EX-99.1 2 a9918-k123125.htm EX-99.1 Document

Exhibit 99.1
Annual Results

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1


2025 Highlights

FINANCIAL RESULTS & COMPANY MILESTONES

Accelerated year-over-year growth in retail units and revenue
Grew retail units by 180,293 (43%) year-over-year, bringing used market share to ~1.6%
Revenue over $20 billion for the first time, up 49% year-over-year
Exceeded 5 million cumulative customer transactions

Achieved record company-level profitability
Net income of $1.895 billion, Net income margin of 9.3%1
Net income included a net non-cash benefit of $621 million
GAAP Operating income of $1.881 billion, GAAP Operating margin of 9.3%
Adjusted EBITDA of $2.237 billion, Adjusted EBITDA margin of 11.0%

Drove significant cost efficiencies while scaling
Operations expense per unit down $118 year-over-year
Overhead expense per unit down $355 year-over-year

Joined the S&P 500 with 2025 revenue growth in the top 2% of S&P 500 companies

Recognized by Forbes as one of the Best Large Employers for 2026

GIVING BACK TO CUSTOMERS TO DRIVE BETTER EXPERIENCES

Expanded vehicle selection by 20,000 vehicles year-over-year

Brought cars closer to more customers by growing inventory pools to 34 locations nationwide
Passed on lower shipping costs to customers in the form of $60 lower shipping fees on average year-over-year in Q4
Reduced frequency of customer delays by ~10% year-over-year

Delivered cars to customers faster than ever before
Reduced average delivery times by 1 full day year-over-year
Share of retail sales with same day or next day deliveries more than doubled year-over-year

Shared fundamental finance and cost of funds gains with customers through lower APRs

Simplified and personalized the e-commerce experience
Over 30% of car buyers and 60% of car sellers now complete entire process without speaking to an Advocate until vehicle delivery or pick up
Average calls per sale down ~25% year-over-year in Q4










1 Net income in FY 2025 was positively impacted by ~$685 million associated with the release of our valuation allowance against our deferred tax assets and recording of the full tax receivable agreement liability. Additionally, Net income for FY 2025 was negatively impacted by ~$64 million associated with changes in the fair value of our warrants to acquire Root common stock.
2


Dear Shareholders,

2025 was another exceptional year full of exciting results and significant milestones.

We grew retail units by 43% and sold just shy of 600,000 cars. We crossed $20 billion in annual revenue. We crossed $1 billion in Net Income and $2 billion in Adjusted EBITDA. And we completed our 5 millionth customer transaction.

These are big numbers that are growing fast.

And they all come from the same root. 13 years and $10 billion invested ago, our team set a clear vision to achieve a big goal. And then we just kept marching.

We believed that by building a fundamentally different business we could deliver fundamentally different customer experiences and fundamentally different financial results.

Today, our progress validates that belief. We are the most profitable automotive retailer by a factor of two and the fastest growing by a long way.

Our success is driven by a simple principle: everything we do starts with the customer, and we work backward from there. We are built to deliver simpler, faster, more confidence-inspiring transactions that deliver greater value with greater selection.

Even with all of our progress, we still have the headroom of many early-stage startups. At a scale of ~600,000 sales per year, we represent just 1.6% of used car sales and 1% of overall U.S. car sales. Even our next milestone goal of selling 3 million cars annually represents only 7.5% of the used car market.

Meanwhile, the market around us looks very similar to the way it did on day one. At that point, the entire market was held by many thousands of traditional retailers, each delivering similar experiences with similar structural economics to one another. Along the way, several companies, including Carvana, sought to build a different kind of business model that would deliver different kinds of experiences and results. Our collective learnings demonstrate just how difficult it is to build a business like ours.

And today, we are, once again, competing almost exclusively with traditional retailers, only now, Carvana is operating at scale and our model’s competitive differentiation is proven and growing.

Our business gets better as it gets bigger – not just in the results it drives but in the customer experiences it delivers. 30% of our retail customers and 60% of customers selling us their car now choose to do so without talking to anyone at Carvana prior to delivery or pickup because our tools are simple and confidence inspiring. As we added more inventory pools, logistics routes, and network density in 2025, our average delivery time fell by a full day year-over-year and customers paid lower shipping fees. Our growth enabled us to expand customer selection by 20,000 cars compared to a year ago. And the fundamental gains we achieved in the last year also meant that we were able to pass more value on to our customers in the form of lower interest rates.

Compared to just one year ago, our customers are more likely to find the exact car they are looking for, they can have that car delivered faster, and they spend less money to get it.

We delivered all that value, grew rapidly, and improved our financial performance at the same time because of the positive feedback inherent in our business and we plan to get much bigger and much better from here.

We are the fastest growing and most profitable automotive retailer.

The path to selling 3 million cars per year at 13.5% Adjusted EBITDA margins by 2030 to 2035 is clear.

We still have the same team that got us here working with the same vision, the same enthusiasm, the same intensity, and the same ambition that we had at the beginning.

And we remain on a mission to change the way people buy and sell cars.








3


Summary of Q4 2025 and 2025 Results

Q4 2025 Financial Results: All financial comparisons stated below are versus Q4 2024, unless otherwise noted. Complete financial tables appear at the end of this letter.

