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Amazon Q4 FY 2025: Revenue Beat, AWS +24% Amid $200B Capex Plan

Amazon Q4 FY 2025 Revenue Beat, AWS +24% Amid $200B Capex Plan

Analyst(s): Futurum Research
Publication Date: February 9, 2026

Amazon’s Q4 FY 2025 results highlight accelerating AWS growth tied to AI workloads, a scaling first‑party silicon strategy, and rising customer commitments. Management’s 2026 capex outlook centers on AI infrastructure build‑out, with near‑term margin pacing shaped by satellite and international investments.

What is Covered in this Article:

  • Amazon’s Q4 FY 2025 financial results
  • AWS AI stack and custom silicon momentum
  • Bedrock, Nova, and agentic platform signals
  • Ads growth and Prime Video reach
  • Guidance and Final Thoughts

The News: Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN) reported Q4 FY 2025 revenue of $213.4 billion, up 14% year over year (YoY), versus Wall Street consensus of $211.5 billion. North America revenue was $127.1 billion (+10% YoY), International was $50.7 billion (+17% YoY; +11% constant currency), and Amazon Web Services (AWS) was $35.6 billion (+24% YoY). Operating income was $25.0 billion (Q4 FY 2024: $21.2 billion) and the corresponding margin expanded by 40 basis points YoY to 11.7%. Net income was $21.2 billion (+6% YoY) and diluted EPS was $1.95 versus $1.86 in the previous year.

“AWS growing 24% (our fastest growth in 13 quarters), Advertising growing 22%, Stores growing briskly across North America and International, our chips business growing triple digit percentages YoY—this growth is happening because we’re continuing to innovate at a rapid rate, and identify and knock down customer problems,” said Andy Jassy, President and CEO, Amazon. “We expect to invest about $200 billion in capital expenditures across Amazon in 2026, and anticipate strong long-term return on invested capital.”

Amazon Q4 FY 2025: Revenue Beat, AWS +24% Amid $200B Capex Plan

Analyst Take: Amazon’s quarter underscores that AI demand is translating into accelerating AWS revenue, deeper customer commitments, and rapid adoption of custom silicon. The company’s end‑to‑end AI stack—models, agent tooling, orchestration, and infrastructure—continues to expand, with early traction in agentic workloads and developer productivity. Management’s 2026 capex plan prioritizes AI infrastructure and first‑party chips to improve price‑performance and lower inference costs. Near‑term operating income guidance reflects satellite investments (Amazon Leo) and international pricing actions, even as AWS efficiency initiatives continue.

AWS AI Stack, Custom Silicon, and Customer Commitments

AWS growth accelerated 24% YoY to $35.6 billion, taking the annualized run rate to approximately $142.0 billion as customers expand core and AI workloads on the platform. Management highlighted a multi‑billion‑dollar run rate for AWS chips (Graviton and Trainium), now over $10.0 billion and growing at triple‑digit percentages YoY. Trainium2 has 1.4 million chips landed and underpins a majority of Amazon Bedrock inference; Trainium3 is ramping with expected near‑full 2026 supply commitments, while Trainium4 targets 2027 with higher compute and bandwidth. AWS reported an order backlog of $244.0 billion, up 40% YoY and 22% sequentially, signaling sustained multi‑year demand visibility. The team added more than 1 gigawatt of capacity in Q4 FY 2025 while expanding agreements with enterprises and government agencies across industries. Together, these indicators point to continued AWS share gains and durable monetization potential for AI infrastructure.

Bedrock, Nova, and the Agentic Platform

Amazon Bedrock reached a multi‑billion‑dollar annualized run rate with customer spend up 60% quarter‑over‑quarter (QoQ), reflecting momentum across managed models and agentic workloads. The Nova family expanded with Nova 2 variants and Nova Sonic, while Nova Forge enables customers to pre‑train with their proprietary data to create tailored “Novellas” at early checkpoints. AgentCore provides policy, evaluations, and memory primitives to deploy agents securely at scale, addressing production‑grade integration with data, identity, and governance. Amazon is also rolling out Frontier and autonomous agents for code, DevOps, and security, with developer usage of Kiro growing more than 150% QoQ. This stack positions AWS to capture spend from both enterprise‑built agents and third‑party agents through consistent orchestration and controls. Overall, lower friction to build and deploy agents should lift attach to core AWS services and drive incremental workload migration.

Advertising Flywheel and Prime Video Reach

Q4 advertising revenue was $21.3 billion, supported by Sponsored Products in retail, growing signal density, and AI‑driven optimization. Prime Video ads are now available in 16 countries with an average ad‑supported audience of 315 million, broadening reach for brands. New AI‑powered “ads agent” and “creative agent” tools allow brands to generate, target, and optimize full‑funnel campaigns in hours, not weeks. These tools compress creative cycles and improve relevancy, which can increase campaign throughput and return on ad spend. Advertising enhances the profitability of Amazon’s retail ecosystem while providing measurable value for sellers and vendors. As Prime Video ad inventory scales, Amazon’s multi‑surface ad platform should deepen its flywheel effects across commerce and media.

Guidance and Final Thoughts

For Q1 FY 2026, Amazon guided net sales to $173.5 billion–$178.5 billion (consensus: $175.5 billion) and operating income to $16.5 billion–$21.5 billion (consensus: $22.2 billion). Management expects approximately $200.0 billion in FY 2026 capital expenditures, predominantly for AWS and AI infrastructure, with an emphasis on accelerating first‑party silicon and data center capacity. Trailing‑twelve‑month operating cash flow was $139.5 billion; free cash flow was $11.2 billion, reflecting $128.3 billion in purchases of property and equipment tied largely to AI investments. North America operating income is expected to absorb roughly a $1.0 billion YoY cost increase in Q1 FY 2026 related to Amazon Leo, with many satellite and launch costs expensed ahead of planned capitalization later this year. Execution priorities include pacing installations to demand signals, managing cost‑to‑serve, and preserving long‑term ROIC discipline amid elevated build‑out.

See the full press release on Amazon’s Q4 FY 2025 financial results on the company website.

Declaration of generative AI and AI-assisted technologies in the writing process: This content has been generated with the support of artificial intelligence technologies. Due to the fast pace of content creation and the continuous evolution of data and information, The Futurum Group and its analysts strive to ensure the accuracy and factual integrity of the information presented. However, the opinions and interpretations expressed in this content reflect those of the individual author/analyst. The Futurum Group makes no guarantees regarding the completeness, accuracy, or reliability of any information contained herein. Readers are encouraged to verify facts independently and consult relevant sources for further clarification.

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.

Other insights from Futurum:

Amazon’s Alexa+ Challenges GPT and Gemini with Voice-First Design

Amazon EC2 G7e Goes GA With Blackwell GPUs. What Changes for AI Inference?

Amazon Q3 FY 2025 Earnings: AWS Reaccelerates, Retail and Ads Grow

Author Information

Futurum Research
Futurum Research

Futurum Research delivers forward-thinking insights on technology, business, and innovation. Content published under the Futurum Research byline incorporates both human and AI-generated information, always with editorial oversight and review from the expert Futurum Research team to ensure quality, accuracy, and relevance. All content, analysis, and opinion are based on sources and information deemed to be reliable at the time of publication.

The Futurum Group is not liable for any errors, omissions, biases, or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for any interpretations thereof. The reader is solely responsible for any decisions made or actions taken based on the information presented in this publication.

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