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Date
Wednesday, February 4, 2026 at 5 p.m. ET
Call participants
- Chief Executive Officer — Evan Spiegel
- Chief Financial Officer — Derek Andersen
Takeaways
- Total revenue -- $1.72 billion, up 10%, with advertising contributing $1.48 billion, a 5% increase driven by direct response advertising and SMB client segment growth.
- Other revenue -- $232 million, increasing 62%, supported by 71% subscriber growth to 24 million, with memory storage plans cited as a primary driver for higher retention.
- Adjusted gross margin -- 59%, rising from 57%, achieving the near-term goal articulated in recent strategic communications.
- Adjusted EBITDA -- $358 million, a year-over-year increase of $82 million, representing a 21% margin and 51% flow-through of revenue growth.
- Net income -- $45 million, rising from $9 million, primarily attributable to improved EBITDA, partly offset by a $31 million rise in interest expense tied to earlier high-yield note issuances.
- Free cash flow -- $206 million, with trailing twelve-month free cash flow totaling $437 million, and operating cash flow at $656 million.
- Monthly active users (MAU) -- 946 million, increasing by 3 million sequentially, placing the company near its 1 billion MAU target.
- Daily active users (DAU) -- 474 million, declining by 3 million sequentially; decline linked to reductions in community growth marketing and regulatory compliance measures, including age verification in Australia.
- Sponsored Snaps -- Revenue and click-through rates both increased meaningfully quarter over quarter, with click-through purchases up 17%, and click-through rates up 7%, attributed to product and ranking improvements.
- eCPMs -- Decreased by 8%, but the rate of decline slowed by 5 percentage points quarter over quarter, supported by higher demand for Sponsored Snaps.
- Active advertisers -- Up 28%, attributed to improved onboarding, campaign workflows, and expanded integrations, with SMBs contributing most advertising revenue growth for six consecutive quarters.
- Infrastructure costs per DAU -- $0.86, below the company’s upper guidance, attributed to recalibration of service costs to align with monetization potential by geography.
- Regulatory impact -- Implementation of age verification in Australia led to the removal of approximately 400,000 accounts and may further affect engagement metrics as global policies evolve.
- Fiscal Q1 2026 guidance (period ending March 31, 2026) -- Revenue projected at $1.5 billion to $1.53 billion, excluding the effect of the perplexity integration, with adjusted EBITDA guidance between $170 million and $190 million.
- Share repurchase authorization -- New $500 million share buyback program implemented, supported by a $2.9 billion cash and marketable securities position, and only $47 million in convertible notes maturing in 2026.
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Risks
- Management cited that regulatory changes, such as platform-level age verification, have already resulted in removal of accounts and could continue to negatively affect engagement metrics as further legal requirements are enforced.
- Spiegel acknowledged, "We do continue to face some headwinds in the North America large customer business," despite overall SMB momentum.
- Adjusted operating expenses were impacted by increased litigation and regulatory compliance-related costs, factors expected to remain elevated.
- Decline in DAU by 3 million quarter over quarter was partly attributed to the decision to reduce community growth marketing investments, introducing trade-offs with product engagement and user growth.
Summary
Snap (SNAP 3.03%) reported 10% revenue growth and a 21% adjusted EBITDA margin, while achieving $45 million in net income and 59% gross margin, reflecting its recent strategic shift toward profitability and revenue diversification. Management highlighted strong subscriber momentum and operating discipline, but also acknowledged that legal, regulatory, and product-mix decisions have introduced pressures on user engagement metrics and operating costs. Paid features, recalibrated marketing spend, and the transition to higher-margin ad products all contributed to improving margins and free cash flow, despite ongoing macro and regulatory headwinds.
- Snap’s fiscal Q1 2026 revenue guidance does not include any revenue contribution from perplexity integration, as deployment terms have yet to be finalized.
- Management authorized a $500 million share repurchase program, underscoring balance sheet flexibility and focus on shareholder returns as free cash flow rises.
- Spiegel noted, "something like 40% of new code at Snap is AI generated," underscoring rapid gains in engineering efficiency and automation.
- Snap is preparing for the 2026 launch of Specs and plans incremental product development investment to expand its AR platform, leveraging existing developer ecosystems and building a stand-alone Specs brand.
- Pricing headwinds persisted as eCPMs declined, though the mix shift toward Sponsored Snaps and expanding SMB customer base partially offset this trend.
Industry glossary
- Sponsored Snaps: Snapchat ad placements that allow brands to engage directly with users via camera-native creative, designed to prompt conversations or drive measurable conversions.
- eCPM: Effective cost per mille, reflecting the effective price an advertiser pays per 1,000 impressions.
- Specs: Augmented reality smart glasses developed by Snap, set for consumer launch in 2026 as a standalone product within its AR platform.
- Direct response (DR) advertising: Ad campaigns designed to prompt measurable user actions, such as purchases or app installs, tracked in real time.
