EVER November 3, 2025

EverQuote Q3 2025 Earnings Call - Record Growth and Strategic Shift to AI-Powered Multi-Product Growth Partner

Summary

EverQuote reported record Q3 2025 results, with revenues up 20% year-over-year to $173.9 million, driven by strong enterprise carrier spending and advances in their AI-driven SmartCampaigns platform. CEO Jamie Mendal emphasized the company's evolution from a lead generation vendor to a multi-product growth solutions partner, embedding AI technology deeply in its marketplace to improve ad spend efficiency and expand product offerings to carriers and agents. The company is confident in achieving its target of $1 billion in annual revenue within two to three years through organic growth and continued investment in new traffic channels such as social, video, and AI search. Despite a competitive advertising environment, EverQuote demonstrated disciplined expense management and expanded adjusted EBITDA margin to 14.4%.

Key Takeaways

  • EverQuote delivered record Q3 2025 revenues of $173.9 million, a 20% year-over-year increase.
  • Enterprise carrier spend grew 27% year over year, driving top-line growth.
  • Auto insurance vertical revenue rose 21%, home and renters insurance increased 15%.
  • Launched SmartCampaigns 3.0, an AI bidding product improving ad spend efficiency by about 7% for early adopters.
  • 80% of top 25 carrier partners remain below peak spend, signaling room for further growth.
  • Over 35% of local agent customers use multiple EverQuote products, indicating expanding product adoption.
  • Aggressive investments in new traffic channels (social, video, connected TV) and AI search expected to pressure margins short term.
  • Adjusted EBITDA hit a record $25.1 million with margin expansion to 14.4%, significantly outpacing revenue growth.
  • Guidance for Q4 2025 calls for $174-$180 million in revenue, 7% VMD growth, adjusted EBITDA of $21-$23 million, reflecting continued growth with some margin pressure.
  • Company aims for $1 billion annual revenue organically within 2-3 years, maintaining target of 20% annual revenue growth and 20% adjusted EBITDA margin (Rule of 40).
  • Ongoing investments in AI technologies are automating bidding, campaign management, and call center functions to drive efficiency.
  • EverQuote repurchased 900,000 shares for $21 million, reducing shares by 2% without impacting liquidity.
  • Carrier underwriting profitability remains healthy with elevated consumer shopping; soft market cycles expected to persist for years.
  • California market ramping steadily but not proportional to its size; expected to grow meaningfully in 2026.
  • The company controls bidding technology and campaign efficiency, but advertising cost environment is externally driven and can impact variable marketing margin.

Full Transcript

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. My name is Colby, and I’ll be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome you to the EverQuote Q3 2025 earnings call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise, and after the speakers are marked, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you’d like to ask a question at that time, please press star then the number one on your telephone keypad. If you’d like to withdraw your question at any time, please press star one again. I’ll now turn the call over to Brinlea Johnson.

Brinlea Johnson, Investor Relations, EverQuote: Thank you. Good afternoon, and welcome to EverQuote’s third quarter 2025 earnings call. We’ll be discussing the results announced in our press release issued today after the market close. With me on the call this afternoon are Jamie Mendal, EverQuote’s Chief Executive Officer, and Joseph Sanborn, EverQuote’s Chief Financial Officer. During the call, we will make statements related to our business that may be considered forward-looking statements under federal securities laws, including statements concerning our financial guidance for the fourth quarter of 2025. Forward-looking statements may be identified with words and phrases such as expect, believe, intend, anticipate, plan, may, upcoming, and similar words and phrases. These statements reflect our views only as of today and should not be considered our views as of any subsequent date. We specifically disclaim any obligation to update or revise these forward-looking statements except as required by law.

Forward-looking statements are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties that could cause the actual results to differ materially from our expectations. For discussion of those risks and uncertainties, please refer to our SEC filings, including our annual report on Form 10-K and our quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, on file with the Securities and Exchange Commission and available on the investor relations section of our website. Finally, during the course of today’s call, we refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures, which we believe are helpful to investors. A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP measures was included in the press release we issued after the close of market today, which is available on the investor relations section of our website. With that, I’ll turn it over to Jamie.

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Thank you, Brinlea, and thank you all for joining us today. We achieved record top and bottom-line performance in Q3. Our team continues to help carriers and agents drive profitable policy growth amidst a healthy underwriting environment. We’re making steady progress toward our vision of becoming the number one growth partner to P&C insurance providers by delivering, one, better-performing referrals; two, bigger traffic scale; and three, a broader suite of products and services. As we innovate new products, release features, and further embed AI into our marketplace, we are fast-evolving from a lead-gen vendor to a growth solutions partner for our customers. We continue to partner more closely with carriers and differentiate our marketplace through SmartCampaigns, our AI bidding product. In Q3, we launched SmartCampaigns 3.0, which leverages our latest model to deliver better performance than our 2.0 version.

