ARHS May 7, 2026

Arhaus Q1 2026 Earnings Call - Record Revenue Held Back by Weather and Geopolitical Headwinds, But Demand V-Shaped Recovery in April and May Supports Full-Year Outlook

Summary

Arhaus delivered its largest first quarter net revenue ever at $314 million, up 0.9% year-over-year, but comparable written sales fell 5.7% due to a perfect storm of severe weather disruptions, a delayed spring catalog, and macro uncertainty triggered by the conflict in Iran. Management characterized these as temporary headwinds rather than structural damage, pointing to a sharp V-shaped recovery in showroom traffic and order momentum beginning in late March and accelerating through April and May. The company held its full-year guidance, citing healthy client deposits, improved inventory availability, and strong performance in its interior designer and trade channels as key supports for the back half of the year.

On the cost side, gross margin compressed 70 basis points to 36.4% as fuel costs and showroom occupancy weighed on profitability. Management noted that while inflationary pressures persist, productivity initiatives and a new transportation management system should begin to offset these headwinds in the second half. Arhaus remains debt-free with $177 million in cash, and is investing heavily in its distribution network and technology infrastructure. The company also highlighted a strong product cycle that aligns with shifting consumer preferences toward warmer, more eclectic designs, and announced a new trade program offering discounts alongside commissions to design professionals. The second quarter outlook reflects continued near-term caution but targets the high end of guidance, with revenue expected between $350 million and $370 million.

Key Takeaways

  • Arhaus reported record Q1 2026 net revenue of $314 million, up 0.9% year-over-year, beating the midpoint of guidance.
  • Comparable written sales declined 5.7%, driven by severe weather disruptions that closed over half of showrooms at various points, a delayed spring catalog, and macro uncertainty from the Iran conflict.
  • Comparable delivered sales fell 1.7%, while gross margin compressed 70 basis points to 36.4% due to 40 basis points of fuel cost inflation and 40 basis points from showroom occupancy costs.
  • Management described a V-shaped recovery in demand, with trends improving meaningfully in late March and accelerating through April and May, supporting confidence in full-year guidance.
  • Arhaus held its full-year 2026 guidance: net revenue of $1.43 billion to $1.47 billion, comparable delivered sales of flat to +3%, net income of $66 million to $75 million, and adjusted EBITDA of $150 million to $161 million.
  • Q2 2026 guidance reflects near-term caution with expected net revenue of $350 million to $370 million, comparable delivered sales of -5% to flat, and adjusted EBITDA of $40 million to $49 million, with performance weighed down by a strong prior-year quarter.
  • The company is investing in a new transportation management system (TMS), expected to deliver $4 million to $5 million in annualized benefits, and is on track to launch its Order Management System and ERP in Q1 2027.
  • Arhaus remains debt-free with $177 million in cash and cash equivalents, down from $261 million at year-end due to a $49 million special dividend, but maintains a strong balance sheet to invest through the cycle.
  • New product launches are resonating strongly with consumers, as trends shift toward warmer, eclectic designs that align with Arhaus's heritage, with newness accounting for 12% of Q1 sales, up from 8% last year.
  • A redesigned Arhaus Trade program launched in Q1 offers design professionals a choice between commission or discount structures, with early response described as phenomenal, targeting the $27 billion U.S. interior design market.

Full Transcript

Operator: Good morning, and welcome to the Arhaus first quarter 2026 earnings conference call. Please note that this call is being recorded and that the reproduction of any part of this call is not permitted without written authorization from the company. I will now turn the call over to your host, Tara Atwood-Saja, Vice President, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Andrew Carter, Analyst, Stifel0: Good morning, and thank you for joining us for the Arhaus first quarter 2026 earnings call. Joining me on today’s call for prepared remarks are John Reed, our Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, and Michael Lee, our Chief Financial Officer. Jennifer Porter, our Chief Marketing and Ecommerce Officer, will join us for the Q&A portion of the call. During Q&A, we kindly ask that you limit yourself to one question only. This will allow us to get to as many callers as possible within our one-hour window. You are welcome to re-queue for additional questions if time permits. We issued our earnings press release in Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31st, 2026 before the market opened today. Those documents are available on our investor relations website at ir.arhaus.com. A replay of the call will be available on our website within 24 hours.