- SMB: Small- and medium-sized businesses; a key advertiser segment driving recent revenue growth at Snap.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Evan Spiegel: Hi, everyone, and welcome to our call. Last fall, we embarked on a new chapter for our company with the articulation of the Crucible Moment faced by our business. At that time, we laid out our plans to accelerate and diversify our revenue growth, pivot our business towards more profitable growth and deliver on the commercial launch of Specs in 2026. The impacts of the strategic direction began to manifest in the operating results of our business in Q4, and we are excited to build on this momentum in the year ahead.
Over the last 3 years, we have grown monthly active users by more than 150 million, reaching 946 million in the most recent quarter and bringing us within striking distance of our goal to reach 1 billion global monthly active users. We have already achieved immense reach and depth of engagement in many of the world's most attractive advertising geographies, and we believe this affords us a significant opportunity to grow our top line and expand average revenue per user over time.
Growing our community in these prosperous geographies remains a priority, and we remain committed to our long-term goal of reaching 1 billion monthly active users, but going forward, we will seek to strike a better balance between the pace of community growth and the rate of top line growth in order to pivot our business to more profitable growth. For the advertising business, our focus will be on 3 core initiatives. The first is fostering direct connections between brands and Snapchatters by leveraging our core product capabilities across Snapchat.
The second will be making it easier and more performant for advertisers to connect with Snapchatters by leveraging AI tooling and capabilities end-to-end through our ad platform, including creative development, campaign setup and performance optimization. Finally, we plan to grow our advertiser base by scaling and optimizing our go-to-market operations that support the success of small- and medium-sized businesses. Ultimately, we will grade the performance of our advertising business based on the rate of growth in advertising revenue with a focus on gaining share over time. The other revenue portion of our business has become an outside source of growth and is playing a critical role in diversifying our top line.
In the year ahead, we will focus on growing existing subscription offers, including Snapchat+ and Memory Storage Plans, while innovating to bring compelling new offers to our platform. This momentum is already materializing with subscribers growing 71% year-over-year to reach 24 million in Q4. In the year ahead, growth in subscribers will be a critical input metric to track our progress, and we will ultimately grade our performance based on the growth of the annualized run rate for other revenue. We are focusing on 3 significant catalysts for gross margin expansion to drive profitable growth.
First, with community growth focused on monetizable markets, and with our cost to serve increasingly calibrated to the monetization potential of each market, we expect that our infrastructure costs will pivot from being a source of gross margin pressure to become a margin accretive investment. Second, as more of our ad revenue is derived from higher-margin placements such as Sponsored Snaps and Promoted Places, we expect advertising margins to improve. Third, we expect that the growing scale of our subscription business, which is built on a foundation of existing engagement and infrastructure investment will become increasingly accretive to overall gross margins. In the Crucible Moment letter shared last fall, we set a near-term goal to achieve 60% gross margins.
We have already made meaningful progress toward that goal by achieving a 59% gross margin in Q4, and we believe there is a clear path to exceed this goal in 2026. We are excited about our plans to accelerate top line growth, diversify our revenue streams and build a more financially efficient business in the year ahead. Ultimately, we will grade our performance on our progress toward achieving meaningful net income profitability over the medium term. Importantly, we believe we can deliver on this profitable growth path as we continue to invest in the future of augmented reality and support the consumer launch of specs later this year.
For our community, we are focused on strengthening engagement in the world's most developed advertising geographies by building experiences across Snapchat that spark conversations and deepen relationships between Snapchatters. The connections between friends and family are what unify our camera, messaging, Snap Map and content experiences and enable our platform to enrich the lives of Snapchatters around the world. By prioritizing features that encourage creativity, discovery and interaction across these surfaces, we aim to increase the relevance and durability of engagement in ways that support long-term community growth and monetization. Our camera remains central to have Snapchatters communicate and express themselves and it is often the starting point for conversations on Snapchat.
We're enhancing our camera with AI-powered capabilities that make creation more intuitive, dynamic and social. Recent breakthroughs in our proprietary models allow us to deliver high-quality generative AI camera experiences efficiently at scale by running our models on device. AI-driven lenses represent a meaningful evolution from traditional lenses, shifting the experience from applying a fixed set of visual overlays to creating images and scenes dynamically through generative AI. Snapchatters can now prompt, explore and co-create personalized content in real time, and this shift is already resonating with our community. More than 700 million Snapchatters have engaged with generative AI Lenses more than 17 billion times, often discovering and sharing these lenses through conversations with friends and family.
Our Imagine Lens launched in September has already been engaged with nearly 2 billion times, highlighting strong early traction and repeat usage. This momentum is supported by a global creator and developer ecosystem that is unmatched in scale more than 450,000 creators from nearly every country have built over 5 million Lenses using our industry-leading AR and AI tools, helping ensure that camera experiences remain fresh, relevant and closely aligned with how our community builds relationships. Sharing Snaps with friends and family remains the foundation of Snapchat and a core driver of engagement, retention and long-term value creation. Our platform is designed around visual communication that enables frequent interactions and helps our community maintain close relationships over time.
