Analyst(s): Keith Kirkpatrick
Publication Date: August 8, 2025
Twilio’s Q2 FY 2025 earnings highlight how accelerating momentum in messaging and voice, combined with AI-driven product innovation unveiled at its SIGNAL conference, is fueling strong growth and record free cash flow. However, persistent gross margin pressures and higher R&D spending signal a more measured profitability outlook in the near term.
What is Covered in this Article:
- Twilio’s Q2 FY 2025 financial results
- AI-driven product launches at SIGNAL
- Growth in messaging, voice, and RCS adoption with strong large-deal activity
- Go-to-market execution driving active customer and multi-product growth
- Gross margin dynamics, carrier fee impacts, and strategic investments in AI and RCS
- Updated Q3 and FY 2025 guidance, revenue growth outlook, and profitability trends
The News: Twilio Inc. (NYSE: TWLO) reported its Q2 FY 2025 results, with revenue of $1.23 billion, up 13% year-over-year (YoY) and exceeding consensus estimates by 3.4%. Communications revenue grew 14% YoY to $1.15 billion, while Segment revenue remained flat YoY at $75.5 million. Non-GAAP income from operations rose 26% YoY to $221 million, marking a record quarterly high. The corresponding non-GAAP operating margin was 18.0%, up 180 basis points YoY. Non-GAAP diluted earnings per share (EPS) came in at $1.19, beating consensus by 13.7% and up from $0.87 in Q2 FY 2024. Free cash flow reached a record $263.5 million, up 33% YoY.
“The company’s focus and execution is paying off as Q2 marked another quarter of accelerated YoY revenue growth as well as record non-GAAP income from operations and free cash flow,” said Khozema Shipchandler, CEO of Twilio. “During the quarter, Twilio showcased our latest innovations at our user conference, Signal, further cementing our place in the ecosystem as the infrastructure layer for customer experience. We continue to combine communications, data, and AI to power amazing experiences for the world’s leading brands.”
Twilio Q2 FY 2025 Revenue Rises 13% With Record Profitability and Cash Flow
Analyst Take: Twilio delivered a strong Q2 FY 2025 with double-digit revenue growth, record non-GAAP income from operations, and record free cash flow, supported by accelerating momentum in both messaging and voice. Product innovation at the SIGNAL conference included the launch of ConversationRelay. It expanded Conversational Intelligence capabilities, alongside a multi-year strategic partnership with Microsoft, reinforcing Twilio’s role as the infrastructure layer for customer engagement.
While the top-line performance was robust, gross margin pressure from a mix shift toward messaging, higher carrier fees, and stepped-up R&D spending in AI will weigh on near-term profitability. The updated guidance reflects confidence in sustained revenue momentum, even as the stock reacted negatively to a softer-than-expected Q3 FY 2025 EPS outlook.
AI-Driven Product Innovation Expands Platform Capabilities
Twilio advanced its AI strategy with the general availability of ConversationRelay, enabling developers to build natural voice AI agents with their choice of LLM and power context-aware virtual agents across all Twilio channels. In its first quarter of availability, ConversationRelay completed nearly 1 million calls, including a fintech deployment automating credit limit inquiries, card tracking, and installment payments within two weeks of validation.
Conversational Intelligence, now in private beta for messaging and already in general availability for voice, recorded an 86% YoY increase in account usage. This feature unifies conversational data across channels for human and AI agents, enabling deeper customer insights, call scoring, and competitive intelligence. These capabilities directly integrate Twilio’s communications and data strengths, positioning the platform to capture AI-driven customer engagement demand at scale.
Strength in Messaging, Voice, and RCS Adoption
Messaging revenue growth accelerated for the fourth straight quarter, while voice revenue grew double digits for the first time in two years, boosted by adoption from AI startups in the self-serve channel. Large deal activity was strong, with communications deals above $500,000 up 57% YoY, supported by cross-sell motions and voice add-ons.