I would like to remind everyone that our remarks today concerning future expectations, events, objectives, strategies, targets, trends, or results constitute forward-looking statements. Actual results or events may differ materially due to a number of risks and uncertainties. For a summary of these risk factors and additional information, please refer to this morning’s press release and the cautionary statements and risk factors described in our most recent annual report on Form 10-K and Subsequent 10-Qs, as such factors may be updated from time to time in our filings with the SEC. The forward-looking statements are made as of today’s date and except as may be required by law, the company undertakes no obligation to update or revise these statements. We will also refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures, and this morning’s press release includes the relevant non-GAAP reconciliations. Now, I will turn the call over to John.

John Reed, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Arhaus: Thanks, Tara. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us. I want to start by discussing our first quarter performance, how we view the current environment, and why we remain confident in the long-term opportunity ahead of us. We have been in business for over 40 years. When you have operated through as many cycles as we have, you learn that quarter-to-quarter fluctuations matter, but they do not define a business. We are building Arhaus for the long term. The first quarter marked the highest first quarter net revenue in our history. This reflects the strength of our operating model, the resilience of our client base, and the disciplined execution across all our teams. We delivered this performance despite several temporary headwinds.

First, more than half of our showrooms experienced weather-related disruptions at some point in the quarter, including temporary closures in several key markets. We also saw a delay in our spring catalog release, which shifted some demand timing. In addition, just 48 hours after our previous earnings call, the conflict in Iran began, creating a broader macro uncertainty and contributing to more cautious consumer sentiment. That caution was most visible in our comparable written sales, which decreased a little over 5% during the quarter. We believe that our pressure was primarily driven by those temporary factors: weather disruption, delayed catalog timing, and of course, the broader macro uncertainty. Importantly, we view this as short-term pressures, not structural changes. When we look at the second half of March and trends continuing through April and into May, we saw meaningful improvement and stronger momentum.

That gives us confidence as we move through the second quarter. As we have for four decades, we navigate cycles by staying focused on what we can control. Our long-term strategy remains unchanged, and we continue to execute with discipline across the key drivers of our business. Short-term volatility can create noise, but it does not change who we are, the strength of our brand, or the opportunity ahead of us. Our future is incredibly bright. We believe we are exceptionally well-positioned with our product, our design leadership, and our ability to stay ahead of where the customer is going. We continue to deliver differentiated collections that set us apart and strengthen our competitive position. Let me walk you through five key growth drivers. First, we remain focused on product innovation, which is the foundation of our brand and the one of our strongest competitive advantages.

We continue to invest through cycles in livable luxury, heirloom quality, and artisan crafted pieces that are built to last for generations. Our assortment and quality is exclusive to Arhaus and cannot be purchased or replicated elsewhere, reinforcing the uniqueness of our brand and the emotional connection our clients have with our brands. Our aesthetic breadth spans traditional, transitional, and modern designs with a level of customization that is meaningfully differentiator for us. A key competitive advantage is our custom upholstery, with the majority of our upholstery sourced domestically. This gives us greater control over quality, cost, lead times, and the client experience. We believe we are in one of the strongest periods of product innovation in our history, with 2026 featuring some of our most expressive designs to date. We are seeing a shift from neutral-only palettes towards richer colors, patterns, architectural silhouettes, and layered textures.

We have been ahead of this trend, a traditional evolution, refining classic silhouettes for modern living with pieces that feel collected over time, rooted in craftsmanship and layered in character. You see it in our tailoring trim, fringe, distinctive textiles, materials that create a warmth and individuality in your home. At the same time, we continue to expand our customization capabilities with hundreds of silhouettes and more than 700 fabrics and leathers, allowing clients and our designers to create something truly personal and uniquely special. Our vertically integrated sourcing model further strengthens our quality standards. We work directly with artisans across North America, Europe, and South Asia, many of which we have partnered with for decades using time-honored craftsmanship and responsible sourcing practices. Since our founding more than 40 years ago, we believed furniture should be responsibly sourced, lovingly made, and built to last.

Because of our unique model, we are extremely competitive in our pricing, in most cases, lower retails and better quality than many of our competition. We remain committed to investing in product innovation during periods of uncertainty because we have consistently seen that strong product cycles positions us to capture sales when consumer confidence improves. Second, we remain committed to our showroom growth strategy. These are longer-term investments with attractive returns, and we continue to see meaningful white space opportunities. Since 2019 through 2025, we have grown our showroom footprint for more than 50%, and showrooms opened during this period represented 37% of our net revenue growth, reinforcing the long-term value creation of our disciplined approach. As of today, we operate 108 showrooms, including our new traditional showroom in Ashburn, Virginia, which opened just last month.