For example, a customer who recently migrated from 2.0 to 3.0 saw a 7% improvement in ad spend efficiency, an early indication that the new model is materially improved. When customers adopt SmartCampaigns and experience these types of performance improvements, they often shift more budget to EverQuote. As we secure more budget, we also gain more data, and as a consequence, our AI-driven systems can further improve campaign performance. As evidence of this flywheel working, in Q3, we were notified by a major national carrier that we have become their number one customer acquisition partner in our channel for the first time. Turning to our local agent customers, we continue making progress in our evolution from a lead vendor to a one-stop growth partner as we roll out and gain adoption of additional products and services to help agents grow.

As of October, over 35% of our local agent customers are using more than one of EverQuote’s four agent products, which demonstrates broadening adoption but also ample room for continued growth through product expansion within our existing customer base. Our consumer acquisition teams continued executing well in Q3 despite elevated competitive pressure in the insurance advertising landscape. In Q4, we have begun to ramp investments and scale new traffic channels and programs to support future growth. Since our IPO in 2018, EverQuote has committed to growing 20% and expanding adjusted EBITDA margin by 100-150 basis points per year on average. Over the six-year period through 2024, we delivered as promised with a 21% revenue CAGR and an average of over 200 basis points of margin improvement per year. As we approach the end of the year, we have confidence that we will deliver once again in 2025.

Now, we have set our sights on reaching a billion dollars of annual revenue in the next two to three years while transforming into a multi-product, AI-powered, profitable growth solutions provider for carriers and agents. Consistent with our track record of saying what we will do and doing what we say, we look forward to updating you on our progress as we drive full steam ahead into 2026. I’ll now turn the call over to Joseph to discuss our financial results.

Joseph Sanborn, Chief Financial Officer, EverQuote: Thank you, Jamie, and thank you all for joining. Today, I will be discussing our financial results for the third quarter of 2025, as well as our guidance for the fourth quarter of this year. We delivered record results in the third quarter, achieving new quarterly highs for revenue, variable marketing dollars or VMD, adjusted EBITDA, and net income. In addition, we continued to enhance our operating performance and drove expanding levels of profitability, as reflected by our record adjusted EBITDA margin. Total revenues in the third quarter grew 20% year over year to a record $173.9 million. Revenue growth was primarily driven by stronger enterprise carrier spend, which was up over 27% from the comparable period last year. Revenue from our auto insurance vertical increased to $157.6 million in Q3, up over 21% year over year.

Revenue from our home and renters insurance vertical increased to $16.3 million in Q3, up 15% year over year. VMD increased to a record $50.1 million in the third quarter, up 14% from the prior year period. Variable marketing margin, or VMM, was 28.8% for the quarter. Turning to operating expenses and the bottom line. As we scale and drive top-line growth, we continue to expand operating leverage in our business through disciplined expense management and by utilizing AI and other technology investments to deliver incremental efficiency. In the third quarter, we grew net income to a record $18.9 million, up from $11.6 million in the prior year period. Q3 adjusted EBITDA increased to a record $25.1 million, representing a 33% increase year over year and significantly outpacing the strong revenue growth we achieved during the same period. Adjusted EBITDA margin expanded to 14.4%.

Cash operating expenses, which excludes advertising spend and certain non-cash and other one-time charges, were $25.1 million in Q3. As expected, this was up from the previous quarter by approximately $1.5 million for planned investments in our AI and technology capabilities, but effectively flat on a year-over-year basis. We reported operating cash flow of $19.8 million for the third quarter. To note, temporary timing differences in working capital impact our cash conversion from adjusted EBITDA compared to prior quarters. During the quarter, we repurchased 900,000 shares of our Class A common stock for $21 million from Leake Ventures, which is an entity affiliated with Funds Advised by David Blunden, EverQuote’s chairman and co-founder. We believe this was an accretive use of capital, which enabled us to efficiently execute a portion of our recently announced $50 million share buyback program.

