
Uber posted a strong third quarter, with revenue of approximately $13.5 billion, up about 20 % year-over-year, and gross bookings reaching roughly $49.7 billion, growing around 21 %. Trips on its platform rose 22 % to about 3.5 billion, reflecting gains across both ride-hailing and delivery operations.
On the earnings front, the company reported adjusted EBITDA of about $2.3 billion, up 33 % year-over-year — a sign that Uber’s underlying business is scaling. Net income was markedly higher as well, in part due to a large tax-valuation benefit of around $4.9 billion.
Despite the headline beat, Uber’s stock slipped after the report. Market reaction suggests some investors are cautious: while growth is impressive, the company signalled that margins may face pressure going forward and that some of the profit boost this quarter came from one-time items rather than pure operating improvement.
Looking ahead, Uber is guiding for gross bookings in the range of about $52.3 billion to $53.8 billion for Q4 2025, and adjusted EBITDA of approximately $2.41 billion to $2.51 billion implying growth of 17-21 % in bookings and roughly 31-36 % in adjusted EBITDA.
What this quarter underscores is that Uber continues to expand its core platform, more rides, more deliveries, more trips per user. But the narrative is shifting: the company is also investing heavily in longer-horizon bets such as autonomous vehicles and local commerce, and those initiatives mean that while growth is intact, the path to high-margin profitability remains complex.
Uber’s Q3 shows momentum and scale, yet the market is reminding us that scale alone isn’t enough — execution across new business lines and clarity on margins will be key.
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