PayPal Holdings, Inc.
CorpDigest
PayPal Holdings, Inc.
Annual Revenue
Last reviewed: 2026-06-03 · By Swet Parvadiya
FY2025 Revenue
$33.2B
▲ 4.3% vs FY2024 ($31.8B)
Net Income: $5.2B
PayPal Holdings, Inc. reported $33.2B in revenue for fiscal year 2025. This represents a growth of 4.3% compared to the 2024 figure of $31.8B.
The most revealing number in PayPal's financials isn't revenue or net income — it's the gap between total payment volume growth and revenue growth. TPV grew roughly 10% in FY2025 to approximately $1.5 trillion. Revenue grew 4.3% to $33.2 billion. That divergence is the take-rate compression story in one data point: PayPal is moving more money but capturing less of each dollar. Net income of $5.2 billion (15.7% margin) looks respectable in isolation. But the trajectory matters more than the snapshot. Q4 2025 was ugly enough to get a CEO fired: revenue of $8.68B and EPS of $1.23 both missed estimates, the stock dropped 18% in a day, and the board concluded Alex Chriss wasn't moving fast enough. Q1 2026 under interim leadership showed stabilization — $8.35B in revenue (up 7.2% YoY, beating estimates by 3.8%), adjusted EPS of $1.34 (beating by $0.07). The patient isn't dying. But the market isn't paying for survival. Revenue per employee runs about $1.23 million across the roughly 27,000-person workforce (down from 30,000+ through layoffs). That's efficient for a technology company but unremarkable for a payments business where the product is largely software. The real efficiency question is whether PayPal can grow revenue without proportionally growing headcount — and whether the layoffs have cut muscle along with fat. The stock at ~$44 per share ($42B market cap) prices PayPal like a slow-growth utility. For comparison: the company generated $5.2B in net income on a $42B market cap — that's a P/E of roughly 8x. Either the market believes earnings will decline, or it's pricing in permanent multiple compression. Revenue has grown every single year since the 2015 spin-off ($9.2B → $33.2B). The company isn't shrinking. The market just doesn't believe the growth is worth paying for anymore.
| Year | Revenue | Net Income | YoY Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| FY2025 | $33.2B | $5.2B | +4.3% |
| FY2024 | $31.8B | — | +6.8% |
| FY2023 | $29.8B | — | +8.2% |
| FY2022 | $27.5B | — | +8.5% |
| FY2021 | $25.4B | — | +18.3% |
| FY2020 | $21.5B | — | +20.7% |
| FY2019 | $17.8B | — | +15.0% |
| FY2018 | $15.5B | — | +18.0% |
| FY2017 | $13.1B | — | — |
Source: SEC EDGAR filings, annual earnings releases, and verified financial disclosures.