We continue to see strong momentum in direct communication between friends and family with messaging behaviors reflecting the durability of Snapchat's core value proposition. For example, average daily messages sent increased 5% year-over-year, and the number of bidirectional communicators increased 5% year-over-year in Q4. We are investing in product experiences that make it easier to start conversations, sustain them over time and introduce new ways for friends and family to interact. For example, in Q4, we began testing Topic Chats, a new feature that allows Snapchatters to participate in public conversations around trending topics and events, discover shared interest and explore what's happening visually across our community.
We also began rolling out new 2-player term-based games designed to create playful, low friction ways for friends and family to connect such as 2 Player Mini Golf and Magic Jump. In Q4, these experiences contributed to more than 200 million Snapchatters playing games every month on average, representing an increase of 90% year-over-year. The Snap Map has become an increasingly important driver of engagement by helping Snapchatters stay connected to friends, local communities and places in the real world. Snapchatters use the Snap Map to see where friends are spending time, discover what is happening nearby and engage with local businesses and events.
Monthly active Snap Map users reached $435 million in Q4, up 6% year-over-year, creating natural opportunities for both organic engagement and monetization through ad placements such as promoted places. We have built a differentiated content platform powered by authentic content that is native to Snapchat and that reinforces human connection through content sharing as a conversation starter. Our systems increasingly surface timely, relevant content by identifying emerging trends and original formats across Spotlight and Stories and matching them to the right audiences. In Q4, enhancements to our ranking and trend detection models contributed to improved content freshness and engagement.
For example, the number of Spotlight reposts and shares increased 69% year-over-year in the U.S. reflecting our ability to surface timely content at scale. In addition, Snapchat continues to be a platform where both established and emerging creators can grow an audience and build a sustainable business. For example, Randa Adami, a nail designer and travel creator, grew her follower base by more than 20x over the last 6 months by consistently posting the Spotlight and leveraging engagement tools such as Q&A and Spotlight comments to strengthen connections with our viewers.
As we continue to innovate across these services, we are seeing the impact of better calibrating our investments in community growth and cost to serve with the long-term monetization potential of each market. In Q4, global monthly active users increased by 3 million quarter-over-quarter to 946 million, while global daily active users declined by 3 million quarter-over-quarter to 474 million.
The decline in global DAU in Q4 reflects in part our decision to substantially reduce our community growth marketing investments in order to focus on more profitable growth. improving average revenue per user through more direct monetization of our core product remains a key priority, including continued growth in Snapchat+, the expansion of Sponsored Snaps in Promoted Places, the launch of Lens+, and Memories Storage Plans. While these initiatives involve trade-offs with engagement, they are strengthening top line performance, supporting more stable and retentive subscription-based revenue streams and improving the gross margin profile of our business. The regulatory environment also presents near-term risk to engagement metrics.
In Q4, we implemented platform-level age verification in Australia in accordance with the new law requiring users to be at least 16 years old resulting in the removal of approximately 400,000 accounts. We have since begun testing new signals from Apple's declared age range API, and we plan to test Google solution once it becomes available. While these actions may adversely affect engagement metrics as implementation progresses, we believe it is the right thing to do to maintain the long-term trust of our community and partners, and we remain committed to our long-term goal of serving more than 1 billion global monthly active users.
Our long-term vision for augmented reality extends beyond the smartphone to a future when computing is more natural, contextual and seamlessly integrated into the real world. For more than a decade, we have invested in building a platform that brings digital experiences closer to how people see, move through and interact with their everyday environments. Specs are central to this vision. After 5 generations of development and refinement, we plan to launch Specs publicly in 2026, which we believe represents a significant step forward in human-centered computing and the evolution of our AR platform. As we prepare for launch, we have continued to strengthen both the platform and the ecosystem that is designed to support adoption at scale.
We began testing Snap Cloud powered by Superbase to make advanced back-end capabilities more accessible within Lens Studio enabling developers to build richer, more dynamic AR experiences. We also announced that all lenses built today for Spectacles will be compatible with Specs at launch, providing continuity and scale for developers from day one. Partners and developers are already building compelling AR experiences that demonstrate the breadth of what is possible on specs. Star Wars: Holocron Histories from ILM is now live on Spectacles highlighting the power of smart glasses for immersive storytelling with one of the world's most beloved franchises. This experience showcases the studio's continued innovation and technology and platforms through an extension of the Star Wars Galaxy.
In addition, developer Harry Banda created Card Master, a multiplayer AR card game that lets players face AI opponents in classic card games with tutorials and achievements evolving into a broader suite of AR card experiences for Specs. We believe Snap is uniquely positioned to lead the next wave of spatial computing. With Snap OS 2.0, Lens Studio, Snap Cloud and a global developer ecosystem, we have built an end-to-end AR platform spanning software, tools and hardware. Together, these capabilities position us to deliver fully stand-alone human-centered eyewear that expands creative expression and unlocks new ways for people to engage with the world around them.