This transaction approach reduced shares outstanding by 2% in a manner that did not adversely impact liquidity in EverQuote’s public float. This repurchase reiterates our confidence in EverQuote’s ability to generate long-term sustainable growth and free cash flow while maintaining a strong balance sheet. We ended the period with no debt and cash and cash equivalents of $146 million. We continue to operate in a favorable environment where carriers are broadly enjoying healthy underwriting margins and consumer shopping activity remains elevated. We expect these conditions to persist for the foreseeable future. Of note, approximately 80% of our top 25 historical carrier partners were below peak quarterly spend in our marketplace in Q3, reflecting ample room for additional growth. Now, turning to guidance for the fourth quarter of 2025, we expect revenue to be between $174 million and $180 million, representing 20% year-over-year growth at the midpoint.

We expect VMD to be between $46 million and $48 million, representing 7% year-over-year growth at the midpoint. We expect adjusted EBITDA to be between $21 million and $23 million, representing 16% year-over-year growth at the midpoint. As we continue to deliver better-than-expected revenue, we are taking the opportunity to invest in existing and new traffic lines in Q4. While these traffic investments will further build our competitive differentiation and better position EverQuote for long-term growth, they are expected to put some pressure on VMM and VMD in the period, which in turn impacts Q4 adjusted EBITDA and associated margin. Based on the midpoint of our guidance for Q4, we’re expecting full-year 2025 annual growth in revenues of approximately 35% and annual growth in adjusted EBITDA of over 55%, reflecting our strong operating leverage.

It is also worth noting that the midpoint of our Q4 revenue guide, in combination with Q3 results, implies top-line growth of 20% for the second half of 2025, compared to prior record revenues in the second half of 2024. In summary, our performance year to date reflects our steadfast commitment to strong execution and a clear strategy. As we look ahead to 2026 and beyond, we remain focused on our goal of creating a $1 billion revenue business by being a leading growth partner for P&C insurance and delivering on our long-term target of achieving average annual revenue growth of 20% with 20% adjusted EBITDA margin, a rule of 40 company. We believe that our clear strategy and the strength of our team and operating model will position EverQuote to deliver continued growth and expanding profitability. Jamie and I will now take your questions.

Conference Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. If you’d like to ask a question, please press star then the number one on your telephone keypad to raise your hand and enter the queue. If you’d like to withdraw your question at any time, simply press star one again. Thank you. Your first question comes from the line of Maria Ripps. Your line is open.

Great. Good afternoon, and thanks so much for taking my questions, and congrats on the strong quarter here. Just first, just in terms of the sort of broader industry backdrop, as you pointed out, carrier profitability has been strong, and some investors have been asking whether sort of carriers are approaching peak margins. Can you maybe share your view on the sustainability of current profitability levels and what that means for customer acquisition spend?

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Sure. Thanks, Maria. Yeah, carrier underwriting is back to a very healthy and steady-state level. Acquisition spend tends to lag the profitability a bit. We still see quite a bit of room to go in terms of the advertising spend keeping pace with the profitability trends. We’ve still got, at least we’ve got one major carrier, national carrier, that’s in the process of reactivating in Q4. We’ve still got 80% of our top 25 partners below their historical high watermark of spend and still certain state carrier combinations that are kind of working their way through. The good news is these soft market cycles tend to last five-plus years, and we think we’re in the very early stages of it.

We do see some opportunity for continued strengthening as the balance of the carriers catch up in terms of their advertising spend with respect to where their underwriting profitability is now.

Got it. That’s very helpful. Then you’ve talked about sort of elevated investments in AI capabilities, technologies, sort of data assets here in the second half of the year. To the extent we can talk about this, what are some sort of key platform features or innovations that investors sort of should expect in 2026?

Yeah. Some of our most significant investment has been in our SmartCampaigns product. That’s our machine learning-based carrier bidding product. We’ve been getting broader adoption of that product over the course of the last year or two, and we’ve been investing in improving model accuracy and adding features to those models. All the results that we’ve seen so far as customers adopt SmartCampaigns and then as we upgrade to newer versions is that they drive meaningful improvement in carrier performance. Sorry, meaningful improvement in carrier performance. As that happens, the net effect is the carrier will allocate more budget in our direction relative to alternatives, and it helps kind of propel this flywheel of better performance, better pricing, more traffic, more data, and that helps us drive more performance. That’s the area we’ve been most focused on.

We do expect to extend some of the AI bidding products to local agents as we turn the corner into the next year, and that’s an area we’ve been focused on. I’ve also spoken a bit about conversational voice. We have managed to introduce AI voice into our call workflows, and that’s achieving good levels of performance. That’s really beginning to allow us to interact more with customers through sort of AI modalities, which we expect to extend from that voice modality down funnel and into others over time.