Retail units sold totaled 163,522, an increase of 43%
Revenue totaled $5.603 billion, an increase of 58%
Total Gross profit was $1.051 billion, an increase of 38%
Total Gross profit per unit (“GPU”) was $6,427, a decrease of $244
Non-GAAP Total GPU was $6,562, a decrease of $354
Net income margin was 17.0%, an increase from 4.5%
Net income totaled $951 million2
Adjusted EBITDA margin was 9.1%, a decrease from 10.1%
Adjusted EBITDA totaled $511 million
GAAP Operating income was $424 million, an increase of $164 million
Basic and diluted net earnings per Class A share were $6.05 and $4.22, respectively, based on 142 million and 226 million shares of Class A common stock outstanding, respectively

FY 2025 Financial Results: All financial comparisons stated below are versus FY 2024, unless otherwise noted. Complete financial tables appear at the end of this letter.

Retail units sold totaled 596,641, an increase of 43%
Revenue totaled $20.322 billion, an increase of 49%
Total Gross profit was $4.192 billion, an increase of 46%
Total GPU was $7,026, an increase of $118
Non-GAAP Total GPU was $7,182, a decrease of $14
Net income margin was 9.3%, an increase from 3.0%
Net income totaled $1.895 billion2
Adjusted EBITDA margin was 11.0%, an increase from 10.1%
Adjusted EBITDA totaled $2.237 billion
GAAP Operating income was $1.881 billion, an increase of $891 million
Basic and diluted net earnings per Class A share were $10.22 and $8.45, respectively, based on 138 million and 224 million shares of Class A common stock outstanding, respectively

Outlook

In 2025, we focused on three key objectives: (i) significant growth in retail units and Adjusted EBITDA, (ii) fundamental gains in unit economics and customer experience, and (iii) developing foundational capabilities.

We made significant progress in all three areas in 2025, highlighted by record units, industry-leading margins, multi-year high customer NPS, and expanded integrated reconditioning and digital auction capabilities.

In 2026, we plan to maintain these priorities while placing additional weight on driving significant, profitable growth at scale.

Looking forward, we expect significant growth in both retail units sold and Adjusted EBITDA3 in full year 2026, including a sequential increase in both retail units sold and Adjusted EBITDA3 in Q1 2026, assuming the environment remains stable.





2 Net income in Q4 2025 and FY 2025 were positively impacted by ~$685 million each period associated with the release of our valuation allowance against our deferred tax assets and recording of the full tax receivable agreement liability. Additionally, Net income in Q4 2025 and FY 2025 were negatively impacted by ~$67 million and ~$64 million, respectively, associated with changes in the fair value of our warrants to acquire Root common stock.
3 In order to clearly demonstrate our progress and highlight the most meaningful drivers within our business, we continue to use forecasted Non-GAAP financial measures, including forecasted Adjusted EBITDA. We have not provided a quantitative reconciliation of forecasted GAAP measures to forecasted Non-GAAP measures within this communication because we are unable, without making unreasonable efforts, to forecast fair value changes or calculate one-time or restructuring expenses. These items could materially affect the computation of forward-looking Net Income (loss).
4


Fourth Quarter Results

Retail units sold reached a new company record of 163,522, driven by strong customer demand for our differentiated offering. We grew retail units 43% year-over-year, significantly outpacing our industry, which was approximately flat year-over-year.

In order to support such significant growth, we successfully scaled operations across the business but saw three primary drivers leading Retail GPU to be outside of the normal range of sequential seasonal changes we were expecting.

The first driver was the result of a favorable operational trend. Strong execution from our fulfillment team, combined with the expansion of new inventory pools, reduced our average outbound shipping distance as more customers purchased vehicles closer to them. This lower shipping distance flowed through to customers in the form of lower shipping fees, while also generating operations expense savings in SG&A.

The second was an opportunity for better execution. Reconditioning costs came in higher than our expectations, particularly in locations with the lowest management tenure. We see clear opportunities to make management of our large-scale production facilities simpler and more data-driven, much like we have done for associate and line lead workflows through our proprietary Carli software. We believe this can lower reconditioning costs over time as we scale. As a point of reference, if all production locations had per unit costs in line with the top quartile of locations, our total reconditioning cost per unit would have been ~$220 lower in Q4.

Finally, retail depreciation rates increased sequentially more than last year, leading to an additional impact on Retail GPU.

We expect to see elevated reconditioning costs again in Q1, but expect a sequential increase in Retail GPU in Q1.

Overall, our results in Q4 continued our industry leadership in both growth and profitability, marking another step toward our goal of becoming the largest and most profitable auto retailer and buying and selling millions of cars.

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1 All data points are as of Q4 2025 or most recently reported fiscal quarter.
2 Net income margin in Q4 2025 was positively impacted by a net 11.0% benefit associated with the release of our valuation allowance against our deferred tax assets and recording of the full tax receivable agreement liability and changes in the fair value of our warrants to acquire Root common stock. Note that Carvana Net income margin is not to scale.

Progress On Our Path to 3 Million Units

In 2025, we set a goal to sell 3 million retail units annually at a 13.5% Adjusted EBITDA margin within the next 5 to 10 years (for clarity, we will now refer to this as 2030 to 2035). When we announced this goal, we estimated that we would need to grow at 20% to 40% annually to achieve our goal by 2030 or 2035. In 2025, we grew at 43% year-over-year. As a result, the annual growth rates required to achieve our goal are now 18% to 38%.

In 2025, we increased Adjusted EBITDA margin to 11%, up from 10.1% in 2024. We see a clear path to our target of 13.5% through: 1) fixed cost overhead leverage and 2) driving our company-wide advertising efficiency to mature market levels. We also see significant opportunities to keep improving unit economics, but as we achieve them, we expect to pass back many of these fundamental gains to customers, further differentiating our offering.