In Q4, we made meaningful progress executing against the 3 priorities guiding the evolution of our advertising business, fostering more direct connections between brands and Snapchatters, making advertising on Snapchat easier and more performance through our AI-driven ad platform and expanding our advertiser base by scaling and optimizing our go-to-market operations for small- and medium-sized businesses. Together, these efforts delivered measurable improvements in advertiser performance, positioning us for more durable growth as we enter 2026. We are focused on fostering more direct connections between brands and Snapchatters by enabling advertisers to participate natively in the experiences our community use every day on Snapchat, including messaging, the Snap Map, our AI-powered camera and creator led content.
These services allow brands to show up in ways that feel timely, relevant and aligned with how our community communicates and discovers the world around them. High-impact conversation driven placements are playing an increasingly important role across both upper and lower funnel objectives. Sponsored Snaps continue to gain traction in Q4 as one of our most differentiated ad placements, allowing brands to engage directly with Snapchatters. Sponsored Snaps revenue grew meaningfully quarter-over-quarter, supported by in-app optimizations and early testing of dynamic product ad integrations. Advertisers are seeing strong results from this placement. In Q4, Sponsored Snaps click-through rates grew 7% and click-through purchases grew 17% from Q3 to Q4, during which numerous format and ranking improvements were introduced.
For example, global travel company Contiki, used Sponsored Snaps to drive lower funnel bookings, achieving a 283% increase in ROAS and a 72% reduction in cost per purchase highlighting the format's ability to connect creativity with measurable outcomes. In addition, SHEIN used Sponsored Snaps as part of the total takeover campaign to amplify the launch of its 2025 collection, connecting an online-to-offline event with high-impact camera native creatives that drove engagement beyond digital impressions. The campaign exceeded impression benchmarks by 20% while delivering CPMs below standard benchmarks, demonstrating strong efficiency, scale and the effectiveness of clear product-led creative with a direct call to action.
We're also seeing advertisers amplify lower funnel outcomes by combining complementary ad formats across the Snapchat experience. For example, Saudi QSR brand KUDU, combined creative AR Lenses with Sponsored Snaps to drive full funnel performance achieving up to 49.5% lower cost per sign-up, 3.76x more app installs at 76% lower CPI and 38x more purchases at an 84% lower cost per purchase. Promoted Places further extends this strategy by translating digital engagement into real-world action. Early results from our promoted places beta saw an average 65% reduction in cost per incremental visit and an average double-digit visitation lift according to third-party foot traffic measurement by InMarket.
We continue to leverage AI to make it easier for advertisers to connect with Snapchatters while delivering stronger performance and more consistent returns. By embedding AI across our advertising platform from creative development and campaign setup to delivery and optimization, we are reducing friction for advertisers and improving ROAS at scale, particularly across direct response use cases. A central focus of our AI strategy is simplifying how advertisers plan, launch and manage campaigns on Snapchat. Our Smart Campaign Solution suite, including smart targeting and smart budget uses AI to identify incremental high-value audiences and dynamically allocate spend across objectives, reducing the need for manual setup and ongoing optimization.
We also began early testing of smart ads, which automatically assemble and iterate creative elements to identify the highest performing combinations. These tools are designed to reduce creative friction, accelerate learning cycles and shorten time to spend. Improving direct response performance remains a core priority within this effort. In Q4, we delivered meaningful progress across both DPA and App advertising. For DPA, targeted ranking, format and delivery improvements delivered a 55% reduction in cost per action for 7-0 conversions and 45% reduction in cost per action for 1-0 conversions amongst all Pixel Purchase GBBs, based on cumulative internal testing over the past year.
CPA revenue grew 19% year-over-year, supported by expanded adoption among large advertisers and continued migration to higher performing dynamic solutions. For example, WOLFpak, a North America retail fashion and apparel brand, leverage dynamic product ads to drive lower funnel performance, delivering 90% higher return on ad spend compared to non-DPA campaigns. Our App advertising business also accelerated meaningfully in Q4. Revenue from in-app optimizations grew 89% year-over-year supported by advances in foundational app models, broader adoption of the App Power Pack and new immersive formats such as playables.
For example, our partnership with Triumph Arcade delivered 2.6x more app installs at 37% lower CPI and 94% more purchases at a 15% lower cost per purchase demonstrating how native formats can drive strong lower funnel outcomes. We are growing our advertiser base by scaling and optimizing go-to-market operations that support the success of small- and medium-sized businesses. SMBs contributed the majority of advertising revenue growth for the sixth consecutive quarter, underscoring sustained product market fit and the impact of our investments. In Q4, total active advertisers increased 28% year-over-year driven in part by simplified onboarding, improved campaign workflows and increased performance.
We reduced setup friction by enhancing Ads Manager workflows and expanding integrations across the commerce and measurement ecosystem, enabling advertisers to launch campaigns directly from partner platforms. We also strengthened our SMB offerings through new partnerships, including a global integration with Wix, which allows e-commerce businesses to more easily create campaigns, manage catalogs and improve measurement. In addition, we are investing in AI agents designed to accelerate SMB activation through automated recommendations and onboarding optimizations that reduce decision friction and improved performance. Our Q4 results reinforce our confidence in the strategic direction outlined in our 2026 plan.
