ZVIA November 5, 2025

Zevia PBC Q3 2025 Earnings Call - Strong Sales Growth and Raised Guidance Amid Strategic Brand and Distribution Expansion

Summary

Zevia PBC delivered a robust third quarter in 2025, reporting a 12% increase in net sales to $40.8 million, surpassing expectations despite facing inventory obsolescence and tariffs pressures. The company’s strategic pillars of impactful brand marketing, innovative product launches, and expanded distribution are driving momentum, notably with successful new flavors, refreshed packaging, and an expanded footprint at Walmart including Canadian stores. While still operating at an adjusted EBITDA loss of $1.7 million in Q3, improved operational efficiencies and marketing investments position Zevia to raise its full-year net sales guidance to $162-$164 million and narrow adjusted EBITDA losses to $5-$5.5 million. Zevia highlights a significant runway for growth, leveraging increasing household penetration and category tailwinds with a clear plan to achieve adjusted EBITDA profitability in 2026 as productivity savings and scale accelerate.

Key Takeaways

  • Zevia posted 12% net sales growth in Q3 2025, reaching $40.8 million, surpassing internal forecasts.
  • Adjusted EBITDA loss for the quarter was $1.7 million, slightly wider than the prior year due to marketing spend and packaging inventory obsolescence.
  • Based on Q3 performance, Zevia raised full-year 2025 net sales guidance to $162-$164 million and improved adjusted EBITDA guidance to a loss of $5-$5.5 million from previous wider loss forecasts.
  • Brand marketing efforts, including a summer campaign and influencer activations, have doubled purchase intent and consideration among consumers, particularly millennials with children.
  • New flavor innovations like Strawberry Lemon Burst, Peaches and Cream, and Fruity Variety Pack have driven velocity and retailer shelf space gains.
  • The company’s refreshed packaging design is slated for full rollout in early 2026, showing meaningful increases in consumer purchase intent and trial rates.
  • Distribution expanded notably at Walmart, including an entry into over half of Walmart Canada stores, though this contributed less to near-term growth compared to U.S. gains.
  • Zevia achieved improved operational efficiencies, lowering selling expenses as a percent of sales despite higher marketing costs to fuel brand growth.
  • The Better-For-You soda category has around 20% household penetration, offering significant upside as Zevia’s current penetration is just over 5%.
  • Zevia plans to focus on accelerating household penetration and velocity within existing distribution, with new channel and store opportunities in club, mass, value, and convenience expected in 2026.
  • Energy drinks remain a smaller segment for Zevia, with management signaling future interest in scaling the category once soda brand awareness and penetration advance sustainably.
  • Management expects to reach positive adjusted EBITDA in 2026, balancing investment in growth with cost savings and pricing improvements amid aluminum tariff headwinds.

Full Transcript

Conference Operator: Greetings and welcome to the Zevia PBC Q3 2025 earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. Should anyone require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Anne McGuinness, Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin.

Anne McGuinness, Investor Relations, Zevia PBC: Thank you, and welcome to Zevia’s third quarter 2025 earnings conference call. On today’s call are Amy Taylor, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Girish Satya, Chief Financial Officer and Principal Accounting Officer. By now, everyone should have access to the company’s third quarter 2025 earnings press release and investor presentation made available this afternoon. This information is available on the investor relations section of Zevia’s website at investors.zevia.com. Before we begin, please note that all financial information presented on today’s call is unaudited. Certain comments made on this call include forward-looking statements which are subject to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements are based on management’s current expectations and beliefs concerning future events and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in these forward-looking statements.

Please refer to today’s press release and other filings with the SEC for a detailed discussion of the risks that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in any forward-looking statements made today. During the call, we will use some non-GAAP financial measures as we describe business performance. The SEC filings, as well as the earnings press release presentation slides that accompany today’s comments and reconciliations of the non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures, are also available on our website at investors.zevia.com. I would like to turn the call over to Amy Taylor.