Got it. That’s very helpful. Appreciate the call.

Thanks, Maria.

Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Zach Cummins with B. Riley Securities. Your line is open.

Joseph Sanborn, Chief Financial Officer, EverQuote: Yes. Thanks for taking my questions. Good afternoon and congrats on the strong performance here in Q3. Jamie or Joseph, both of you could probably comment on this, but can you give me a little more insight into kind of the incremental investments that you’re making into new channels in Q4? Is there any way to break out kind of the anticipated impact that you’re seeing to VMM in Q4 as a result of these channels? Just trying to get a sense of what’s the best way to think about VMM over the next couple of quarters.

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Sure. Why don’t I start, and then I’ll let Joseph expand on it. The channels, there’s a handful of channels that we have, most of which we have been active in in the past but have subsided through the hard market, and now we’re in the process of rebuilding. These are some of the, characterize them as higher funnel channels. That could be social, video, display, connected TV, things like that. Typically, when you launch new campaigns in these channels, it takes a while to kind of get the right creative, the right bidding strategy in place. For that period of time, when you’re just in the early stages of optimizing those campaigns, they tend to run at lower, in some cases, even negative margin. That’s kind of how it flows through into the financials. The other sort of category that we’re focused on is AI search.

Historically, we’ve not done much SEO traffic here at EverQuote. For better or worse, today, I’d say that’s kind of a positive thing because we haven’t been, there’s been nothing to sort of disrupt as the organic search results have changed. We view the AI search as kind of a clean sheet for us, and we’re making some investments and beginning to build out our presence in those platforms.

Joseph Sanborn, Chief Financial Officer, EverQuote: With regards to, so just turning to the numbers on VMM, if you look at the midpoint of our guide, it’s sort of close to 27% on VMM margin. We were closer to 28.8% in Q3, comparable in Q2. When I think about the impact in the quarter, it’s probably a couple hundred basis points of investment you’re doing in new traffic channels on the VMM line. Just to give you context, and I think it’s how we think about VMM. In general, we still think it’s going to be in the high 20s over time. It’ll fluctuate quarter to quarter based on what’s going on in the broader market. I think it’s important to call out when you think about VMM margin, two factors. One is it reflects the advertising environment which we do not control. We do not control what the advertising environment broadly.

What we do control is how we apply our models and our technology to be efficient in going after that advertising dollar. And Zach, you and I have talked about this in the past, but just for context, if you look at our VMM margin being in the high 20s, go back to 2023 when our business was much smaller. The VMM margin in auto was in the high 20s, and we were a $250 million-$275 million business. The fact that we’re two and a half times bigger now in scale and we’re having the same margin speaks to, yes, there has certainly been a more competitive advertising environment and more folks going after, but our bidding technology is working. We’re getting more efficient, and that’s driving results. We’ll continue to make those investments this quarter, and you’ll see those benefits as we progress into 2026 and beyond.

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Understood. Just my one follow-up question is just the broader appetite that you’re seeing from your carrier partners to ramp up budgets. I thought it was interesting to hear that 80% of your top 25 still isn’t at peak spend. Just curious what you’re hearing from some of these partners and how they’re thinking about deploying budgets as we move into 2026.

Joseph Sanborn, Chief Financial Officer, EverQuote: Sure. Maybe I’ll start with where we are now in Q4. Typically, we have a seasonally down Q4. If you go on the average of seasonality for the past seven years, typically Q3 to Q4 is down, so 4%-5% dip. We’re actually showing that we’re actually expecting a quarter that’s up at the midpoint, actually up in the full range of our guidance. I think that reflects that we see carriers seeing really healthy underwriting margins that we’ve been talking about throughout this year. As we progress through the year, some of the uncertainty has been replaced by greater certainty, whether it be the impact of tariffs on underwriting costs, whether it be the CAD environment.

As we’ve gone further into the year, they’re feeling stronger, and we’re seeing that result in what we’re seeing today, which is them defying the normal seasonal pattern and really engaging to continue customer acquisition. As you look to next year, as Jamie touched on, the backdrop remains very strong for carriers. We see an environment where the health will continue on the underwriting margins for everything we’re seeing and hearing from our carrier partners. As Jamie mentioned, often the health of the carriers comes before you actually see the spend pick up as fully. I think there’s continued growth you’ll see from carriers into next year. You match that on the consumer side, where we have consumers continuing to shop for alternatives. That’s a really good combination for us.

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Understood. Thanks for taking my questions and congrats again on the strong results.

Joseph Sanborn, Chief Financial Officer, EverQuote: Thank you, Zach.