By fostering deeper connections between brands with Snapchatters, improving advertiser performance through AI and expanding our advertiser base with greater discipline, we are building a more resilient and competitive advertising business. As we move into 2026, we will continue to grade our progress based on growth in conversions, improvements in ROAS, expansion of our active advertiser base and ultimately the rate of growth in advertising revenue and share over time. I'll now turn the call over to Derek to discuss our financials.
Derek Andersen: Thanks, Evan. Q4 was a pivotal quarter for our business as we began to see the impact of our strategic focus on profitable growth translate into further revenue diversification, meaningful gross margin expansion, elevated flow-through of top line growth to adjusted EBITDA, the achievement of net income profitability and substantially improved free cash flow generation. Total revenue was $1.72 billion in Q4, up 10% year-over-year. Advertising revenue reached $1.48 billion in Q4, up 5% year-over-year, driven primarily by growth in DR advertising revenue. The growth in DR advertising revenue was driven by strong demand for our Pixel Purchase and App Purchase optimization as well as continued strength from the SMB client segment.
Other revenue increased 62% year-over-year to reach $232 million in Q4. We with subscribers growing 71% year-over-year to reach 24 million in Q4. Global impression volume increased approximately 14% year-over-year driven in large part by expanded advertising delivery across Sponsored Snaps and Spotlight. Total eCPMs declined approximately 8% year-over-year, with the rate of decline moderating by 5 percentage points quarter-over-quarter driven by growing demand for sponsored snaps that helped boost yields for this new placement. We are encouraged to see our advertising partners experience strong advertising performance alongside the supply growth and that the improvements in pricing and performance are bringing increased demand to the platform.
Adjusted cost of revenue was $699 million in Q4, up 4% year-over-year but growing at less than half the rate of our top line. Infrastructure costs per DAU was $0.86 in Q4 and below the top end of our full year cost structure guidance range as we began to experience the initial benefits of better calibrating our cost to serve relative to the long-term monetization potential of the geographies in which we operate.
The remaining components of adjusted cost of revenue were $289 million in Q4 or 17% of revenue, which is below the low end of our full year cost structure guidance range. due in large part to the outsized growth of higher-margin ad placements, including Sponsored Snaps and Spotlight. With the combination of revenue growth outpacing infrastructure cost growth and a favorable shift in impression delivery mix adjusted gross margin reached 59% in Q4, up from 55% in Q3 and 57% in Q4 of the prior year. Adjusted operating expenses were $660 million in Q4, up 8% year-over-year, but growing 2 percentage points slower than revenue.
Personnel costs increased 8% year-over-year, driven primarily by a 7% increase in head count with hiring tightly focused on our core strategic priorities. Higher legal costs, including litigation and regulatory compliance-related costs were an additional driver of operating expense growth in Q4. These factors were partially offset by reductions in community growth marketing spending as we began to execute on our strategic initiatives to better calibrate our investments in community growth with the long-term monetization potential of each geography. Adjusted EBITDA was $358 million in Q4, an improvement of $82 million compared to the prior year.
Adjusted EBITDA flow-through or the percentage of year-over-year revenue growth that flowed through to adjusted EBITDA was 51% in Q4 and contributed to adjusted EBITDA margins expanding 9 percentage points to reach 21% in Q4. Importantly, we delivered positive net income of $45 million in Q4, up from $9 million in prior year. The $36 million year-over-year improvement largely reflects the flow-through in adjusted EBITDA. Offset by a $31 million increase in interest expense reflecting the high-yield notes issued earlier in the year. Stock-based compensation and related payroll expenses or $265 million in Q4 or approximately flat year-over-year as progress towards a flatter and leaner leadership structure helped power the business to net income profitability in Q4.
Free cash flow was $206 million in Q4, while operating cash flow was $270 million. Over the trailing 12 months, free cash flow was $437 million and operating cash flow was $656 million. as we continue to execute on translating top line growth into sustained growth in cash flow. We continue to manage our share count carefully with share repurchases completed throughout 2025, helping limit share count growth to 3% in Q4. We ended Q4 with approximately $2.9 billion in cash and marketable securities and just $47 million in convertible notes set to mature in fiscal 2026.
Given the strength of our balance sheet, our progress towards sustained free cash flow generation and our desire to opportunistically manage our share count for the benefit of our long-term shareholders. We have authorized a new share repurchase program in the amount of $500 million. For the full year, we generated $5.93 billion in revenue, reflecting 11% year-over-year growth, driven by a combination of ongoing strength in our SMB advertising segment as well as the rapid growth in our subscription business. We delivered $689 million in adjusted EBITDA, representing adjusted EBITDA flow-through of 32% in 2025.
Importantly, we came within or below our full year cost structure guidance across all key metrics as we managed our investment levels in balance with the rate of revenue growth realized by our business throughout the year. As we begin 2026, we are focused on accelerating top line growth further diversifying our revenue streams, expanding gross margins and making meaningful progress towards net income profitability. Our investment plans for 2026 reflect these priorities, and our intention is to calibrate our investments to revenue growth as we move through the year.