Amy Taylor, President and Chief Executive Officer, Zevia PBC: Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining our third quarter 2025 earnings conference call. Our third quarter results reflect strong progress and provide clear signs that our strategy is taking effect. Our initiatives are positioning us for durable growth and profitability over time. Our third quarter results exceeded our expectations with net sales growth of 12% to $40.8 million and adjusted EBITDA loss of $1.7 million. Based on our better-than-expected performance and the continued progress across our strategic growth pillars, we are raising our full-year net sales and adjusted EBITDA guidance, which Girish will speak to shortly. I’ll share the progress we’ve made across our three strategic growth pillars of high-impact brand marketing, accelerated product innovation, and expanded distribution. Beginning with marketing, our brand-building initiatives are resonating with consumers and gaining traction against our key priority of expanding our user base.

Strong third quarter results reflect, in part, the success of our summer campaign, the launch of Strawberry Lemon Burst, and the playful Summer Break sweepstakes, which were activated on social and received favorable editorial media coverage, extending reach and driving engagement. Zevia has a great story to tell as the consumer moves away from the artificial and seeks better-for-you products from brands that they trust. We are Soda Made Better, and our new brand messaging, design, and tone of voice are resonating across media channels and in store. Based on proprietary survey data, while early, brand consideration and purchase intent have made double-digit gains this year, and social media engagement rates continue to build to levels well above channel benchmarks. As the broad cultural conversation continues to focus on health and ingredients, major food and beverage companies scramble to remove artificial ingredients and colors.

Zevia has, and will continue to be, ahead of this movement with a clean label, Clear Soda, with natural flavors and sweeteners, and is telling its story through cross-channel brand campaigns and high-reach influencer activations. Our humorous, engaging campaign supporting Amazon-exclusive Peaches and Cream is a great example, giving the flavor a hot start and the brand a strong halo via virality on Instagram and TikTok. In addition, Zevia’s competitions featuring UGC or user-generated content have been fruitful in driving awareness and trial, especially when activated with a focus on specific customers ranging from Albertsons, Kroger, and Walmart to Costco. On the ground, we continue in-market activations at events like Gaming’s 100 Thieves Block Party in July, Diplo’s Run Club across August, September, and October, and periodic joint efforts with well-aligned partners such as Lifetime Fitness at running, cycling, and mountain biking events.

These events are equal parts brand-building and sampling opportunities focused on winning new users, which remains our top priority. Turning to innovation, the performance of our recent product launches offers strong proof points that our portfolio evolution is driving brand momentum. New flavor profiles and a more sugar-like taste experience, along with delicious-looking new packaging and dynamic marketing, continue to support velocity and drive trial. Our portfolio evolution this year is working. Exciting new flavors launched nationwide received strong consumer acceptance, and retailer-exclusive or limited-time offer flavors brought brand heat. The debut of Strawberry Lemon Burst nationwide, Orange Creamsicle in the Naturals channel, and Fruity Variety Pack initially at Walmart demonstrate that we are on point in flavor trends. Peaches and Cream are showing promising results and have been drivers of increased Zevia space at retail and of accelerating velocities.

Peaches and Cream and Salted Caramel provided new news this quarter as exclusives or limited-time offers, respectively, and Strawberries and Cream is doing the same in selected retailers here in Q4. Peach is off to a good start and will inform the portfolio evolution for 2026 and beyond. Peaches and Cream has been the fastest-selling new Zevia item ever on Amazon, while Strawberries and Cream was immediately a top three velocity driver at Kroger. Our Fruity Variety Pack has quickly become the number one Zevia SKU at Walmart. We remain the only better-for-you brand offering multi-packs and variety packs at accessible price points. We are very pleased with the positive response to our refreshed packaging. Featuring Soda Made Better, our strong brand block will highlight zero sugar, no artificial colors, and no artificial sweeteners.

Our proprietary research indicates a meaningful increase in purchase intent versus the prior design and versus competition. We are on track to roll new packaging out to legacy flavors as well in early 2026, in parallel with the introduction of a new, more sugar-like taste experience across legacy and new flavors alike. Moving on to distribution, a key component of our strategic growth plan. We both regained and opened new points of distribution over the past nine months. We attribute this expansion to strong product innovation as well as brand momentum delivered by marketing. Our national Walmart distribution continues to drive new-to-brand consumers. We’re also pleased to share that following a successful pilot at the start of this year, we’ll be expanding into more than half of Walmart’s Canadian stores going forward.