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Thanks, Zach.

Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Jason Kreyer with Craig Hallum. Your line is open.

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Great. Thank you, guys. We’re hearing a lot more from carriers that are pursuing kind of strategies that would have rebating to consumers. I’m just curious what your take is on that, if there’s any impact, if that kind of takes away from budget that historically could go into performance marketing, or if that has any impact on what you guys could potentially absorb from carriers. Thank you.

Brinlea Johnson, Investor Relations, EverQuote: We’ve not heard anything about that in our sort of interactions with carriers. I think it’s a representative of the broader underwriting environment, which, again, is quite healthy, meaning the carriers are quite profitable. Rebates are one way they can sort of approach that, depending on what problem they’re trying to solve. I would say the overarching problem that most carriers right now are trying to solve is growth. That’s all they talk to us about. That’s reflected in how they’re kind of leaning into the marketplace broadly right now.

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Appreciate it. Last year, as we got into this time of the year, we saw somewhat of a budget flush from carriers. You had pointed out the attractive profitability metrics. Is that predicated on guide, or I am just curious what you are assuming in the balance of Q4 here, what is baked into the guide? Thanks.

Joseph Sanborn, Chief Financial Officer, EverQuote: Yeah. For the guide to Q4, it’s obviously assuming carriers define the normal seasonal pattern of being down from Q3 to Q4. The underlying basis for that is that carriers are seeing sort of pulling forward investment into this quarter. I won’t use the term you used. I’ll say they were pulling forward growth investment into Q4 and customer acquisition from. I think that’s clearly happening, and that’s reflected in our guide.

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Joseph, that year-end budget flush isn’t really having much of an impact to VMM? That’s not a component of the sequential pressure?

Joseph Sanborn, Chief Financial Officer, EverQuote: I guess when you look on the VM, when you look at the VMB line, all of things equal, Q4, if you have an environment where you’re defying the seasonal pattern on revenues being higher than the norm, that can put some pressure on advertising costs, particularly in Q4. In some traffic areas, we have broader competition from retail and holidays. There can be some impact in VMM in the quarter from that. I’d say that’s, relative to what we described earlier, more modest than our investments in the new traffic channels. I think theoretically, it has some impact in Q4. I guess when I still come back to the carriers and their budgets for the period, I think we go into this saying they feel very bullish, and they’re reflecting that.

Relative to last year at this time, I think they’re coming into this quarter with a greater sense of clarity on how the year is progressing. They’re quite healthy. As they progress through the year, the uncertainty they may have seen, whether it’s from tariffs affecting underwriting costs or uncertainty over the CAD environment, those uncertainties have been replaced by clarity. As they’ve gotten those, they’re able to lean in early in Q4, and we’re reflecting that in our guide.

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: All right. Appreciate the thoughts. Thanks.

Joseph Sanborn, Chief Financial Officer, EverQuote: Thank you, Jason.

Conference Operator: Your next question comes from Ralph Schackart with William Blair. The line is open.

Good evening. Thanks for taking the question. On the call today, Jamie, you talked quite a bit about transforming the model from lead generation vendor to a multi-product provider, which obviously would be a pretty important strategic shift. Just any more color you can provide on this without disclosing exact products for competitive reasons, but just conceptually, just trying to figure out where you’re focused on product innovation. Then can you maybe sort of talk about the evolution of this change in the model? Would you be, I guess, sort of moving away from a transactional model or sort of entertaining a new revenue model in the future? Any help on that would be great. Thank you.

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Yeah. Thanks, Ralph.

Brinlea Johnson, Investor Relations, EverQuote: Yes. I mean, we have strong, large relationships with all the big carriers and thousands of local agents. Those relationships have been built and are predicated predominantly on the sort of referral, right, the click or the lead that we’re selling to the carrier or the agent. Our sense is that the carriers and the agents, we can deliver them a lot more value by wrapping sort of value-add technology, data, services around that core referral product. In the case of a carrier, the example we’ve talked about is giving them bidding services through SmartCampaigns, which is an AI-enabled bidding solution. There are other services that on the carrier side we will not mention at this time. On the agent side, again, the vision is to really evolve to become their one-stop shop for all things growth.

Agents spend money on leads to generate growth, but there are a lot of other things that they spend money on, whether it’s telephony services or calls or digital services. We’ve now built out a much more robust product suite that allows us to solve for the vast majority of agents’ needs as it relates to growing their local agency. The idea is to build these deeper relationships, which add a lot more value. They’re built on mutual trust, more data sharing, and they’re built on top of some of our distinct advantages and the data that we have and the technology that we’re able to build around that data to ultimately deliver more performance for the agent, for the carrier, and also allow them to consolidate, to have fewer vendors to deal with. That’s the thrust of the strategy.