Our infrastructure investment levels for 2026 will be driven by our strategic initiative to better align our cost to serve with the long-term monetization potential of each geography in which we operate. As a result, our full year cost structure guidance range for infrastructure costs is $1.6 billion to $1.65 billion. which would represent flat year-over-year infrastructure costs at the low end. We estimate that the remaining components of adjusted cost of revenue will be a combined 16% to 17% of revenue in each quarter of 2026 and which would represent a 1 to 2 percentage point improvement over 2025, driven by the benefit of outsized growth and higher-margin ad placements.
Personnel costs are the largest component of adjusted operating expenses, and we expect head count growth in 2026 to be roughly in line with the 7% head count growth we experienced in Q4 of 2025. And with hiring tightly focused on our core strategic priorities. We anticipate continued elevated legal and regulatory-related costs, and we plan to make meaningful proactive investments in community safety that will contribute to adjusted operating expense growth. In addition, our adjusted operating expense range for 2026 includes incremental investments in product development and go-to-market support for the consumer launch of Specs later this year.
These factors will be partially offset by reduced spending on community growth marketing as we adjust these investments to better reflect the long-term monetization potential of each geography. As a result, we estimate that full year adjusted operating expenses will be approximately $3 billion. For SBC and related expenses, we estimate approximately $1.2 billion in 2026. For Q1 specifically, our guidance range for revenue is $1.5 billion to $1.53 billion. Our Q1 revenue guidance range excludes any potential revenue from the perplexity integration as we have yet to mutually agree on a path to a broader rollout.
Given this revenue range and our investment plans for the year ahead, we estimate that adjusted EBITDA will be between $170 million and $190 million in Q1. As we begin 2026, we are excited to execute on our pivot towards profitable growth and to make incremental progress towards our medium-term goal of delivering meaningful net income profitability. The impacts of this strategic direction are already evident in our Q4 results and we are incredibly proud of the work our team is doing to build on this momentum in Q1. Thank you for joining our call today, and we will now take your questions.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] The first question comes from Eric Sheridan with Goldman Sachs.
Eric Sheridan: I want to talk about where the initiatives, Evan, with Snap Specs as 1 of the key priorities in the next 1 to 2 years. Can you just go a little bit deeper into what you've built on the platform and the application and use case side? And how you think it feeds into where you want to take the hardware side of the business. When we think about the next 12 to 18 months and how this fits into your broader strategic priorities for the company and more particularly for spatial computing longer term?
Evan Spiegel: Eric, thanks so much for the question. We're super excited about what's ahead this year with the launch of specs and obviously, graduating from the R&D phase of Specs to broader consumer adoption. In preparation of that, we've been working on several prior versions of Specs, including most recently, the version released in 2024 to developers who can subscribe to Specs and start building Lens experiences.
We've seen some people build really spectacular things, whether it's utilities or new educational tools, for example, like at-home chemistry lab, you can have an augmented reality to even some of the more interesting work we've been doing with the browser and the ability to stream video on a virtual screen grounded in the real world through your glasses. So it's been really exciting to see all the new use cases that developers are building for Specs with the current version released back in 2024. And those will be able to run on the upcoming or the forthcoming version of specs released later this year.
So I think we'll be able to launch with a really wide variety of compelling experiences, which I think is so important for the early success of a product like this. And we're just really focused on getting the hands of early adopters. We're so fortunate to have this passionate base of developers, hundreds of thousands of developers who've used Lens Studio to build lenses. And I think they're really excited about this forthcoming product. So really trying to engage them and early adopters with specs later this year is super exciting.
And I think as we look out to future generations of the product through the end of this decade, we've got a really clear path here to lightweight, affordable and incredibly powerful glasses that can deliver immersive experiences in the real world.
Operator: The next question comes from Ross Sandler with Barclays.
Ross Sandler: High end of the range. And also -- can you hear me? .
Evan Spiegel: We can now go ahead.
Ross Sandler: Okay. Sorry. Okay. The 1Q guide assumes a pickup in growth at the high end, and you guys mentioned that there's no perplexity in there. Could you just talk about what's driving that between DR and brand and how you're kind of expecting trends in 2026 in the ad business to play out?
Evan Spiegel: Thanks for the question. On the ad side, the biggest focus is continuing to generate additional demand by demonstrating the strong performance of the Ad Platform. So at the top of that, we're seeing really strong growth in active advertisers. They were up 28% year-over-year in Q4 as we continue to invest and scale our SMB go-to-market operations. And that's something you're going to see us build on into 2026. That's part of the investment plan for the year ahead is to continue to scale that out so that we can build on the momentum we have there.
We've seen especially strong growth in the medium customer segment globally with medium customers in North America, in particular, being the largest contributor to absolute dollar growth there, which is good to -- that's the kind of momentum we want to build on in '26. We do continue to face some headwinds in the North America large customer business, but there are some bright spots there, including the U.S. LCS financial services vertical as well as autos. We have new leadership in place over the North America LCS segment.