Our growth in 2025 was again driven by our three fundamental drivers: 1) continuously improving our customer offering, 2) increasing awareness, understanding, and trust, and 3) increasing inventory selection and other benefits of scale. In 2025, we made meaningful progress across each area. Below are a few examples.

5


1)We continue to improve our customer offering.

In 2025, we further integrated our technology and operations to deliver even better customer experiences. Below is an example of how we’re improving Customer Care with AI.

Our AI brain sits flexibly atop multiple leading-edge foundation models, while leveraging proprietary, real-time data from our home-built systems containing inventory information, finance terms, vehicle valuations, state, local, and Carvana-specific policies, labor optimization algorithms, and much more. Within Customer Care, it uses that deep context to serve up personalized responses that enable both AI agents and Advocates to deliver consistent, high-quality, personalized support.

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Customer Care tools powered by our AI brain have driven meaningful customer experience gains: more than 30% of car buyers and 60% of car sellers now complete the entire process without interacting with a Customer Advocate until their delivery or pickup. This growing subset of customers is higher converting and has a higher reported Net Promoter Score.

When customers do choose to interact with an Advocate, the same brain powers tools that help our team deliver efficient, personalized support. A new example is Heads Up, a proprietary tool that synthesizes the customer’s past and real-time actions in a simple interface to ensure Advocates are equipped with the most relevant and personalized information for each customer’s specific journey.

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Heads Up enhances customer experiences and operational performance by driving consistency and accelerating Advocate proficiency. Looking forward, we will continue to refine and enhance our customer-facing technology to make buying from or selling to Carvana as intuitive and convenient as possible.

2)We continue to increase awareness, understanding and trust.

In 2025, we invested more in advertising and launched new campaigns to expand our reach and educate customers. After more than a decade of building what we believe is the best way to buy or sell a car, there are still many people who are not familiar with Carvana, underscoring our opportunity.



6


Beyond advertising, word of mouth is a powerful and compounding driver of growth. A recent third party survey indicates that ~70%4 of Carvana car buyers were influenced by a friend or family member’s recommendation. Among those influenced, just under half said this recommendation was the primary driver of their choice. That same survey showed that roughly three quarters of Carvana customers recommended us to two or more people, with 7% recommending Carvana to ten or more people5.

High-quality, efficiently-deployed advertising campaigns have always been essential to brand building, but this data also underscores the importance of delivering great experiences to more and more customers over time. With more than 5 million customer transactions to date and more customer touchpoints every day, we are just getting started.

3)We continue to build selection and leverage benefits of scale.

In 2025, we continued to unlock the power of our infrastructure, growing our total number of inventory pools from 24 to 34. With more than 75,000 vehicles available on our website at year-end, we offer our broadest selection ever, making it more likely that we have the exact vehicle a customer is looking for.

By growing inventory across geographies we also put more cars closer to more customers, shortening average delivery times by a full day year-over-year and increasing the share of customers with access to as-soon-as same-day delivery.

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Each growth driver strengthens the others, creating a compounding cycle with scale. A great customer experience drives positive word of mouth, organic demand, and efficient acquisition, which supports broader selection, faster delivery, and lower per unit costs. The resulting gains can be passed back to further improve the customer experience, leading to further growth. These drivers fueled our growth in 2025, and we expect them to continue to fuel us as we march towards selling 3 million retail units and beyond.














4 “Carvana Consumer Survey Volume 13” conducted by Bespoke Market Intelligence October 2025. Electronic survey conducted over a large population (N = 10,000) to gather consumer feedback towards Carvana and competitive brands. Base: n=384 respondents who said that they purchased a car from Carvana, Question: “To what extent do a friend or family member’s recommendation of Carvana influence your decision to buy from Carvana?”
5 “Carvana Consumer Survey Volume 14” conducted by Bespoke Market Intelligence February 2026. Electronic survey conducted over a large population (N = 10,000) to gather consumer feedback towards Carvana and competitive brands. Base: n=647 respondents who said that they purchased a car from Carvana, Question: “Have you recommended the following to any people?”
7


Expanding Production Capacity

One of the key drivers of our growth to 3 million annual retail units sold is expanding production capacity. In 2025, we integrated 10 additional ADESA production locations, including one in Q4, bringing our total to 16 integrations since we began our rollout in Q2 2024.

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We now have fully built out annual capacity for approximately 1.5 million retail units, with real estate to support annual retail production of 3 million retail units.

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We plan to execute four key production strategies over time to drive to 3 million units and beyond: 1) increasing staffing at existing facilities, 2) integrating retail production lines at more ADESA facilities, 3) building new lines at ADESA facilities, and 4) eventually, building new greenfield production locations, with the latter being less of a priority in the near term.

In 2026, we plan to continue integrating existing ADESA sites with a target of 6 to 8 new integrations, while also beginning full buildouts at select ADESA locations. We currently expect ADESA full buildouts to cost an average of $30 to $35 million per site and to unlock an average of ~40k units of annual production capacity per site. We plan to start construction on the first full buildout sites in Q2 2026 and to launch production capabilities in early 2027.

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Looking forward we will continue investing in our infrastructure ahead of future growth. By building excess reconditioning capacity, we benefit from near-term operational flexibility while laying a clear foundation to support growth over the medium and long term.






8


Summary

2025 was another incredible year that can be summed up simply.

We rapidly grew units. We improved our offering. We passed value back to our customers in the form of lower interest rates, lower shipping fees, faster delivery, and broader selection. And while doing all that, we also improved our own financial performance.