As it relates to the commercial model, Ralph, I think over time, the answer is yes. We started doing this with the local agents. We do have, albeit relatively modest relative to the scale of EverQuote, but we do have a nice chunk of recurring subscription revenue that is building with the local agents as we execute on this strategy. I do think there’s opportunities to begin to think about evolving the commercial model over time. The most important thing to us right now is to get the products right, to get them adopted, to prove the value, and then we build from there.

That’s great. Thanks, Jamie.

Thanks, Ralph.

Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Mayank Tandon, Needham & Company. Your line is open.

Thank you. Good evening, congrats, Jamie and Joseph, on the quarter. Jamie, I wanted to touch on the billion-dollar revenue target. Is that an organic target, or would you also factor in M&A to get to that level? Because when I think about what Joseph said, the 20% growth model, then that would get you close to a billion dollars in actually two, two and a half years. Just curious on sort of what are the underlying drivers behind that target and whether it’s organic or does it include potential M&A?

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Yeah. So we have a plan to achieve that goal organically. I’ll let Joseph expand on how we think about M&A in this context. When I talk about our path to a billion dollars, it’s an organic path. We’ve got the roadmap. On the distribution side, it’s really about just executing the playbook, which is improving the performance for carriers and agents through use of our AI products like SmartCampaigns in order to get more budget and more favorable pricing. We can take that budget, that pricing, and push it downstream back into traffic to increase our traffic share. At the same time, we’re going to be expanding into more traffic channels, as we’ve talked about earlier already. We’re going to be accessing more traffic and winning more of it.

We’ve got a lot of room to continue growing in our non-auto verticals, specifically in home, and as we can start to consider other P&C verticals that might make sense under that umbrella. That’s more or less the ingredients of the path to a billion. We think we can get there organically in the timeframe that I suggested.

Joseph Sanborn, Chief Financial Officer, EverQuote: Maybe to give you the math, I think you kind of got there, is. For those who were not doing the math as quickly, that implies if it took three years, it would be sort of mid to high teens would be the growth rate. If it took two years, it would be sort of low 20s in terms of this is revenue growth rate. I think that gives you a sense of how we frame it. We feel bullish on our ability to get here through organic means. Do we see an opportunity to potentially supplement that through M&A? Yeah, we see that opportunity as well. In our minds, M&A comes back to the same criteria we have discussed previously with folks, is we view it as accelerating our strategy to win in P&C and being the number one growth partner to carriers and agents in this vertical.

We think there could be opportunities to do that. We do by no means see those as necessary to achieve that billion-dollar goal.

Got it. That’s super helpful. Also, just turning to margins, I think, Joseph, you said 100 to 150 basis points is the target model. I know that’s not guidance. Just as I think about that, is that going to come from eventually maybe a little bit of an improvement in VMM when some of these maybe advertising pressures abate, or would it be more heavily weighted towards operating leverage in the model?

I think when I look at it, I just give some context, right? In 2023, we had none, right? In 2024, we went to 11.6%. I think we brought a lot of operating leverage into the model and really focused where we were spending on our investments in technology, the things that give us greater leverage. If you look at 2025 in the midpoint of our guide, it implies we’re actually going to gain over 200 basis points at the midpoint from 2024, sort of 13.6%, whatever. I think you’re seeing us at a pretty significant clip over the past few years. If you look to next year, we always say 100-150 basis points on average. I’d probably say we’re targeting towards the lower end of that for next year as we think about EBITDA.

I also would say that our EBITDA, we view it as continuing to be high cash converting. That EBITDA will be very high cash conversion into operating cash flow in the period, just subject to no more working capital. In terms of margins, I would say we still sort of continue to see VMM in the high 20s. I think it’s important to give some context in this, which is, it is a market where there are things we control and there are things we don’t control. We do not control the broad advertising environment where we buy advertising. If there’s more demand in that market or less demand in that market, that can impact advertising costs in the period.

What we do control is the investments we make in our bidding technology and how we use that technology to more efficiently acquire traffic and drive that to our carriers and agents. When I think about the business, I’d say we still think high 20s. It’ll fluctuate quarter to quarter based on various things going on in the market and also the investments we’re making. Again, on the operating expense side, we certainly will see a step up from Q4 to Q1 as we customarily do. We’ll continue to be making investments in our technology areas, around AI and other areas, our data access that we think will build long-term advantage. We’re playing investments to win. We’re not just trying to do this to drive 20% growth and get to the EBITDA margin overnight.