We've got new products to connect brands with Snapchatters, including Sponsored Snaps and Promoted Places to build with their and smart campaign solutions to make it easier for advertisers to leverage the full set of Snapchat placements to make those connections easy and performance. So those will be big themes that we'll be building on in '26 as well. In terms of the guide for Q1, the macro operating environment has thus far remained relatively stable compared to what we saw in Q4. There's a lot of quarter left to go in Q1, of course, but our guidance range is built on the assumption that the macro environment continues to be stable.
I hope that extra color helps a little bit.
Operator: SP1 The next question comes from Rich Greenfield with LightShed Partners.
Richard Greenfield: A couple of questions. First, the subscription side, which I know, Evan, if I go back to your letter a while ago, you sort of marked the importance of subscription. It seemed like it really accelerated this quarter. And I'm curious, are you marketing it differently? Are there new features that you added? I know you've talked about sort of charging for memories and other things that will add to this. But just in terms of what happened in Q4, it would be great to better understand what's happening inside of that Snap?
And then -- the other thing, I think, 2 years ago, Evan, you got on this earnings call and you talked about the fact that you were sort of refocusing user growth efforts from Android developing markets to the bigger markets like the U.S. where the meat of your monetization was. And if I look at sort of where U.S. users -- or sorry, North American users have fallen to a $94 million do you need to put even more effort into those efforts to sort of drive U.S. users or North American users? Just what's happening in the North American user market would be great to just better understand, given your focus there?
Evan Spiegel: Yes. Definitely excited about what we're seeing on the subscriber side of the business. Certainly, memory storage plans were a big driver of the subscriber growth that we've seen recently and also have helped improve retention rates overall. So that definitely has been really helpful to the subscription business. And we've got some other great features on debt coming up this year for the direct pay segment of our business. So really excited about that overall, and I think really helps support our efforts to diversify our revenue in addition to the small and medium customer growth that Derek mentioned.
So overall, really excited about the progress on subscriptions and the diversification of our revenue -- as it pertains to user growth, I think if you take a step back and look at the growth overall of the platform, monthly active users, now 946 million. So we're pretty close to our goal of 1 billion monthly active users. And I think, as you know, over the past 3 years, our community growth has really outpaced our revenue growth and ARPU has actually declined, while we simultaneously increased the cost to serve. By which has put downward pressure on our margin.
So as we look at this crucial moment and the pivot to profitability, we have immense daily reach and engagement in many of the most valuable advertising markets, including in North America. And we think we can strike a much better balance between pursuing community growth and also growing average revenue per user. So in addition to that, obviously, we're working through some of the regulatory landscape and some of the shifting user engagement patterns as we focus on organic growth.
But I think taking that all in totality, we've made some choices to reduce community growth marketing spend to adjust the cost to serve and to roll out additional paid features like the Memory Storage Plans that we just discussed. And all of those can cause headwinds to user engagement. So those changes actually free up more resources to focus on our most valuable geographies so that we can continue innovating and delivering great customer experiences, which really believe is the most important driver of long-term growth.
Operator: The next question comes from Dan Salmon with New Street Research.
Daniel Salmon: Evan, I wanted to just talk a little bit more about, as you called it, the sort of litigation or regulatory risk caused by changes in age verification policies, sort of broader teen smartphone and social media restrictions. You obviously commented on the actions that you took in Australia following the ban going into place there. But what I'm particularly interested to hear a little bit more about is the potential for those types of actions to impact North America. Obviously, a $4 million step down in the DAU this quarter.
I'm curious just maybe to unpack a little bit of what drove that more and what the outlook could be there during the year based on some of those litigation risks or regulatory risks you mentioned.
Evan Spiegel: We're certainly aware of some pending legislation. Obviously, there's quite a bit working its way to the court system right now that would further restrict the use of Snapchat for our community. I think as we look at, for example, global ad revenue from impressions served to users under the age of 18, that revenue is not material. . So I think looking at sort of the revenue generating potential of the business looking forward, we're not overly concerned about the changing regulatory environment.
I will say one of the things that's very interesting is that if you look at the research studies that look at Snapchat specifically as separate from some of the studies that look at social media in totality. I think what we continue to see, which makes us proud of the service we've developed is that Snapchat actually has a positive impact on people's well-being and people's friendships. And that's actually in contrast to other services that don't necessarily have that positive impact.
But I think we have had quite a bit of trouble as we look at the regulators, explaining how different Snapchat is because there is really this moment where people are expressing concern about use of social media. So we have to continue making the case that Snapchat and its orientation around your close friends and your family can have a really positive impact. I think that's backed up by the research. But certainly, it's going to take time to prove that out, and especially as these regulations sort of work their way through the court system.
Operator: The following comes from Ken Gawrelski with Wells Fargo.