We were particularly excited about this location in Ashburn, one of the most affluent areas in the country. It is a premium lifestyle destination that aligns exceptionally well with our client base and our showroom growth strategy. Just this week, we completed the expansion of our Park Meadows showroom in Lone Tree, Colorado, an important market for us. Park Meadows is a premium luxury retail destination supported by affluent demographics and premium co-tendency. Expanding this showroom reflects strong local engagement, showroom productivity, and an opportunity to deepen client relationships through greater product presentations, design services, and more expansive showroom experience. For 2026, we continue to expect to complete approximately 10-14 showroom projects, including 4-6 new openings, 6-8 relocation renovations or expansions. We remain confident in our long-term showroom strategy because proximity matters.

Our showrooms are often the front door to the brand, driving client engagement, conversion, and long-term relationships. Third, we remain committed to the investments in our infrastructure needed to grow our business. We are making meaningful progress across initiatives focused on modernizing our distribution network and technology infrastructure, which are foundational to our long-term growth, improved operational efficiencies, and an enhanced client experience. At our core, we believe that investing with discipline, even during periods of uncertainty, will help us emerge with stronger, more durable competitive advantages. I’ll let Mike dive deeper into the progress of our strategic investments shortly. Fourth, we remain focused on our client. This includes delivering an exceptional client experience across three primary channels: our core customers, our clients that are engaged with Arhaus interior designers, and our trade partners.

These relationships are essential to how we build loyalty, deepen engagement, and capture market share, particularly during periods of macroeconomic uncertainty. Our interior designers continue to be one of the most powerful drivers of demand across the brand. Designer-supported projects generate meaningful higher order values, drive stronger repeat engagement, and provide greater visibility into our future projects. In the first quarter, Arhaus interior designers represented a significant % of our total written sales, and we expect this to continue to grow. We are seeing similar momentum with the trade, which represents another attractive long-term demand channel for us.

We recently launched our newly redesigned Arhaus Trade program, which was built in collaboration with the feedback from our trade community and designed to strengthen the relationship with design professionals, builders, and developers. The program provides personalized order support, access to our exclusive products, and a customized trade dashboard that empowers professionals to better serve their clients, including design tools for 3D and 2D planning, room planning. The U.S. interior design market is approximately $27 billion. We see significant long-term opportunity to grow our reach within this channel. We remain focused on building out our integrated omni-channel model. Our omni-channel model allows us to meet our clients wherever they choose to engage, whether online or in one of our showrooms. Our showrooms, we curate immersive, traditionally inspired spaces that feel layered, warm, and aspirational. Clients don’t simply see a piece of furniture.

They feel transported into a home that reflects their own. Digitally, we extend the same emotional experience through enhanced storytelling, ensuring a seamless connection across e-commerce platforms and showroom experience. 40 years in, we have navigated recessions, market disruption, supply chain shocks, and a pandemic. The long-term strategy for Arhaus remains intact, and we are focused on the disciplined execution across 5 key drivers of our business that I had just shared. At the same time, we are making strategic adjustments to thoughtfully navigate the near-term environment. These include being more deliberate with the pace of our investments, taking a more measured approach to headcount growth, and in the near term, implementing new promotions to help accelerate the client journey from aspirational to conversion, and increasing our marketing efforts to further increase engagement and conversion while keeping an eye on cost to protect margins.

In closing, our product is exceptional. Our client continues to invest in their home, and our showrooms are very productive. Our balance sheet remains a competitive advantage. We are debt-free and operating from a position of strength. This gives us flexibility to invest through the cycle while maintaining a disciplined approach to allocate capital. Investing in the business, returning value to shareholders, and maintaining financial flexibility. Now I’ll turn it over to Mike.

Michael Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Arhaus: All right. Thanks, John. Good morning, everyone. As I reflect on my first year in this role, I’m proud of what we have accomplished across the business and the discipline with which our teams have continued to execute. Even in a more challenging environment, we remain focused on strengthening our operations, investing in the business, and positioning Arhaus for long-term profitable growth. That perspective gives me continued confidence in the strength of our model, the resilience of our client base, and our ability to navigate near-term volatility while staying committed to our long-term strategy. Net revenue was $314 million in the first quarter, up 0.9% year-over-year and above the midpoint of our guidance range, making the largest first quarter net revenue in our history.