Rich Communication Services (RCS) momentum also built during the quarter, with customers such as Fresha achieving a 99.2% delivery rate, 41% read rate, and uplifts in appointment confirmations and reviews. Twilio also made WhatsApp business calling generally available, expanding omnichannel capabilities. These channel expansions reinforce Twilio’s market share gains in communications, despite the gross margin drag from messaging mix and carrier fees.
Go-to-Market Execution Driving Customer Growth
Active customer accounts rose to 349,000, up 10% YoY, aided by onboarding improvements in self-serve and new free-to-trial email services. Multi-product customer growth remained in double digits, while self-serve, ISV, international, and software add-on revenue all achieved double-digit gains.
Enterprise wins included brands across financial services, healthcare, and professional services, as well as ISVs and technology customers. These execution gains, combined with Twilio’s ability to land and expand across multiple channels and products, deepen customer relationships and drive broader platform adoption.
Gross Margin Dynamics and Strategic Investments
Non-GAAP gross margin fell to 50.7%, down 260 bps YoY, primarily due to a 260 bps increase in messaging mix, higher carrier fees, and FX impacts. Verizon’s Application-to-Person (A2P) fee increase contributed $6 million in Q2 FY 2025 and is expected to have a $20 million impact per quarter in H2 FY 2025.
Management is implementing pricing actions in messaging and voice, particularly in North America’s self-serve channel, and pursuing platform cost optimization, including migrating email infrastructure to the cloud and securing better carrier pricing through prepayments. These measures, combined with growth in higher-margin products, are aimed at stabilizing margins over the near term. Meanwhile, increased R&D investments in AI, voice, and RCS reflect Twilio’s intent to accelerate roadmap delivery in high-demand areas while sustaining operating profitability.
Guidance and Final Thoughts
For Q3 FY 2025, Twilio guided revenue to $1.25-$1.26 billion (+10%-11% YoY; above consensus estimate of $1.2 billion) and non-GAAP diluted EPS to $1.01-$1.06, below the $1.14 consensus, reflecting ongoing gross margin pressure and higher R&D spend. FY 2025 guidance was raised for organic revenue growth (9%-10% vs. 7.5%-8.5% prior) and free cash flow ($875-$900 million vs. $850-$875 million prior), with non-GAAP operating income projected at $850-$875 million.
Management flagged tougher H2 FY 2025 comparisons due to lapping prior-year political messaging volumes, but expects sustained growth from self-serve, cross-sell, ISV, and international channels.
Notably, Twilio’s revenue from Segment, its customer data platform offering, was flat year over year, and the company will need to continue investing in it to drive growth over the next few quarters.
While margin headwinds will temper near-term profitability, Twilio’s expanding AI portfolio, growing multi-product adoption, and strategic partnerships position it to drive growth into FY 2026.
See the complete press release on Twilio’s Q2 FY 2025 results on the Twilio investor website.
Disclosure: Futurum is a research and advisory firm that engages or has engaged in research, analysis, and advisory services with many technology companies, including those mentioned in this article. The author does not hold any equity positions with any company mentioned in this article.
Analysis and opinions expressed herein are specific to the analyst individually and data and other information that might have been provided for validation, not those of Futurum as a whole.
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Author Information
Keith Kirkpatrick is Research Director, Enterprise Software & Digital Workflows for The Futurum Group. Keith has over 25 years of experience in research, marketing, and consulting-based fields.
He has authored in-depth reports and market forecast studies covering artificial intelligence, biometrics, data analytics, robotics, high performance computing, and quantum computing, with a specific focus on the use of these technologies within large enterprise organizations and SMBs. He has also established strong working relationships with the international technology vendor community and is a frequent speaker at industry conferences and events.
In his career as a financial and technology journalist he has written for national and trade publications, including BusinessWeek, CNBC.com, Investment Dealers’ Digest, The Red Herring, The Communications of the ACM, and Mobile Computing & Communications, among others.
He is a member of the Association of Independent Information Professionals (AIIP).
Keith holds dual Bachelor of Arts degrees in Magazine Journalism and Sociology from Syracuse University.
