Flexport, Inc.
CorpDigest
Flexport, Inc.
Annual Revenue
Last reviewed: 2026-06-10 · By Swet Parvadiya
FY2024 Revenue
$3.8B
▼ 15.6% vs FY2023 ($4.5B)
Flexport, Inc. reported $3.8B in revenue for fiscal year 2024. This represents a decline of 15.6% compared to the 2023 figure of $4.5B.
In early 2022, Flexport commanded an $8 billion valuation and processed over $5 billion in gross merchandise value, positioning itself as the undisputed vanguard of a digital revolution that promised to eradicate the fax machines, PDFs, and opaque pricing that had defined the $2 trillion global freight forwarding industry for over a century. When the global freight recession of 2023 triggered a catastrophic collapse in shipping rates and a massive inventory destocking cycle among retail shippers, Flexport's revenue plummeted, its cash burn rate spiraled to an estimated $100 million per month, and the company faced an existential liquidity crisis that forced the ousting of its CEO, a massive workforce reduction, and the emergency return of its founder, Ryan Petersen, to execute a brutal operational turnaround. Today, operating with an estimated $3.8 billion in FY2024 revenue and a drastically reduced $1.3 billion valuation secured via a strategic $260 million lifeline from Shopify in early 2024, Flexport has been forcibly stripped of its hyper-growth hubris and rebuilt into a leaner, highly focused digital freight forwarder. The resulting $260 million investment from Shopify in early 2024, which established a $1.3 billion post-money valuation, was not merely a financial rescue package; it was a strategic realignment that cemented Flexport's role as the premier global logistics partner for the direct-to-consumer economy. Ultimately, Flexport's journey from a $8 billion venture capital darling to a $1.3 billion battle-tested logistics operator is a masterclass in the realities of building a defining technology company in a deeply physical, highly regulated, and notoriously fragmented industry. Flexport, Inc. is a premier digital freight forwarder and supply chain technology company, generating an estimated $3.8 billion in FY2024 revenue by orchestrating the global movement of ocean, air, and truck freight for thousands of direct-to-consumer brands, mid-market manufacturers, and enterprise retailers. Following a severe valuation correction from its $8 billion peak in 2022 to a $1.3 billion valuation in 2024, driven by the global freight recession and a strategic pivot away from asset-heavy e-commerce fulfillment, Flexport has refocused relentlessly on its core forwarding network and unit-economic profitability. The combination of massive volume aggregation, technological automation, operational discipline, and a relentless focus on unit-economic profitability creates a business model that is uniquely positioned to capture significant market share in the $2 trillion global freight forwarding industry, cementing Flexport's status as the premier digital logistics orchestrator for the modern global economy. Flexport generated an estimated $3.8 billion in FY2024 revenue, operating as a premier digital freight forwarder and supply chain technology orchestrator that manages the physical movement of global trade for thousands of direct-to-consumer brands and mid-market enterprises. In fiscal year 2024, Flexport generated an estimated $3.8 billion in net revenue, representing a significant stabilization following the catastrophic revenue contraction of 2023, a period defined by the brutal normalization of global freight rates and a massive inventory destocking cycle among retail shippers. In 2021 and 2022, at the absolute peak of the pandemic-induced supply chain crisis, Flexport's gross merchandise value (GMV) skyrocketed past $5 billion, and its net revenue surged as ocean freight rates reached unprecedented, historically anomalous levels, with the cost to ship a forty-foot equivalent unit (FEU) from Shanghai to Los Angeles exceeding $10,000. During this period, the company commanded an $8 billion valuation, fueled by a venture capital environment that aggressively rewarded top-line growth and market share acquisition at the absolute expense of cash flow generation and unit economics. However, this astronomical valuation masked a severe structural vulnerability: a massive, unsustainable cash burn rate, reportedly exceeding $100 million per month at its peak, driven by the immense working capital requirements of funding physical freight movements, the aggressive hiring of thousands of employees to manage operational complexity, and the highly distracting, capital-intensive acquisition of Shopify Logistics. Petersen's immediate mandate was to stop the cash burn, ruthlessly eliminate unprofitable freight lanes and non-core business units, and refocus the entire organization on achieving positive adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow generation. The culmination of this rigorous financial reset was the strategic $260 million investment from Shopify in early 2024, which established a $1.3 billion post-money valuation. The $260 million lifeline from Shopify in early 2024, while strategically vital, was a stark reminder of the company's ongoing reliance on external capital to sustain its physical logistics network, a vulnerability that is heavily scrutinized by a venture capital environment that now demands immediate, sustainable free cash flow generation. Driven by the conviction that the $2 trillion freight forwarding industry was ripe for a massive, software-driven disruption, Petersen partnered with David Habben to found Flexport in 2013 in San Francisco, California. The decision to raise massive amounts of venture capital, culminating in a $1 billion valuation in 2019 and an $8 billion valuation in 2022, provided the company with the financial runway necessary to build out its global physical footprint, acquire specialized customs brokerages, and hire the elite engineering talent required to maintain its technological supremacy.
Source: SEC EDGAR filings, annual earnings releases, and verified financial disclosures.