This performance is particularly notable as we lapped a prior year period that did not face the same tariff uncertainty, macro volatility, or geopolitical disruption. Despite these ongoing headwinds, including the recent escalation in global conflict, we continue to deliver net revenue growth through a volatile environment. Gross profit was $114 million, down 1% versus last year, with gross margin decreasing 70 basis points to 36.4%, driven by higher fuel prices of 40 basis points and showroom occupancy costs of 40 basis points. Selling, general, and administrative expenses increased 1.9% to $112 million, driven by a $1.9 million increase primarily related to strategic investments to support and drive the growth of the business, including supply chain and technology improvements and other corporate expenses.

SG&A load increased 40 basis points to 35.7%. Net income was $2.2 million and within our guidance. Adjusted EBITDA was $18 million and within our guidance range. Adjusted EBITDA margin decreased 30 basis points year-over-year. As a reminder, there is a seasonal impact to margins in the first quarter, which carries lower net revenue as a result of less operating leverage. Turning to our comparable metrics, comparable delivered sales decreased 1.7% above the midpoint of our guidance range. Performance during the quarter was impacted by severe weather, our delayed catalog, as well as broader consumer softness tied to macroeconomic uncertainty, which weighed on overall delivery volumes. Comparable written sales decreased 5.7%, driven by a combination of factors.

Weather-related disruption in key markets reduced traffic during important promotional periods, including our semi-annual storewide sale in January. In total, more than half of our showrooms experienced temporary closures at some point during the quarter due to adverse weather conditions. Additionally, the delayed timing of our spring catalog release, as well as macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainty, including the war in Iran, impacted comparable written sales. While comparable written sales were pressured during the quarter, trends improved meaningfully in the back half of March, where elevated promotional activity drove stronger engagement and improved conversion. That trend continued in April and into May. Turning to our balance sheet and liquidity. We ended the quarter with $177 million in cash and cash equivalents, a decrease of 30% from December 31, 2025. This primarily reflects the $49 million special cash dividend paid in March.

Net merchandise inventory totaled $369 million, up 9% from December 31st, 2025. The increase reflects higher product costs, including the impact of tariffs, as well as inventory investments, including increased depth in best sellers as well as new product introductions, in addition to outdoor assortments ahead of the seasonal ramp. Excluding tariff impact, net merchandise inventory would be up approximately 6% from December 31st, 2025. Turning to strategic investments. We continue to make meaningful progress on numerous initiatives to modernize our distribution network and our technology infrastructure. This initiative is aligned with our long-term strategy designed to improve operational efficiency, enhance the client experience, and strengthen our internal controls and support profitability. Simply put, these investments are foundational to supporting our next phase of growth.

A recent milestone was the go live of phase 1 of our transportation management system in April. This is an important foundational step in modernizing our distribution network and strengthening our transportation capabilities across the business. We are now live with the new TMS system and are nearing the end of our hypercare phase, at which point we will be fully operational. As with any large-scale implementation, there is continued work underway and our teams remain focused on execution and long-term success. Our TMS is expected to deliver several meaningful benefits over time. First, improved cost efficiencies through better load optimization, route planning, and carrier selection, helping us to reduce transportation expense and improve network productivity. Second, greater operational visibility through real-time tracking and system-driven planning, replacing manual processes and giving us stronger control across the delivery journey.

Third, stronger integration and scalability across our broader distribution network, creating efficiencies through connectivity with our warehouse management systems and other platforms. We are encouraged by the progress and excited about the long-term value this platform can create as we continue to expand capabilities across the network. Additionally, we continue to make meaningful progress on our Order Management System and Enterprise Resource Planning initiatives. Our OMS investment is critical to enhancing the client experience and improving the purchase journey across our omni-channel model. While our ERP investment is designed to modernize our core financial and operational systems. Execution across our distribution network and technology infrastructure investment remains our top priority, and success is delivering these initiatives on time, on budget, and within scope. Equally important is the cultural shift underway.