James Cordwell: Maybe first, I'll touch on Specs. Could you talk about maybe, Evan, could you talk about the kind of synergy between specs and Snap services more broadly and the audience and kind of the developer base. And then talk about the right way to capitalize that entity? I mean, if there's -- if you have confidence in the end product -- how do you think about appropriately capitalize on that? Can it -- does it -- should it happen all within Snap, should there be outside partners? And how do you accelerate kind of the development and the deployment of specs throughout the ecosystem. I'll stop there.
Evan Spiegel: Yes. Well, I think to just maybe take a step back on why we started working on specs in the first place. When we invented Snap and we worked on things like a femoral messaging or stories that put content in chronological order or even things like opening to the camera, our vision, our work was really designed to make computing or smartphone feel more human. And we think that's quite a really important role in connecting people with their friends and their family. But we also saw a lot of limitations of the smartphone and of computers. And I think today, people are spending something like 7 hours a day in front of a screen.
And so I think there is, at this moment, a real opportunity to change what the computer is instead of something that you're constantly operating using a keyboard and a mouse something that now powered by AI can actually get work done for you. And so in that way, it's really a continuation of this vision to try to work to make computing more human for folks. And so I think now that we are exiting the R&D phase of spec development, there's a couple of important things.
One is developing a strong stand-alone brand I think Specs the product itself, in many ways, appeals to a different audience segment than the core Snapchat audience, and it's going to be really important for us to develop a stand-alone brand identity for Specs. And then I think longer term, as we look at the rollout and broader deployment of Specs, there may be opportunities to raise additional capital to accelerate balancing that, obviously, with our own sort of ownership interest and any potential dilution. So I think right now, given that we're so close to launch, the key here is really just nailing the launch and making sure that we deliver an extraordinary product.
And then I think we have a lot of flexibility to think about how we want to capitalize it moving forward.
Operator: The next question comes from Justin Patterson with KeyBanc.
Justin Patterson: I wanted to talk about agentive coding. We've seen more companies see meaningful improvements in engineering productivity from these tools. How is this thing deployed at Snap today? And how should we think about potential benefits, whether it's product velocity more engagement on the platform, more monetization opportunities or expense efficiency.
Evan Spiegel: Yes. There's just so much opportunity here. Obviously, I think now, something like 40% of new code at Snap is AI generated. We made a ton of headway with trust and safety and customer service. in terms of automating those workflows. I think there's a lot of opportunity for the sales workflow as well to empower our sales team but also to automate quite a bit of that. So certainly, we're seeing gains across the board and how we're operating our business today. I also think this can be a real accelerant for our own creativity. I mean one of the things we love to do is invent new services.
And we've got a bunch of ideas for new apps, for example that we could build using these AI tools and deploy very, very quickly, leveraging, of course, the distribution we have, our friend graph, some of the unique assets we have like folks memories, for example. So I think there's a lot of opportunity here for us to think about how we accelerate the growth of our business and actually develop new services quickly using these tools. And I think in addition to that, we're just running as fast as we can to roll out new agents across the enterprise new tools.
And it's especially for a small team, like the one we've got at Snap, this is just a massive force multiplier. And I think really will help accelerate a lot of the creative vision we have in terms of turning it into reality.
Operator: Our last question comes from Benjamin Black with Deutsche Bank.
Benjamin Black: Great. Can you talk about the decision to moderate infrastructure spending at a time when others are ramping spend to drive ad performance? Was there sort of slack in the system? Maybe just talk through that decision.
Evan Spiegel: It's a great question. Thanks for asking it. I think the first thing I would say just for context, the big driver in the ramp of infrastructure investment over the last couple of years has been a really significant growth in our ML and AI investment, and that was to both support the rebuild of the Ad Platform and the DR advertising business. and also to support the content business and banking and personalization and all of the work that we've done there. And I think I would say, first and foremost, we intend to continue to invest pretty heavily there. And so that's not an area of focus for pulling back.
As it pertains to infrastructure, specifically, there are really 2 big catalysts where we see a lot of opportunity and are already making progress in terms of driving margin efficiency for the business and margin expansion. The first there is just our investments in how we handle cost to serve. And getting that in a place where we're calibrating that better relative to the monetization potential of each of the markets in which we're operating. And there's a lot we can do to optimize that. And that's really about the theme that we've been talking about in terms of getting to profitable growth.
And so translating that into the growth in infrastructure really being keyed in against the growth in monetization. The other real opportunity we see here is to take some of the infrastructure things that are cost right now and turn them into revenue-generating investments. And so I think the recent launch of the memory storage plants is a great example of that, where we can take cost and not only find ways to make it more efficient, but then also turn it into a revenue-generating source of top line growth, which is going to help with even further margin expansion. So a lot of this is about efficiency.
A lot of it is about being really sensible about our cost to serve relative to monetization potential markets and then scaling efficiently. But those investments in AI and ML will continue to be really important to the performance of the business in both the adds and the content side. So hopefully, that gives a little bit more context there. Thanks for asking.
Operator: This concludes our question-and-answer session as well as Snap Inc.'s Fourth Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. Thank you for attending today's session. You may now disconnect.
