basic safety products.

So what we're seeing in the market is people are looking for a broader platform, something that's modern, something where they can really put multiple applications up and get a system of record going. That's different than the kind of telematics point solutions that were common about 20 years ago.

Mike Chang: This concludes the question-and-answer portion. Thank you all for attending our Q3 fiscal year 2026 earnings call. Before I let you go, I have a few short announcements. We will be attending the Raymond James TMT and Consumer Conference in New York on December 9 and the FBN Virtual Technology Conference on December 12. We'll also be hosting the Piper Sandler Bus Tour on December 9, the Rothschild Bus Tour on December 9, the Evercore Bus Tour on January 5, the Bank of America Bus Tour on January 5 and the Jefferies Bus Tour on January 6. We hope to see you at one of these events. That's it for today's meeting.

If you have any follow-up questions, you can e-mail us at [email protected]. Bye, everyone.