As we implement these systems, we are increasing accountability and standardization across Arhaus, building a more scalable and disciplined operating model. Overall, we view these strategic investments as essential to strengthening our foundation and positioning Arhaus for long-term profitable growth. Turning to tariffs and sourcing. Trade policy remains fluid, particularly following the recent Supreme Court ruling on certain IEEPA related tariffs and the rollout of the CBP refund process. We are actively evaluating the potential implications, including the administrative process required to pursue refunds. Separately, the 10% global tariff implemented under Section 122 is currently scheduled to expire in July, though the path forward remains uncertain. Given this evolving backdrop, we continue to take a disciplined and measured approach. Importantly, our diversified sourcing strategy and meaningful domestic manufacturing footprint position us well across the range of potential policy scenarios.

Based on current policy, we continue to estimate 2026 tariff impacts to be in the range of $30 million-$40 million. This reflects some benefits from vendor negotiations, sourcing shifts, and operational efficiencies. We will continue to assess pricing over the coming months and quarters and plan to respond quickly and thoughtfully as conditions evolve. Turning to our outlook. While we continue to operate in a challenging environment, we remain confident in our full year 2026 outlook. In the first quarter, we achieved results within our expected range. We continue to believe our long-term strategy and operating model position us well to navigate near-term volatility. We recognize that the consumer has been pressured by broader economic uncertainty, geopolitical tensions, and shifting consumer sentiment. That being said, we also see several meaningful factors supporting the balance of the year.

First, we entered the second quarter with healthy client deposits, which we expect to convert to delivered revenue as inventory availability and in-stock positions improve across key categories. Second, we have increased promotional activity and marketing efforts to drive volume and client engagement, strengthen brand awareness, and stimulate demand. Third, we have seen continued strength in our interior design and trade channels. As a result, these factors continue to support our confidence in the back half of the year. Importantly, because of prior pricing actions, we have flexibility to increase our promotional activity while continuing to protect our margins. This allows us to support volume and demand generation without creating meaningful pressure on profitability. As we have said before, for our client base, we believe demand is often deferred rather than lost.

Our clients may consider purchases. We believe deferred demand, improved product availability, and demand generation efforts support our confidence in maintaining our full year guidance. It’s also important to note that our current outlook does not include any benefits from potential IEEPA tariff refunds. As we gain full clarity and confirmation around those refunds, we will evaluate any impact and update our guidance if necessary. For the full year, we continue to expect net revenue between $1.43 billion and $1.47 billion for year-over-year growth of between 3.7% and 6.6%. Comparable delivered sales of flat to +3%, net income of $66 million to $75 million, and adjusted EBITDA of $150 million to $161 million.

For the second quarter of 2026, we expect continued near-term pressure on demand as consumers remain cautious amid ongoing macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainty. Our second quarter outlook reflects a range of outcomes, with the low end assuming continued pressure on demand trends and the high end incorporating benefits from improved inventory availability, strong in-stock positions, client deposit conversion, and the positive impact of our increased marketing and promotional activity. As a reminder, we are also lapping a particularly strong second quarter in the prior year, which benefited from elevated delivered sales following insourcing of operations of our Dallas distribution center. Therefore, second quarter performance should be viewed in the context of this year-over-year comparison.

For the second quarter of 2026, we expect net revenue between $350 million to $370 million for a year-over-year growth rate of down 2.4% to up 3.2%, with comparable delivered sales of -5% to flat and net income of $19 million to $24 million and adjusted EBITDA of $40 million to $49 million. In closing, we are controlling what we can control and investing where it matters most and in positioning Arhaus to emerge stronger. We have the brand, the product, the balance sheet, and the strategy to navigate this period and capture opportunity as demand improves. Thank you to our teams across Arhaus for their focus and execution. To our shareholders, thank you for your continued support. With that, I’ll turn it over to the operator.

We are happy to answer your questions.

Operator: Thank you. We will now be conducting the question-and-answer session. We ask that you limit yourself to 1 question and 1 question only. If you would like to ask a question, please press star 1 on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star 2 if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using a speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. 1 moment while we pull for questions. The first question comes from the line of Andrew Carter with Stifel.

Andrew Carter, Analyst, Stifel: Thank you. Good morning. I wanted to ask, in terms of your reiteration of guidance, the guidance implies, I think, 3% to kind of 6.5% comparable growth in the second half of the year. In terms of where your written trends are today comparable, are they supportive of that kind of outlook, or do they need to accelerate from here to get to the low end, high end, et cetera? Thanks.

