Analyst(s): Futurum Research
Publication Date: November 4, 2025
Twilio’s Q3 FY 2025 results highlight broad-based demand across enterprise, ISV, and self-serve channels, with accelerating adoption in Voice and software add-ons. Management emphasized progress in trusted communications, conversational AI, and solution selling as near-term growth drivers.
What is Covered in this Article:
- Twilio’s Q3 FY 2025 financial results
- Voice AI and omnichannel momentum
- ISV and self-serve channel expansion
- Solution bundles and trusted communications
- Guidance and Final Thoughts
The News: Twilio (NYSE: TWLO) reported Q3 FY 2025 revenue of $1.3 billion, up 15% year over year (YoY), versus Wall Street consensus of $1.29 billion. Non-GAAP operating income was $235.0 million, up 29% YoY. The corresponding margin expanded to 18% from 16.1% in the prior year. Non-GAAP diluted EPS was $1.25, up by 23% YoY.
“Twilio saw another record quarter of revenue and non-GAAP income from operations, and as a result, we’ve raised our revenue, profitability, and free cash flow targets for the full year,” said Khozema Shipchandler, CEO of Twilio. “We saw broad-based strength across customer segments, ranging from startups to enterprises to ISVs, that continue to choose Twilio to power their customer engagement.”
Twilio Q3 FY 2025 Results Lift Outlook on Broad-Based Demand
Analyst Take: Twilio’s quarter underscores that usage-driven demand is recovering across core channels while newer growth vectors—voice, AI-enabled use cases, and software add-ons—are scaling. The company’s execution in ISV and self-serve channels is translating into durable expansion, with solution selling beginning to layer in higher-margin products. With the Stytch acquisition, Twilio is positioning authentication and identity as a native capability for AI-era interactions. The setup for FY 2026 centers on expanding trusted, branded communications and accelerating cross-sell of voice, Verify, and conversational AI.
Voice, AI, and Omnichannel Traction
Twilio’s voice revenue accelerated to mid-teens YoY growth—its fastest pace in over three years—supported by Voice AI customers growing nearly 60% YoY and a 10x YoY increase from the top 10 Voice AI startups. Conversation Relay call volume more than tripled quarter over quarter as customers embedded context-aware virtual agents for call deflection and follow-ups. Rapid onboarding was highlighted by Genspark AI, which deployed automated calling within a week and subsequently expanded into email for marketing communications. Traditional messaging remained in high-teens growth with RCS volumes more than doubling quarter over quarter as branded communications scaled globally. These dynamics suggest that Twilio’s platform is increasingly being selected for end-to-end omnichannel engagements, where voice and AI augment core messaging workflows.
ISV and Self-Serve Engines
ISV and self-serve channels each delivered 20%+ YoY revenue growth, reinforcing Twilio’s “land and expand” motion from developer-led adoption to scaled platform use. Management cited a seven-figure ISV win spanning SMS, WhatsApp, and RCS, as well as the Engagement Suite, along with a nine-figure multi-product renewal with a large cloud provider. Ending free tiers for email and marketing APIs converted many small accounts into active customers. At the same time, self-serve demand saw particular strength in voice, with 40% growth attributed to that product area. The improving dollar-based net expansion rate (109%) points to healthier usage patterns across cohorts. The takeaway: durable ISV pipelines and self-serve conversions are supporting sustained net expansion and multi-product adoption.
Solution Selling and Trusted Communications
The Agent Productivity solution launched and closed its first set of deals, including Inhabit’s multi-year hybrid agentic transformation leveraging Flex and Conversation Relay for intelligent inbound handling. Verify grew more than 25% YoY, aided by AI-driven anti-fraud features like Fraud Guard, aligning with customer demand for secure, authenticated communications. RCS reached global general availability, and early adopters, such as Partiful, used it to deliver branded experiences at scale across multiple countries. Twilio’s position as a customer engagement platform (CEP) with communications, data context, and AI-driven orchestration aligns with enterprise requirements for persistent, two-way customer memory.
Guidance and Final Thoughts
Twilio guided Q4 FY 2025 revenue to $1.31–$1.32 billion (organic +8%–9%), non-GAAP operating income to $230–$240 million, and raised FY 2025 targets: reported revenue growth to 12.4%–12.6% (prior: 10%–11%), organic revenue growth to 11.3%–11.5% (prior: 9%–10%), non-GAAP operating income to $900–$910 million (prior: $850–$875 million), and free cash flow to $920–$930 million (prior: $875–$900 million). Carrier fee pass-throughs remain a headwind to reported gross margins; however, pricing actions, platform efficiency, and a shift in mix toward voice and software add-ons are intended to support gross profit dollar growth. The Stytch acquisition is expected to advance Twilio’s identity and authentication roadmap for AI agents, adding developer-centric capabilities for secure digital interactions. For enterprise leaders, the priority is clear: unify communications, data, and AI to enable trusted, branded, and context-aware customer engagement across channels.
See the full press release on Twilio’s Q3 FY 2025 financial results on the company website.
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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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