Distribution gains at grocery were also a key driver of our growth year to date, with innovation in flavor and in packs supporting increased space gains. In the Club channel, increasing sales velocity drove additional regional rotations, reflecting in part the impact of our new packaging. The positive reception has exceeded our expectations. In convenience, we’re seeing some encouraging early indicators, even as the rollout in the channel for brand and for category remains in the early stages of development. Performance is tracking in line with broader natural soda category trends, providing a good selling story as we continue to thoughtfully expand our regional footprint in 2026. In closing, with our strategy firmly in place and with strong execution, we are reshaping the business and paving the way to capitalize on a changing consumer landscape and category tailwinds.

We see evidence that we are growing market relevance and are on track to thoughtfully scale the business quarter by quarter and year over year. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Girish.

Girish Satya, Chief Financial Officer and Principal Accounting Officer, Zevia PBC: Thank you, Amy. Good afternoon, everyone, and thanks for joining our call today. Our third quarter results reflect strong execution of our strategic plan, with both revenue and adjusted EBITDA exceeding expectations. Over the past 18 months, savings from our productivity initiatives have enabled us to invest meaningfully while strengthening Zevia’s market position within the better-for-you soda category. Importantly, the work we have done has created a solid foundation for sustained growth and profitability. In light of our strong third quarter performance, we are raising our full-year 2025 net sales and adjusted EBITDA guidance, which I’ll address shortly. Turning to our results, net sales in the third quarter increased 12% to $40.8 million. The increase versus the prior year was primarily due to expanded distribution at Walmart and incremental regional rotations at the Club channel.

Gross margin reached 45.6%, a 350 basis point decline from 49.1% in the third quarter of last year, reflecting the $0.8 million in inventory obsolescence associated with the packaging refresh and the full realization of aluminum tariffs, which we discussed previously. As we mentioned earlier, we invested in a package redesign that brought to life our new flavor profile and better communicated the benefits of the Zevia value proposition. Selling and marketing expenses were $12.7 million, or 31% of net sales in the third quarter of 2025, compared to $12 million, or 33% of net sales in the third quarter of 2024. Breaking it down, selling expense was $7.7 million, or 18.9% of net sales in the third quarter of 2025, compared to $8.5 million, or 23.3% of net sales in the third quarter of 2024.

The improvement was largely a result of lower warehousing and freight transfer costs as we continue to benefit from our productivity initiative. Marketing expense was $4.9 million, or 12.1%, compared to $3.5 million, or 9.7% of net sales in the third quarter of 2024. The increase was primarily due to increased investments in brand marketing. General and administrative expenses were $7.7 million, or 18.8% of net sales in the third quarter of 2025, compared to $7.4 million, or 20.3% of net sales in the third quarter of 2024. The increase was primarily driven by higher accrued variable compensation expense. As a result of the aforementioned factors, net loss was $2.8 million, unchanged from the prior year. Adjusted EBITDA loss was $1.7 million, compared to an adjusted EBITDA loss of $1.5 million in the prior year period.

The decrease was due to costs associated with inventory losses related to the packaging refresh and higher brand marketing spend, partially offset by strong sales growth and operating efficiencies. Turning to our balance sheet, we ended the quarter with approximately $26 million in cash and cash equivalents and have an undrawn revolving credit line of $20 million. Now turning to our outlook. Based on our strong third quarter results, we are raising our full-year net sales guidance to the range of $162 million-$164 million versus prior guidance of $158 million-$163 million. We now expect our adjusted EBITDA loss for the full year to range from $5 million-$5.5 million versus prior guidance of $7 million-$9 million. Our 2025 adjusted EBITDA outlook represents a $9 million improvement versus prior year despite tariffs, ongoing marketing investments, and a packaging refresh.

Turning to the fourth quarter, we expect net sales of between $39 million and $41 million and adjusted EBITDA loss to be between $0.25 million and $0.75 million. As a reminder, the 350 basis points impact from inventory losses associated with the packaging redesign was largely captured in the third quarter. In closing, our third quarter results reflect the traction we are gaining towards building a solid foundation from which to deliver sustainable growth and profitability. These efforts not only reinforce our operational momentum but also lay a strong foundation for sustained profitability as we move forward. I will now turn it over to the operator to begin Q&A. Operator.