Michael Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Arhaus: Good morning. Thanks, Andrew. Let me first take a step back and remind everyone of the approach we took to setting our full year guidance back in February. Starting with the top line, our guidance assumed a continuation of a weak housing market. It assumed continued investments in home remodeling and renovations. We also assumed growth from our new Arhaus Trade model as a platform for growth into FY 2026. With this, we arrived at a range of around 0%-3% comp delivered growth, and that was further supported by 350 basis points of growth tied to new showrooms in the development pipeline. That was really what underpinned our top line guide.

Our EBITDA margin guide was based on flattish gross margins for the year, reflecting, you know, modest inflationary headwinds, you know, a full year of tariff impacts, as well as, you know, pricing actions and improved mix, as well as, you know, various productivity initiatives to help offset some of those headwinds. From an operating expense perspective, we assumed, you know, continued funding of our digital transformation, which started last November and will continue through this year, as well as increases for sales and marketing investments to help drive the top line. That’s what led to our EBITDA guidance of $151 million-$160 million for the year. Look, as we mentioned in our prepared marks, Q1 was challenging. We faced very difficult weather conditions.

Just to give you a little more color, we had 60 showrooms close for 5 days in January, which included a weekend. We had 20 showrooms close later in January for 2 days, and then another 20 showroom closures in February for 3 days. If you just run the math on selling days against the quarter, it’s about a 4% reduction in selling days as a result of those weather-related closures. We also, you know, had delays on the catalog, which coincided with our January storewide sale. The catalogs, a majority of the catalogs did not show up in people’s homes until the end of January.

When you take that and then add the impact of the war and the commensurate impacts of the capital markets and what it meant to consumer sentiment, along with the associated inflation concerns that are emerging, you know, we kind of had a perfect storm in Q1. You know, putting all that into context, we did see a meaningful improvement in, you know, showroom traffic and client engagement as we exited Q1 and proceeded into Q2, and that engagement really has continued through April and into May. That’s, you know, it’s consistent with what we’ve highlighted in the past, which is our clients tend to be, you know, very resilient. They often are the fastest to return following a period of uncertainty.

Though we’re all, you know, cautious about the macro backdrop, we believe we’re out of the woods when it comes to some of those unique challenges we faced in Q1. We’ve elected to hold our guide based on, you know, somewhat of an elevated risk profile. If you just look at our distance to go, taking our full year guide and bouncing that against what that means for Q2 to Q4, you know, we’ve got to deliver 1%-4% delivered comp growth versus the full year guide of 0%-3%. It’s about another point from a distance to go perspective. Again, very elevated but achievable given we know how Q2 is shaping up, and we know everything that’s in store, you know, for H2. That’s a little bit of a backdrop.

I also want to highlight that, you know, we’re entering a period where our inventory availability and our in-stock now status is reaching recent highs. You know, we haven’t talked a lot about it, but as we’ve navigated through tariffs, you know, over the last six to eight months, we’ve had portions of inventory where, you know, we were oversold, and we had elongated, you know, lead times. We’re in a much stronger position now than we were, you know, even two, three months ago. Really optimistic that we’re well-positioned, you know, from that perspective. You know, as far as our Q2 guide goes, Andrew, recall that we are overlapping, you know, a pretty big Q2 of last year.

Our delivered comp was up 10.5% last year in Q2. That was, you know, driven by the early ramp of Dallas. You know, as we sit here today, five weeks into the quarter, you know, we’re trending toward the high end of our Q2 guide. We kept our range wide because of the ongoing uncertainty that we’re facing, and we think that’s prudent. Once again, because of that Q2 overlap, I would encourage everyone to look at our Q2 guide relative to two years ago. In doing that, you’ll see that our Q2 revenue guide is +13% to +19% versus 2024. If you look at Adjusted EBITDA, it’s essentially flat to +22% versus 2024.

Just looking at it, taking the overlap out of play and looking at it versus 2 years ago. That’s how significant that Q2 overlap was for us. Again, just one final comment when we get back to our full year guide looking at EBITDA. We do have an elevated risk profile, really driven by a variety of inflationary headwinds. I mentioned, you know, fuel costs. They’re having both a direct and indirect impact on our business, and we are taking actions to mitigate these costs. And while we, you know, have a number of productivity initiatives underway, we expect that to start to flow through in the second half as well, and we’ll share more details on these as they materialize.

Just one, you know, final reminder, our current guidance does not include anything on tariff refunds. We just don’t know enough at this stage to guide on it. I can assure you by the end of Q2, we’ll have more information to share. Hopefully that gives you a little color on, you know, the building blocks behind our full year guide as we sit here, you know, five weeks into Q2.