That summary is basically the dream we started with. It’s something we’re extremely proud of.

But we are nowhere near satisfied.

The march continues,

Ernie Garcia, III, Chairman and CEO

Mark Jenkins, CFO


9


Appendix I:

GPU and SG&A Expense Detail

Year-over-year changes in components of Total GPU and Total SG&A Expense per Unit were driven by the factors outlined below.

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Additional Details

The year-over-year decrease in Retail GPU was primarily driven by higher non-vehicle costs, lower shipping fee revenue (resulting from more customers choosing cars closer to them, which benefits operations expenses), and higher industry-wide retail depreciation rates.

The year-over-year decrease in Wholesale Marketplace GPU was driven by two primary factors. First, growth in retail units sold significantly outpaced growth in wholesale marketplace units sold, leading to a mechanical per retail unit impact of ~$140 per retail unit sold. Second, as we expanded ADESA Clear nationwide, we shifted our wholesale marketplace unit mix into units sold by Carvana and away from units sold by third-parties. The majority of revenue and gross profit on marketplace units sold by Carvana is included in Wholesale Vehicle sales and gross profit, contributing to Wholesale Vehicle gross profit growth but leading to lower Wholesale Marketplace gross profit, other things being equal.

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Conference Call Details

Carvana will host a conference call today, February 18, 2026, at 5:30 p.m. EST (2:30 p.m. PST) to discuss financial results. To participate in the live call, analysts and investors should dial (833) 255-2830 or (412) 902-6715. A live audio webcast of the conference call along with supplemental financial information will also be accessible on the company's website at investors.carvana.com. Following the webcast, an archived version will also be available on the Investor Relations section of the company’s website. A telephonic replay of the conference call will be available until Wednesday, February 25, 2026, by dialing (877) 669-9658 or (412) 317-0088 and entering passcode 3177941#.

Forward Looking Statements

This letter contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements reflect Carvana’s current expectations and projections with respect to, among other things, its financial condition, results of operations, plans, objectives, strategy, future performance, and business. These statements may be preceded by, followed by or include the words "aim," "anticipate," "believe," "estimate," "expect," "forecast," "intend," "likely," "outlook," "plan," "potential," "project," "projection," "seek," "can," "could," "may," "should," "would," "will," the negatives thereof and other words and terms of similar meaning.

Forward-looking statements include all statements that are not historical facts, including expectations regarding our operational and efficiency initiatives and gains; our strategy, expected gross profit per unit; forecasted results, including forecasted Adjusted EBITDA and forecasted retail units sold; potential infrastructure capacity utilization; efficiency gains and opportunities to improve our results, including opportunities to increase our margins and reduce our expenses, trends or expectations regarding inventory, expected customer patterns and demand; expectations on anticipated timing of increased production output; potential benefits from and expectations regarding new technology, including the use of artificial intelligence; anticipated benefits of integrations, including relating to ADESA; our long-term financial goals; fiscal year 2026 budget items; unexpected macroeconomic conditions, including geopolitical, trade, and regulatory uncertainty and commodity prices; and growth opportunities. Such forward-looking statements are subject to various risks and uncertainties.

Accordingly, there are or will be important factors that could cause actual outcomes or results to differ materially from those indicated in these statements. Among these factors are risks related to: the larger automotive ecosystem, including consumer demand, global supply chain challenges, and other macroeconomic issues (including with respect to the impact of tariffs on our business); our ability to utilize our available infrastructure capacity and realize the expected benefits therefrom, including increased margins and lower expenses; the benefits from our initiatives relating to ADESA; our ability to scale up our business; our ability to raise additional capital and our substantial indebtedness; our ability to effectively manage our rapid growth; our ability to maintain customer service quality and reputational integrity and enhance our brand; the seasonal and other fluctuations in our quarterly and annual operating results; our relationship with DriveTime and its affiliates; the highly competitive industry in which we participate, which among other consequences, could impact our long-term growth opportunities; the changes in prices of new and used vehicles; our ability to acquire and expeditiously sell desirable inventory; our ability to grow complementary product and service offerings; our use of artificial intelligence technology; and the other risks identified under the “Risk Factors” section in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2025.

There is no assurance that any forward-looking statements will materialize. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward-looking statements, which reflect expectations only as of this date. Carvana does not undertake any obligation to publicly update or review any forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future developments, or otherwise.

Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures

As appropriate, we supplement our results of operations determined in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) with certain non-GAAP financial measurements that are used by management, and which we believe are useful to investors, as supplemental operational measurements to evaluate our financial performance. These measurements should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for reported GAAP results because they may include or exclude certain items as compared to similar GAAP-based measurements, and such measurements may not be comparable to similarly-titled measurements reported by other companies. Rather, these measurements should be considered as an additional way of viewing aspects of our operations that provide a more complete understanding of our business. We strongly encourage investors to review our consolidated financial statements included in publicly filed reports in their entirety and not rely solely on any one, single financial measurement or communication.

Reconciliations of our non-GAAP measurements to their most directly comparable GAAP-based financial measurements are included at the end of this letter.

