OpenAI Burns $3.7B In Q1 As Revenue Reaches $5.7B


OpenAI burned through approximately $3.7 billion during the first quarter of 2026 despite generating $5.7 billion in revenue, exposing the extraordinary cost of scaling one of the world’s largest artificial intelligence platforms.

The figures came from internal shareholder documents reviewed by The Information. They have not been independently confirmed through audited public filings, and Reuters was unable to verify them directly.

The reported cash burn equaled roughly 65% of quarterly revenue. Both revenue and cash consumption were about three times higher than during the same period in 2025, showing that commercial growth has not yet reduced OpenAI’s dependence on outside capital.

Revenue Growth Meets Heavy Compute Costs

OpenAI’s official disclosures confirm that its commercial expansion accelerated sharply entering 2026. The company said in March that it was generating approximately $2 billion in monthly revenue, compared with $1 billion per quarter at the end of 2024.

That pace broadly aligns with the reported $5.7 billion first-quarter total, although revenue recognition and monthly run rates can differ.

The financial pressure comes from the infrastructure required to train new models, serve expanding ChatGPT usage and support enterprise and developer customers. OpenAI has continued adding data-center capacity through Stargate, with the company treating access to chips, power and large-scale computing systems as a core constraint on future growth.

Internal figures reviewed by The Information also placed OpenAI’s first-quarter gross margin near 39%, up from 33% one year earlier. The improvement suggests that inference economics are becoming more efficient, but research, staffing, infrastructure and model-development costs remain large enough to keep overall cash consumption elevated.

Record Funding Supports The Expansion

OpenAI has raised enormous amounts of capital to finance that buildout. The company announced $122 billion in fresh funding in March, following an earlier $110 billion commitment involving SoftBank, Nvidia and Amazon.

The new cash gives OpenAI a substantial buffer, but it also raises expectations for revenue growth and eventual operating leverage. Investors are funding the company on the assumption that ChatGPT subscriptions, enterprise contracts, API usage and new agent-based products can eventually support the cost of frontier-model development.

The latest figures arrive as OpenAI moves closer to public-market scrutiny after submitting a confidential S-1 for a possible IPO. A listing would expose margins, infrastructure commitments and cash requirements to a much broader group of investors.

OpenAI’s $5.7 billion quarterly revenue confirms powerful demand for AI products, but the accompanying $3.7 billion burn shows how much capital is still required to maintain that growth. Future financial performance will depend on whether revenue can expand faster than compute, research and deployment costs.