OpenAI spent $3.7 billion in the first quarter of 2026, a level of cash outflow that accounted for more than half of the $5.7 billion in revenue it generated across the same three-month span. The company provided documents to shareholders that quantify the scale of spending and revenue growth during the period.
Both cash burn and revenue expanded roughly threefold versus the first quarter of 2025, underscoring the rapid intensification of the firm's financial activity as demand for its artificial intelligence products remains strong. The increase in spending continues to highlight how challenging it remains to translate heavy AI usage into consistent profitability.
At the end of the quarter, OpenAI held in excess of $73 billion in cash and marketable securities, up from about $40 billion at the close of December. Company materials attribute this jump to a large funding round that was announced at the end of March.
Based on the first-quarter cash outflow, management estimates that if spending remains at the same pace, the firm would not need to raise additional capital in the near term. That reduced immediate pressure on the balance sheet could, in turn, lessen impetus to pursue a public offering right away.
However, recent industry reports indicate that OpenAI had been preparing to cut prices on some AI services to better compete with rival Anthropic. Analysts and market watchers note that price reductions, if implemented, might exert further strain on the company's financial position, particularly because the firm has not yet achieved overall profitability.
Separately, earlier reporting placed OpenAI's net loss for 2025 at roughly $39 billion. That prior shortfall, combined with the ongoing elevated cash burn and potential margin pressure from reported pricing moves, frames the company's near-term financial trajectory as uncertain.
Context and implications
The Q1 spending figures and cash balance reflect an organization operating at significant scale: high revenue growth, substantial operating expenditures and a bolstered cash cushion from late-March financing. How pricing strategies evolve and whether spending levels normalize will determine the firm's path toward profitability.