Investor Relations Contact Information: Mike McKeever, investors@carvana.com
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CARVANA CO. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(In millions, except number of shares, which are reflected in thousands, and par values)
December 31,
20252024
ASSETS
Current assets:
Cash and cash equivalents $2,327 $1,716 
Restricted cash102 44 
Accounts receivable, net245 303 
Finance receivables held for sale, net813 612 
Vehicle inventory2,408 1,608 
Beneficial interests in securitizations486 464 
Other current assets, including $5 and $4, respectively, due from related parties
168 122 
Total current assets6,549 4,869 
Property and equipment, net2,814 2,773 
Operating lease right-of-use assets, including $6 and $13, respectively, from leases with related parties
443 440 
Intangible assets, net47 34 
Goodwill10 — 
Deferred tax assets3,064 
Other assets
274 365 
Total assets$13,201 $8,484 
LIABILITIES & STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIT)
Current liabilities:
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities, including $21 and $17, respectively, due to related parties
$1,100 $856 
Short-term revolving facilities58 67 
Current portion of long-term debt227 309 
Other current liabilities, including $31 and $16, respectively, due to related parties
134 106 
Total current liabilities1,519 1,338 
Long-term debt, excluding current portion4,830 5,256 
Operating lease liabilities, excluding current portion, including $5 and $10, respectively, from leases with related parties
406 414 
Tax receivable agreement liability, including $1,721 and $48, respectively, due to related parties
2,228 65 
Other liabilities15 36 
Total liabilities8,998 7,109 
Commitments and contingencies
Stockholders' equity:
Preferred stock, $0.01 par value - 50,000 shares authorized; none issued and outstanding as of each of December 31, 2025 and 2024
— — 
Class A common stock, $0.001 par value - 500,000 shares authorized, 142,230 and 133,271 shares issued and outstanding as of December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively
— — 
Class B common stock, $0.001 par value - 125,000 shares authorized, 76,109 and 79,119 shares issued and outstanding as of December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively
— — 
Additional paid-in capital
3,450 2,676 
Accumulated deficit(9)(1,416)
Total stockholders' equity attributable to Carvana Co.3,441 1,260 
Non-controlling interests762 115 
Total stockholders' equity4,203 1,375 
Total liabilities & stockholders' equity$13,201 $8,484 
13


CARVANA CO. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
(In millions, except number of shares, which are reflected in thousands, and per share amounts)

Three Months Ended December 31,Years Ended December 31,
2025202420252024
(unaudited)
Sales and operating revenues:
Retail vehicle sales, net$4,156 $2,552 $14,537 $9,681 
Wholesale sales and revenues, including $11, $7, $39, and $28, respectively, from related parties
988 678 4,052 2,841 
Other sales and revenues, including $99, $59, $347, and $200, respectively, from related parties
459 317 1,733 1,151 
Net sales and operating revenues5,603 3,547 20,322 13,673 
Cost of sales, including $4, $2, $14, and $9, respectively, to related parties
4,552 2,784 16,130 10,797 
Gross profit1,051 763 4,192 2,876 
Selling, general and administrative expenses, including $8, $9, $32, and $31, respectively, to related parties
627 494 2,308 1,874 
Other operating expense, net— 12 
Operating income
424 260 1,881 990 
Interest expense, net
98 148 505 651 
Loss on debt extinguishment
— 16 12 
Other expense (income), net
2,158 (50)2,250 (73)
Net (loss) income before income taxes
(1,832)156 (890)400 
Income tax benefit
(2,783)(3)(2,785)(4)
Net income
951 159 1,895 404 
Net income attributable to non-controlling interests
94 80 488 194 
Net income attributable to Carvana Co.
857 79 1,407 210 
Net income attributable to Class A common stockholders
$857 $79 $1,407 $210 
Net earnings per share of Class A common stock - basic
$6.05 $0.61 $10.22 $1.72 
Net earnings per share of Class A common stock - diluted
$4.22 $0.56 $8.45 $1.59 
Weighted-average shares of Class A common stock outstanding - basic
141,749 130,164 137,634 122,344 
Weighted-average shares of Class A common stock outstanding - diluted225,522 139,859 224,277 132,206 


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CARVANA CO. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(In millions)
Years Ended December 31,
202520242023
Cash Flows from Operating Activities:
Net income$1,895 $404 $150 
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities:
     Depreciation and amortization expense275 305 352 
     Equity-based compensation expense96 91 73 
     Deferred income taxes(2,784)(4)
     Tax receivable agreement expense2,200 67 14 
     Loss on disposal of property and equipment12 
     Loss (Gain) on debt extinguishment
16 12 (878)
     Payment-in-kind interest expense182 458 184 
     Provision for bad debt and valuation allowance15 27 38 
    Amortization of debt issuance costs10 15 24 
Unrealized loss (gain) on warrants to acquire common stock64 (115)(3)
     Unrealized gain on beneficial interests in securitizations(12)(23)(14)
Changes in finance receivable related assets:
Originations of finance receivables(12,807)(8,329)(6,041)
Proceeds from sale of finance receivables, net13,315 8,805 6,594 
Gain on loan sales(1,193)(755)(434)
Principal payments received on finance receivables held for sale241 188 186 
Other changes in assets and liabilities:
     Vehicle inventory(734)(455)711 
     Accounts receivable49 (47)(22)
     Other assets(4)12 43 
     Accounts payable and accrued liabilities235 260 (166)
     Operating lease right-of-use assets(3)15 81 
     Operating lease liabilities(2)(10)(71)
     Other liabilities(21)(21)(22)
Net cash provided by operating activities1,036 918 803 
Cash Flows from Investing Activities:
Purchases of property and equipment(147)(91)(87)
Proceeds from disposal of property and equipment11 72 
Payments for acquisitions, net of cash acquired(160)— (7)
Principal payments received on and proceeds from sale of beneficial interests75 67 53 
Net cash (used in) provided by investing activities(230)(13)31 
Cash Flows from Financing Activities:
Proceeds from short-term revolving facilities4,018 3,096 6,709 
Payments on short-term revolving facilities(4,026)(3,697)(7,575)
Proceeds from issuance of long-term debt175 191 132 
Payments on long-term debt(820)(577)(503)
Payments of debt issuance costs(17)(4)(69)
Payments of tax made on behalf of non-controlling members(4)— — 
Net proceeds from issuance of Class A common stock and LLC Units536 1,264 453 
Tax receivable agreement payments(17)— — 
Proceeds from equity-based compensation plans48 — 
Tax withholdings related to restricted stock units
(30)(19)(15)
Net cash (used in) provided by financing activities(137)261 (868)
Net increase (decrease) in cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash669 1,166 (34)
Cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash at beginning of period1,760 594 628 
Cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash at end of period$2,429 $1,760 $594 
15