Conference Operator: Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press Star 1 on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press Star 2 if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the Star keys. One moment, please, while we pull for questions. The first question is from Jim Solera from Stevens Inc. Please go ahead.

Hey, Amy. Hi, Girish. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking our question. I wanted to start off with, obviously, the positive news around expanding distribution with Walmart in Canada. Could you just maybe help size that up for us? Is that the primary contributor of the raised sales outlook, or should we expect that to be more of kind of a 2026 event? And if you could just kind of size up how many stores that would be and any other color you could provide on how we should think about that uplift?

Amy Taylor, President and Chief Executive Officer, Zevia PBC: Sure, Jim. Yeah, we are excited about expanding with Walmart in Canada just because of the indicator of future opportunity for continued distribution expansion in Canada overall. It’s also just a good, I think, reflection of the velocities coming out of the customer in the initial pilot. It was fairly small out of the gates. We were in less than 100 stores, and we’re now in just over half of Canada’s Walmart stores, which is just over 400 stores in total. To answer your question directly, that is not the major driver of lift in growth. There are many other things driving growth through the quarter, but it is a good indicator of the health of the brand in Canada and opportunity to follow.

Great. I was looking through the deck you guys put out. I really liked the new packaging. Can you just give us some color around how distributed is that and maybe what type of timing we should think about between switching over from the old packaging to the new packaging until we kind of see that across all of your distribution points in the U.S.?

Sure. So we’re excited about the new packaging too. We did some, as I said in the prepared remarks, we did some initial proprietary research that indicated a significant increase in purchase intent with the new packaging relative to our previous packaging and relative to competition. We believe that that is because of the insights-based changes that we made to the messaging, which very clearly state Zevia’s value proposition. They’re talking zero sugar, zero fake colors, zero fake sweeteners, and looking delicious, carrying the line Soda Made Better. We’re really bullish on the packaging. We do have some early indicators of how it supports the business, both from the standpoint of driving trial to new-to-brand users and driving velocity. That’s because one of our Q4 limited-time offer flavors in Strawberries and Cream is already in the market in the new package.

The rest of the portfolio will reflect the new packaging in early 2026, so mid-Q1 or late Q1 2026. We will do a rolling rollout from there, not a hard cutover, but a rolling launch of the new packaging from there into the second quarter.

Okay. Great. I appreciate the comments. I’ll hop back in the queue.

Thanks, Jim.

Conference Operator: The next question is from Sarang Vora from Telsey Advisory Group. Please go ahead.

Great. Congratulations on a great quarter, and good to see the healthy momentum in the business. My question is about when you look at the underlying matrix that drives growth, which is increase in household penetration, dollars per household, increase in frequency. Can you remind us who are some of the new customers that are coming to the brand that you weren’t there before? And just from a broader standpoint, how is the penetration for Better For You products in general versus your little north of 5%? How big is the runway for you to catch up from a household penetration standpoint just so that we can size the total addressable market as you keep moving on this path of expansion?

Amy Taylor, President and Chief Executive Officer, Zevia PBC: Yeah. Thanks, Sarang. That’s a very good way to frame the opportunity and sort of the runway ahead. We’re really pleased to see movement in household penetration over the last 12 months, this last read being improved over the prior, and we are now back over that 5 million. 5% points of household penetration, excuse me. The major drivers of that are new consumers coming to the brand, yes, in part through marketing. We’re winning new consumers. It continues to be oftentimes a slightly higher-income millennial, often with kids in the household, bringing Zevia Soda home as a trusted brand stock in the fridge for all usage occasions and all family members, right? It continues to be relevant across generations, but our sweet spot is the millennial and oftentimes the millennial household with children.

Part of what’s driving our gains in household penetration, though, is increased distribution. We get support there from the Walmart expansion, where especially with the introduction of new flavors, we’re seeing a very high percentage of new-to-brand users buying Zevia for the first time at Walmart. There are other examples of that: expanded same-store sales in other major grocery outlets, expansion into the drug channel, etc. All of those are supporting household penetration growth. To help you to size this, we see the category right now operating around 20 percentage points of household penetration. There’s a lot of ground to be gained for Zevia. As we talk about very frequently, we see all of these category tailwinds as a net positive to Zevia. There’s tremendous opportunity ahead as the world continues to move away from sugar and toward clean-label products.