We are going to do it in a way that’s setting us up to really succeed in this market long-term and really be the premier growth partner to carriers and agents in the long term.

Right. Very helpful, Connor. Thank you so much. Congrats.

Thank you, Mike.

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Thanks, Mike.

Joseph Sanborn, Chief Financial Officer, EverQuote: Thank you.

Conference Operator: Your next question comes from Jed Kelly with Oppenheimer. The line is open.

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Hey, great. Thanks for taking my question. Just on investing in some of the newer traffic channels, how much of this is at your discretion doing this versus some of your competitors that are probably also operating at low 20% margins? I imagine they’re doing this to drive more traffic to carriers to get more budget. Can you just talk about how much of your discrepancy versus potentially responding to competitors?

Brinlea Johnson, Investor Relations, EverQuote: It’s entirely in our discretion, right? I mean, we are making investments that are very much consistent with our long-term strategy. And we think these are investments that will help us achieve that billion-dollar goal, grow at 20%, get to that 20% adjusted EBITDA margin over time. This is all very consistent with our long-term strategy. I mean, we do not pay super close attention to how our competitors’ margins or ad costs are moving around over time, right? We have our financial plan, and we’ve got a pretty good track record of achieving that plan. I can appreciate that others may choose to make certain trade-offs at various points in time. We have had a pretty consistent track record just kind of executing our plan and staying heads down.

Getting into these channels will be important for us to achieve that plan because the demand from the carriers and agents is definitely there right now. We have got to be able to continue growing volume to meet that demand.

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Just as a follow-up. How should we view your opt-acts and sort of your longer-term goals as a percentage of VMM, I guess? Because one could argue your VMM is actually your true revenue, right? How should we look at that? Thanks.

Joseph Sanborn, Chief Financial Officer, EverQuote: Yeah. I guess, Jed, I appreciate you’ve made that comment before. I continue to look like EBITDA margins in the traditional sense relative to revenues, just EBITDA margins. And so they were at 11.6% in 2024. The midpoint of our guide puts them mid-13.5% this quarter, so a couple hundred basis points improvement from last year. And we’ll add another 100 basis points as our target for next year. We’ll continue to do that, 150 basis points every year thereafter. I think that’s how we think about it. Of course, as VMD scales, the thing we are doing is some dollars will go to the bottom line to drive incremental adjusted EBITDA. Some dollars in a given quarter will go to investment.

Those investments will be principally in technology areas, particularly around AI and leveraging our data assets to help us build a longer-term position for longer-term growth and competitive differentiation. That remains our strategy, and that’s how we’re approaching it. That means OpEx, you’ll see those investments as we build through next year. Just as we’ve done this year, we’ve managed very carefully in terms of as we’ve added incremental investments, you’ve seen us. We said at the start of this year that we’d add 150 basis points adjusted EBITDA. We’ve added actually 200 basis points if you look at the midpoint of our guide if that is achieved. I think we’re very good at saying what we’re going to do in the next year against that and then delivering as a result.

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Thank you. Very helpful and great quarter.

Joseph Sanborn, Chief Financial Officer, EverQuote: Thank you, Jed.

Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Corey Carpenter with JPMorgan. Your line is open.

Hey, guys. Good afternoon. I had two financial questions. Just on the traffic investments, how long do you expect those to impact VMM margins? Do you ultimately expect them to run at parity with your other channels? That is the first question. The second question, a lot of talk around the 20% growth target. Maybe just ask directly. Is that something you think is achievable next year given the tougher comp? Thank you.

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Yeah. I’ll take the first one. I mean, the investments, typically, when we’re ramping up a new channel or a new traffic program, it’s one to two quarters where we’re launching, we’re optimizing, and we’re scaling. At which point, I do think that these channels would kind of blend in at comparable VMM levels to our existing traffic portfolio. We don’t view these channels as weighing down VMM in the long term. There’s a bit of a startup cost that you incur when we start launching into some of the new channels.

Joseph Sanborn, Chief Financial Officer, EverQuote: In terms of how we think about top-line growth, there is some context, right? As we look at, obviously, as you point out, we have had some tougher comps, relatively speaking, given the very strong growth we have had. 2024 into 2025 is on a recovery as progress. We mentioned in our prepared remarks in the second half of 2025, we have had 20% year-on-year growth relative to the second half of 2024, which was a record prior to this year, second half of this year. I think you are seeing us continuing to do well as levels start to normalize. We talk about our two- to three-year goal of getting to a billion dollars in revenue. I am not going to tell you in this call if we are going to get exactly 20% next year or not.