CARVANA CO. AND SUBSIDIARIES
OUTSTANDING SHARES AND LLC UNITS
(In thousands)

The following table presents potentially dilutive securities, as of the end of the period, excluded from the computations of diluted net earnings per share of Class A common stock for the three months and years ended December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively:

Three Months Ended December 31,Years Ended December 31,
2025202420252024
(unaudited)
Options (1)
— 97 — 365 
Restricted Stock Units and Awards (1)
11 
Class A Units (2)
— 79,402 — 83,509 
Class B Units (2)
— 1,662 — 1,763 
(1) Represents number of instruments outstanding at the end of the period that were evaluated under the treasury stock method for potentially dilutive effects and were determined to be anti-dilutive.
(2) Represents the weighted-average as-converted LLC units that were evaluated under the if-converted method for potentially dilutive effects and were determined to be anti-dilutive.
16


CARVANA CO. AND SUBSIDIARIES
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
(Unaudited)

Three Months Ended December 31,Years Ended
December 31,
20252024Change20252024Change
(dollars in millions, except per unit amounts)(dollars in millions, except per unit amounts)
Net sales and operating revenues:
Retail vehicle sales, net$4,156 $2,552 62.9 %$14,537 $9,681 50.2 %
Wholesale sales and revenues (1)
988 678 45.7 %4,052 2,841 42.6 %
Other sales and revenues (2)
459 317 44.8 %1,733 1,151 50.6 %
Total net sales and operating revenues$5,603 $3,547 58.0 %$20,322 $13,673 48.6 %
Gross profit:
Retail vehicle gross profit
$489 $369 32.5 %$1,978 $1,379 43.4 %
Wholesale gross profit (1)
103 77 33.8 %481 346 39.0 %
Other gross profit (2)
459 317 44.8 %1,733 1,151 50.6 %
Total gross profit$1,051 $763 37.7 %$4,192 $2,876 45.8 %
Unit sales information:
Retail vehicle unit sales163,522 114,379 43.0 %596,641 416,348 43.3 %
Wholesale vehicle unit sales81,050 48,770 66.2 %297,643 199,780 49.0 %
Per unit revenue:
Retail vehicles$25,416 $22,312 13.9 %$24,365 $23,252 4.8 %
Wholesale vehicles (3)
$9,636 $9,371 2.8 %$10,519 $9,611 9.4 %
Per retail unit gross profit:
Retail vehicle gross profit
$2,990 $3,226 (7.3)%$3,315 $3,312 0.1 %
Wholesale gross profit630 674 (6.5)%806 831 (3.0)%
Other gross profit2,807 2,771 1.3 %2,905 2,765 5.1 %
Total gross profit$6,427 $6,671 (3.7)%$7,026 $6,908 1.7 %
Per wholesale unit gross profit:
Wholesale vehicle gross profit (4)
$938 $902 4.0 %$1,015 $996 1.9 %
Wholesale marketplace:
Wholesale marketplace units transacted
238,366 231,659 2.9 %1,006,551 955,802 5.3 %
Wholesale marketplace revenues$207 $221 (6.3)%$921 $921 — %
Wholesale marketplace gross profit (5)
$27 $33 (18.2)%$179 $147 21.8 %
(1) Includes $11, $7, $39, and $28, respectively, of wholesale sales and revenues from related parties.
(2) Includes $99, $59, $347, and $200, respectively, of other sales and revenues from related parties.
(3) Excludes wholesale marketplace revenues and wholesale marketplace units transacted.
(4) Excludes wholesale marketplace gross profit and wholesale marketplace units transacted.
(5) Includes $10, $19, $51 and $86, respectively, of depreciation and amortization expense.

17


CARVANA CO. AND SUBSIDIARIES
COMPONENTS OF SG&A
(Unaudited)
Three Months Ended
Dec 31, 2024Mar 31, 2025Jun 30, 2025Sep 30, 2025Dec 31, 2025
(in millions)
Compensation and benefits (1)
$184 $199 $201 $209 $221 
Advertising64 72 84 102 105 
Market occupancy (2)
16 16 16 17 19 
Logistics (3)
32 37 38 43 44 
Other (4)
198 211 212 224 238 
Total$494 $535 $551 $595 $627 
(1) Compensation and benefits includes all payroll and related costs, including benefits, payroll taxes, and equity-based compensation, except those related to preparing vehicles for sale, which are included in cost of sales, and those related to the development of software products for internal use, which are capitalized to software and depreciated over the estimated useful lives of the related assets.
(2) Market occupancy costs includes occupancy costs of our vending machine and hubs. It excludes occupancy costs related to reconditioning vehicles which are included in cost of sales and the portion related to corporate occupancy which are included in other costs.
(3) Logistics includes fuel, maintenance and depreciation related to operating our own transportation fleet, and third-party transportation fees, except the portion related to inbound transportation, which is included in cost of sales.
(4) Other costs include all other selling, general and administrative expenses such as IT expenses, corporate occupancy, professional services and insurance, limited warranty, and title and registration.

