Figma has filed its S-1 and, just like one of its live-collab canvases, the document shows multiple growth layers snapping neatly into place. In the first quarter of 2025 the browser-native design platform booked $228 million in revenue, up 46 percent year-on-year, and turned that into $45 million in net profit—a rarity for a SaaS company still in hyper-growth mode. The public float will arrive barely 18 months after U.S. and EU regulators shredded Adobe’s proposed $20 billion takeover, forcing CEO Dylan Field to prove Figma can thrive solo.
Figma last changed hands in a 2024 tender offer at $12.5 billion; bankers working the deal tell TechBooky the IPO range could imply a fully diluted valuation of $18-to-$22 billion, putting the firm head-to-head with Atlassian and Canva on revenue multiples. Early chatter says the ticker will list on the NASDAQ before Thanksgiving, giving U.S. investors one of the year’s showcase tech debuts and offering European funds a pure-play cloud-collaboration stock just as remote design work cements itself across London, Berlin and Oslo agencies.
Key S-1 Nuggets
- Gross margin: 85 percent—enterprise-grade even before economies of scale from 2025’s AWS Graviton migration.
- Net dollar retention: 139 percent, signalling land-and-expand motion that rivals Snowflake’s early days.
- Customers >$100 K ARR: 785, including Apple, Netflix, Volkswagen and the UK Government Digital Service.
- Cash on hand: $1.1 billion, meaning IPO proceeds will likely fund M&A (think FigJam-adjacent whiteboard tools) rather than cover burn.
Adobe still positions XD as a “Creative Cloud companion,” but Figma’s real rival is now Canva, whose new DevMode targets the same designer-to-developer hand-off. Atlassian’s Confluence whiteboards and Miro’s visual boards nibble at FigJam. Yet Figma’s browser-first stack, plug-in marketplace and AI-powered “Make Designs” tool—capable of turning text prompts into polished components—keep it steps ahead on workflow gravity.
Sequoia Capital, Index Ventures, Greylock, a16z and Kleiner Perkins together own roughly 38 percent; staff options account for another 22 percent. None has signalled a major sell-down at the float—a show of confidence that could steady pricing if market volatility re-emerges.
Figma’s filing confirms what product teams sensed: profitability is no longer a someday promise but a present-day feature. If IPO demand holds, the company will have leap-frogged the Adobe escape hatch and landed on its own public runway—ready to fund the next wave of real-time, AI-assisted design tools for creatives from San Francisco to Stockholm, Lagos to London.
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