We are the great tasting, truly zero sugar and also affordable Better For You product. We see a lot of household penetration opportunities ahead.

That’s awesome. I have a second question. Soda business is clearly gaining momentum as we see in all these numbers. One thing we don’t talk much about is the energy business. Energy drinks business. My understanding that. How should we think actually about energy drinks as you look at 2026 and 2027? Is there a thought to revive that category as well?

We agree there’s really tremendous opportunity ahead in energy. Right now, we have a really small energy drink business relative to the rest of the category. It is healthy and growing in a natural channel and in e-commerce where people know and trust the Zevia brand and continue to stock energy drink options in addition to soda. Right now, our focus is really on soda. We just talked household penetration, right? It just outlines how much work there is still to do to realize our full opportunity in soda. Once I believe we are famous for being Soda Made Better, and under that kind of halo of brand trust, we think there’s a significant opportunity to turn our attention to the energy drinks category, which is still growing and will be for a long time.

We believe there is a consumer that wants a clean-label energy drink and that our brand has permission to bring that to the market. We will continue to focus on the healthy growth that we see out of energy drinks in natural and in e-commerce. At the right time, we will think about channel and thus marketing and consumer expansion on a strong foundation of a healthy soda business.

That’s great. Good luck ahead.

Thank you, Sarang.

Conference Operator: The next question is from Andrew Strelczyk from BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Hey, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the questions. With all the marketing that you’ve been doing and some of the momentum that you cited from that, the brand block, etc., do you have any kind of awareness stats, brand-level awareness statistics, or anything like that that you can share to support beyond what you’ve talked about from a purchase intent perspective?

Amy Taylor, President and Chief Executive Officer, Zevia PBC: You know, Andrew, we haven’t reported on awareness levels, but what I can share that kind of doubles down on the prepared remarks was that with our proprietary research, we saw double-digit increases, not only in purchase intent but also consideration. We still have a way to go to grow brand awareness, and distribution, strong packaging design, and marketing are all parts of that equation. What I was really pleased to see this year is, again, double-digit growth and consideration. Now on that foundation, we know our messaging is working, right? Marketing and packaging is inviting trial. The product is satisfying the consumer, so we’re getting strong repeat. That’s a great formula or foundation upon which to now invest in expanding awareness. We still got a ways to go, and I think that’s reflected in our small household penetration.

Our number one objective is to expand that base, which is going to be a combination of awareness, trial, and then building on that strong consideration metric.

Okay. That’s helpful. My other question, if I remember correctly, just seasonally, you would normally see a bigger step down from 3Q to 4Q than the guidance suggests, pretty marginal step down from what you did in 3Q from a revenue perspective to the midpoint of the guidance. I guess I’m curious, do you think you’re seeing less seasonality in your business, or should we read that maybe as a higher baseline from 4Q into next year? What’s driving that, or how should we interpret that kind of as we think about next year? Thanks.

Girish Satya, Chief Financial Officer and Principal Accounting Officer, Zevia PBC: Yeah. Great. Thanks, Andrew. As a reminder, we were comping the Walmart load from last year this Q4. That was a substantial amount of revenue, which was going to always be a challenging comp for the quarter. I think largely what you’re seeing is a reflection of the distribution gains that we’ve made throughout the year, as well as some incremental regional rotations on the club channel, which is really what’s driving a lot of the positivity in Q4. I think it’s a little bit of both. Improved baseline as well as some incremental opportunistic club rotations.

Okay. Great. Thank you.

Conference Operator: As a reminder to ask a question, please press star one. The next question is from Eric Sirota from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

Girish Satya, Chief Financial Officer and Principal Accounting Officer, Zevia PBC: Great. Can you start by reflecting a bit in terms of shelf space expectations for next year? I guess with Walmart, we’re just about a year in or almost exactly a year into the rollout of their modern soda set. What are you guys seeing in terms of what they’re doing as the largest retailer, largest brick-and-mortar retailer as we look to next year? Sort of outside of Walmart, what are your expectations in terms of shelf space?