18


CARVANA CO. AND SUBSIDIARIES
LIQUIDITY RESOURCES
(Unaudited)

We had the following committed liquidity resources, secured debt capacity, and other unpledged assets available as of December 31, 2025 and 2024:

December 31,
20252024
(in millions)
Cash and cash equivalents$2,327 $1,716 
Availability under short-term revolving facilities (1)
2,052 1,879 
Committed liquidity resources available$4,379 $3,595 
Super senior debt capacity (2)
1,500 1,500 
Pari passu senior debt capacity (2)
750 485 
Unpledged beneficial interests in securitizations (3)
110 110 
Total liquidity resources (4)
$6,739 $5,690 
(1) Availability under short-term revolving facilities is the available amount we can borrow under the Floor Plan Facility and Finance Receivable Facilities based on the value of pledgeable vehicle inventory and finance receivables on our balance sheet on the period end date. Availability under short-term revolving facilities is distinct from the total commitment amount of these facilities because it represents the amount we are able to borrow as of period end, rather than committed future amounts that could be borrowed to finance future additional assets.
(2) Super senior debt capacity and pari passu senior debt capacity represents basket capacity to incur additional debt that could be senior or pari passu in lien priority as to the collateral securing the obligations under the Senior Secured Notes, subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the indentures governing the Senior Secured Notes. The availability of such additional sources depends on many factors and there can be no assurance that financing alternatives will be available to us in the future.
(3) Unpledged beneficial interests in securitizations includes retained beneficial interests in securitizations that have not been previously pledged or sold. We historically have financed the majority of our retained beneficial interests in securitizations and expect to continue to do so in the future.
(4) Our total liquidity potential is composed of cash and cash equivalents, availability under existing credit facilities, additional capacity under the indentures governing our Senior Secured Notes, which allow us to incur additional debt that can be senior or pari passu in lien priority as to the collateral securing the obligations under the Senior Secured Notes, and additional unpledged securities that can be financed using traditional asset-based financing sources.
19


CARVANA CO. AND SUBSIDIARIES
RECONCILIATION OF GAAP TO NON-GAAP FINANCIAL MEASURES
(Unaudited)

Adjusted EBITDA; Adjusted EBITDA margin; Gross profit, non-GAAP; Retail gross profit, non-GAAP; Wholesale gross profit, non-GAAP; Wholesale vehicle gross profit, non-GAAP; Wholesale marketplace gross profit, non-GAAP; Other gross profit, non-GAAP; Total gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP; Retail gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP; Wholesale gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP; Wholesale vehicle gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP; Wholesale marketplace gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP; Other gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP; SG&A expenses, non-GAAP; and Total SG&A expenses per retail unit, non-GAAP

The above measures are supplemental measures of operating performance that do not represent and should not be considered an alternative to net income (loss), gross profit, or SG&A expenses, as determined by GAAP.

Adjusted EBITDA is defined as net income (loss) plus (minus) income tax (benefit) provision, interest expense, net, other operating expense, net, other expense (income), net, depreciation and amortization expense in cost of sales and SG&A expenses, share-based compensation expense in cost of sales and SG&A expenses, goodwill impairment, and loss (gain) on debt extinguishment, minus revenue related to our Warrants. Adjusted EBITDA margin is Adjusted EBITDA as a percentage of total revenues.

Gross profit, non-GAAP, Retail gross profit, non-GAAP, Wholesale gross profit, non-GAAP, Wholesale vehicle gross profit, non-GAAP, Wholesale marketplace gross profit, non-GAAP, and Other gross profit, non-GAAP are defined as the respective GAAP gross profits plus depreciation and amortization expense in cost of sales, share-based compensation expense in cost of sales, and restructuring expense in cost of sales, minus revenue related to our Root Warrants. Total gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP, Retail gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP, Wholesale gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP, Wholesale vehicle gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP, Wholesale marketplace gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP, and Other gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP are the respective gross profits, non-GAAP divided by retail vehicle unit sales.

SG&A expenses, non-GAAP is defined as GAAP SG&A expenses minus depreciation and amortization expense in SG&A expenses, share-based compensation expense in SG&A expenses, and restructuring expense in SG&A expenses. Total SG&A expenses per retail unit, non-GAAP is SG&A expenses, non-GAAP divided by retail vehicle unit sales.

We use these non-GAAP measures to measure the operating performance of our business as a whole and relative to our total revenues and retail vehicle unit sales. We believe that these metrics are useful measures to us and to our investors because they exclude certain financial, capital structure, and non-cash items that we do not believe directly reflect our core operations and may not be indicative of our recurring operations, in part because they may vary widely across time and within our industry independent of the performance of our core operations. We believe that excluding these items enables us to more effectively evaluate our performance period-over-period and relative to our competitors. These non-GAAP measures may not be comparable to similarly titled measures provided by other companies due to potential differences in methods of calculations.