I think as we look at it, we feel very good about averaging 20% over time, and importantly, getting to that billion-dollar goal in two to three years of top-line growth organically.

Great. That’s helpful. Thank you both.

Thank you, Corey.

Conference Operator: Our final question comes from Mitch Rubin with Raymond James. Your line is open.

Joseph Sanborn, Chief Financial Officer, EverQuote: Hey, thank you, guys, for taking my questions. My name is Mitch on behalf of Greg Peters. I was wondering if you could provide us with an update on the progress of California with carrier participation and how much impact a full panel of carriers would be. Thanks.

Brinlea Johnson, Investor Relations, EverQuote: Yeah. California has been sort of steadily kind of ramping, carrier by carrier, segment by segment. There is meaningful spend in the state now. I think it is like a top three to five state in Q3. Of course, it is the largest state, so it is still just not quite proportional to its potential scale yet. We view California as having still some room to grow. It is a little hard to dimensionalize that, but we think there could be still some meaningful upside left in California as we progress into next year. We would hope to get California back to kind of a steady state environment sometime in 2026.

Joseph Sanborn, Chief Financial Officer, EverQuote: Great. Thank you for the color on that. My follow-up is, you guys have done a great job of managing non-advertisement costs. Where is there any room for improvement, or is most of the incremental leverage going to come from investments in technology? I think the way we look at the business is, we’re always looking to drive efficiency in the business, right? How do we simplify? How do we be more efficient in the business? As we’ve talked about in some of our prior calls, I think it has been one thing that’s been ingrained in us as a management team is how do we think about how we spend our dollars in a way that we’re getting the right return for shareholders? Having gone through the period we did, it’s sort of a silver lining in that period.

That has continued, and we’re continuing to see ways that we bring more efficiency into business. For example, this year, headcount is up roughly 10% if I look into Q3 where we landed, but operating costs are basically the same. That reflects we are driving efficiency. We’re changing the composition of the team. We’re also using technology to make the team more efficient and get more productivity through the team. As we look ahead to next year, we’re not seeing a lot of significant increase in headcount, but we are seeing continued investment in AI areas, including technologies that would help the team leverage AI more efficiently. That’s where I think you’ll continue to see us doing that, and that will be driving, I think, a lot of leverage for us and efficiency going forward.

Brinlea Johnson, Investor Relations, EverQuote: Yeah. Just to give maybe a couple of examples, right? Our AI bidding technology has really allowed us to do a lot more with our traffic operations teams where we’ve effectively automated a huge amount of work that used to be manual. Now we’ve turned that and with SmartCampaigns out to our carriers. And our carrier-facing teams now have to do a lot less manual campaign management on behalf of carriers. All of our bidding automation has been a huge unlock in terms of efficiency. Within our engineering organization, we’ve got broad adoption now of copilots for engineering. In some cases, we have teams that are writing code. They’re just inferencing code as the primary way of writing code. We’re getting some real benefit in our engineering organization. What else? We’ve talked about our voice agents, right?

Our call center operations, we’ve now begun to introduce voice agents into that to reduce some of the reliance on human call center operators. It’s really at, sort of within every function of the business, we are finding ways to drive efficiency. We are, in fact, going function by function to sort of systematically identify activities that can be automated using GenAI or just good old-fashioned software. That is a process that will continue all through next year.

Joseph Sanborn, Chief Financial Officer, EverQuote: Thanks. I appreciate the color on that. Congratulations on the great print.

Brinlea Johnson, Investor Relations, EverQuote: Thank you.

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: All right. Yes.

Brinlea Johnson, Investor Relations, EverQuote: Go ahead. Go ahead, Operator.

Conference Operator: With no further questions in queue, I’d like to turn the conference back over to management for closing remarks.

Jamie Mendal, Chief Executive Officer, EverQuote: Thank you. Thank you all for joining. The state of the business is strong. It’s getting stronger as we continue to produce record performance quarter after quarter. We are accelerating right now our innovation of new products, features, traffic data, AI capabilities. As we do, we’re transforming from a lead-gen vendor to a growth solutions partner for our customers. We are very energized to continue growing towards our billion-dollar revenue goal as we build EverQuote into the leading growth partner for P&C insurance providers. Thanks all for joining today.

Conference Operator: This concludes today’s conference call. You may now disconnect.