Amy Taylor, President and Chief Executive Officer, Zevia PBC: Sure. Let me start with Walmart, and then I can go to the outlook as it relates to distribution. Walmart is developing nicely, bolstered by the introduction of a number of new items. Some of those are swap-outs, and some are purely incremental new items that is helping us in the back half of this year and going into next year. We are one of the primary brands in that very sort of influential modern soda set in Walmart, and that continues to be the case. Strategically, Walmart works hard for us because, as I mentioned before, it drives a lot of new-to-brand users. I think it’s a great story to say, "Hey, when we have ample brand blocks, strong visibility, right price, right flavor mix, it’s working hard for the brand." That’s a story that we can take elsewhere.

We’ve had other expansions, as I’ve mentioned on prior calls, such as a step change in shelf presence at big retailers in grocery like Albertsons in 2025. That has contributed to some of our growth in the back half of the year. When we look ahead, this year, we surpassed our historical peak distribution levels at retail. We’re not relying on new distribution for growth looking ahead. We’re really focused on driving velocity. That’s why you hear us talk about the brand marketing and innovation priorities that we have. We do see opportunity for new distribution. In terms of new stores, that would be in club, it would be in mass, and it would be in the value and dollar channel, and then long-term in convenience and food service.

In existing stores, there is still more opportunity to expand same-store distribution and to improve shelf. There are major operators in the grocery channel, for example, where we still have, let’s say, a lesser presence on the bottom shelf and an opportunity to build up to eye level, to gain space through innovation, and to leverage all the strong data of 2025 to make those changes. We’re bullish both on accelerating velocity as well as continuing to increase distribution next year, be it in same-store or through new channel. Walmart should continue to perform for us next year. Costco offers opportunities for incremental rotations, and there are other green shoots in the club channel outside of Costco. As I mentioned, grocery offers opportunity in same-store distribution as well as new items and set improvements, and then the long-term.

Sort of slow but steady and strategic need to drive singles through convenience. Hopefully, that paints a picture a little bit about where we see our growth coming from. Our bullishness on same-store distribution increases, and then our greatest channel opportunities for next year.

Girish Satya, Chief Financial Officer and Principal Accounting Officer, Zevia PBC: Great. And then one question in terms of profitability. I realize you’re not going to give us 2026 guidance yet, but any color as to how you’re thinking about achievability of EBITDA profitability next year, puts and takes, it seems like, well, certainly your top line is scaling. You’re seeing some nice operating leverage there. Some of the costs with the new packaging and inventory obsolescence shouldn’t repeat, but then things like aluminum and Midwest Premium keep moving higher. Any color into how you’re thinking about profitability for next year would be helpful. Yeah, of course. I think we continue to point towards being positive adjusted EBITDA in 2026. As noted, we’re going to bias towards investing in the business. Don’t expect a ton of flow-through because we do believe that right now is the time to sort of invest in customer acquisition.

From a puts and takes standpoint, obviously, there’s a huge headwind, which is aluminum tariffs, as you’ve articulated earlier, and we began to see that in Q3. As you also mentioned, we will largely see $15 million of the $20 million of our previously announced productivity initiative savings in this year, i.e., 2025. There’s an incremental $5 million that we will begin to realize starting in sort of mid-Q1 of 2026. As we look towards flipping from negative adjusted EBITDA to positive, I think ultimately the incremental savings, along with scale and some pricing opportunities, will allow us to flip that script into positive adjusted EBITDA while continuing to create opportunities for us to invest to grow the top line. Great. Thanks so much. I’ll pass it on. Thanks, Eric.

Conference Operator: There are no further questions at this time. I would like to turn the floor back over to Amy Taylor for closing comments.

Amy Taylor, President and Chief Executive Officer, Zevia PBC: All right. Thanks so much for joining us. I am pleased with the progress this quarter, and I’m really proud of the team for the broader progress that we made across our three strategic growth pillars. High-impact remarketing, accelerated product innovation, and expanded distribution. Our soda portfolio is uniquely anchored by great taste, truly zero sugar, and accessible price points. The brand is starting to resonate with consumers, and all of this positions us well to capture the continued tailwinds in this Better for You category. It’s an exciting time to be at Zevia. Thanks again for your engagement, and we will see you next quarter.

Conference Operator: This concludes today’s teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.