A reconciliation of Adjusted EBITDA to net income (loss), Gross profit, non-GAAP to gross profit, Retail gross profit, non-GAAP to retail gross profit, Wholesale gross profit, non-GAAP to wholesale gross profit, Wholesale vehicle gross profit, non-GAAP to wholesale vehicle gross profit, Wholesale marketplace gross profit, non-GAAP to wholesale marketplace gross profit, Other gross profit, non-GAAP to other gross profit, and SG&A expenses, non-GAAP to SG&A expenses, which are the most directly comparable GAAP measures, and calculations of Adjusted EBITDA margin, Total gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP, Retail gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP, Wholesale gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP, Wholesale vehicle gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP, Wholesale marketplace gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP, Other gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP, and Total SG&A expenses per retail unit, non-GAAP is as follows:



20


Three Months Ended December 31,
Years Ended December 31,
(dollars in millions)
2024202520242025
Net income
$159 $951 $404 $1,895 
Income tax benefit
(3)(2,783)(4)(2,785)
Interest expense, net
148 98 651 505 
Other expense (income), net
(50)2,158 (73)2,250 
Loss on debt extinguishment
— 12 16 
Operating income
$260 $424 $990 $1,881 
Other operating expense, net
— 12 
Depreciation and amortization expense in cost of sales33 26 140 111 
Depreciation and amortization expense in SG&A expenses
41 43 165 164 
Share-based compensation expense in cost of sales— 
Share-based compensation expense in SG&A expenses
21 22 91 96 
Warrant revenue
(5)(5)(21)(21)
Adjusted EBITDA$359 $511 $1,378 $2,237 
Total revenues$3,547 $5,603 $13,673 $20,322 
Net income margin
4.5 %17.0 %3.0 %9.3 %
Adjusted EBITDA margin10.1 %9.1 %10.1 %11.0 %
Gross profit$763 $1,051 $2,876 $4,192 
Depreciation and amortization expense in cost of sales33 26 140 111 
Share-based compensation expense in cost of sales— 
Warrant revenue
(5)(5)(21)(21)
Gross profit, non-GAAP$791 $1,073 $2,996 $4,285 
Retail vehicle unit sales114,379 163,522 416,348 596,641 
Total gross profit per retail unit$6,671 $6,427 $6,908 $7,026 
Total gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP$6,916 $6,562 $7,196 $7,182 

21


Three Months Ended December 31,
(dollars in millions, except per unit amounts)20242025
Retail gross profit$369 $489 
Depreciation and amortization expense in cost of sales12 13 
Share-based compensation expense in cost of sales— 
Retail gross profit, non-GAAP$381 $503 
Retail vehicle unit sales114,379 163,522 
Retail gross profit per retail unit$3,226 $2,990 
Retail gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP$3,331 $3,076 
Wholesale vehicle gross profit$44 $76 
Depreciation and amortization expense in cost of sales
Wholesale vehicle gross profit, non-GAAP$46 $79 
Retail vehicle unit sales114,379 163,522 
Wholesale vehicle gross profit per retail unit$385 $465 
Wholesale vehicle gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP$402 $483 
Wholesale marketplace gross profit$33 $27 
Depreciation and amortization expense in cost of sales19 10 
Wholesale marketplace gross profit, non-GAAP$52 $37 
Retail vehicle unit sales114,379 163,522 
Wholesale marketplace gross profit per retail unit$289 $165 
Wholesale marketplace gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP$455 $226 
Other gross profit$317 $459 
Warrant revenue
(5)(5)
Other gross profit, non-GAAP$312 $454 
Retail vehicle unit sales114,379 163,522 
Other gross profit per retail unit$2,771 $2,807 
Other gross profit per retail unit, non-GAAP$2,728 $2,777 
22


Three Months Ended December 31,
(dollars in millions, except per unit amounts)
20242025
SG&A expenses
$494 $627 
Depreciation and amortization expense in SG&A expenses
41 43 
Share-based compensation expense in SG&A expenses
21 22 
SG&A expenses, non-GAAP
$432 $562 
Retail vehicle unit sales114,379 163,522 
Total SG&A expenses per retail unit
$4,319 $3,834 
Total SG&A expenses per retail unit, non-GAAP
$3,777 $3,437 

23


Years Ended December 31,
(dollars in millions, except per unit amounts)2014201520162017201820192020202120222023
Net income (loss)
$(15)$(37)$(93)$(164)$(255)$(365)$(462)$(287)$(2,894)$150 
Income tax provision— — — — — — — 25 
Interest expense, net
— 25 81 131 176 486 632 
Other operating expense, net
— — — 10 14 
Other (income) expense, net
— — — — — (11)(3)56 (9)
Depreciation and amortization expense in cost of sales— — — — — — 10 24 114 169 
Depreciation and amortization expense in SG&A expenses
11 24 41 74 105 200 183 
Share-based compensation expense in cost of sales— — — — — 16 — 
Share-based compensation expense in SG&A expenses
— 21 30 25 39 69 73 
Goodwill impairment— — — — — — — — 847 — 
Warrant revenue
— — — — — — — — (7)(21)
Gain on debt extinguishment
— — — — — — — — — (878)
Restructuring (1)
— — — — — — — — 57 
Adjusted EBITDA$(13)$(32)$(84)$(138)$(180)$(204)$(222)$64 $(1,041)$339 
Total revenues$42 $130 $365 $859 $1,955 $3,940 $5,587 $12,814 $13,604 $10,771 
Net loss margin
(36.6)%(28.2)%(25.5)%(19.1)%(13.0)%(9.3)%(8.3)%(2.2)%(21.3)%1.4 %
Adjusted EBITDA margin(31.0)%(24.6)%(23.0)%(16.1)%(9.2)%(5.2)%(4.0)%0.5 %(7.7)%3.1 %
(1) Restructuring includes costs related to our May 2022 and November 2022 reductions in force, as well as lease termination and other restructuring expenses.
24