Andrew Carter, Analyst, Stifel0: I just want to add one little piece just to our FY 2026 adjusted EBITDA guide is $150 million-$161 million for the full year.

Michael Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Arhaus: Thank you, Tara.

Operator: Our next question, we’ll hear from Marilyn Tuch with Bank of America.

Marilyn Tuch, Analyst, Bank of America: Thank you for taking my question. I was wondering if you could remind us the timeline of your order management system and ERP rollout. Are you still targeting 1Q 2027 for deployment? Can you remind us the P&L impact from that investment in 2026? I think maybe you expected to see some gross margin efficiencies from the transportation management part of that in the second half, just wondering what kind of SG&A cost you will see in 2026.

Michael Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Arhaus: Yeah. Thanks for the question. Look, we’re really excited about the progress we’re making on our digital transformation. The TMS system is going to provide meaningful benefits to our supply chain. In fact, even though we’re still in the hypercare phase, which we do expect to end in the next few days, by the way, we are already looking at the underlying KPIs that measure load rates and all the associated efficiencies that we expected to get from this transportation management system. Early indicators are that, yes, we are already seeing some of those benefits.

When you go fully operational on the TMS, which would include the phase 2 portion of that project, which kicks off here in the next few weeks, and it helps us with inbound transportation, we expect to see $4 million-$5 million a year in annualized benefits on just that transportation line item. For FY 2026, you know, we’re forecasting $1 million-$2 million of benefits. Maybe we’ll do a little bit better than that, but that’s what we’re modeling. When you look at the other components of the digital transformation, which include the ERP and the OMS, as we sit here today, we’re on schedule. With these projects, you always have week-to-week volatility on are we on track on certain tasks. Some we’re ahead on, some we’re behind on.

On its entirety, we are still tracking for a Q1 launch on both of those systems. And, you know, so far, we’re on budget and generally no massive, like, scope changes at this point. We feel pretty good about the scope. There’s a few things here and there that, you know, that we’re looking at. Generally, in terms of the overall deliverables, you know, we’re tracking quite well. Going back to our business case on this, you know, there’s a tremendous number of benefits that emerge over the next few years. Some of it is tied to software savings as we consolidate our ecosystem and have fewer systems that we’re paying licensing fees on. Some of it is in the form of IT efficiencies, where we can streamline our support costs.

Some of it just comes down to SG&A efficiency across the organization. Just from an SG&A perspective, we’re modeling 50 basis points of SG&A load that will materialize over the next, you know, 2 years. That’s still what we’re targeting. That’s, you know, again, it will come across different pockets of the organization, a lot of that being back office costs, whether it’s, you know, things like, you know, payroll, accounts payable, and other, you know, transactional areas of the business. Getting back to your point on that order management system, we see this as a significant unlock to how we fill orders, how we deploy inventory, and we think that’s gonna be a big unlock just from a productivity perspective, but also from a customer experience perspective.

Lots more to come. We’ll keep you updated quarterly on this, but tracking extremely well at this juncture.

Operator: Next, we’ll hear from Cristina Fernandez with Telsey Advisory Group.

Cristina Fernandez, Analyst, Telsey Advisory Group: Hi, good morning. I had a question for John. Can you talk about how consumers are responding to the newness, whether it was the spring collection or the expanded outdoor and the bath introductions you did in the fall? Also a clarification on the current trend. When you talk about significant improvement, has demand turned positive, or is it still negative but vastly improved from earlier in the quarter? Thanks.

John Reed, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Arhaus: Hi, Cristina. Thanks for the question. Product-wise, you know, I think as I said in the recorded talk that, you know, this is our biggest launch of new product, most exciting time, you know, I think in our history. As I’m sure you may or may not know, but, you know, trends have changed very quickly in the last year or so. They’ve changed really into our favor, product that is just right down our sweet spot. You know, it had been very stark white or even before that, just gray, neutral fabrics, you know, very flat. We’ve always been much more eclectic, much warmer, and so forth. It’s been, it’s a great time right now.

Michael Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Arhaus: We accelerated the launch of some of our products, and I’m thrilled to report that, in the big picture, the results have been phenomenal. Now we’re playing catch up to get them to all stores. You know, a lot of these groups that we say would have tested in 20 stores, put on the web, and so forth, we monitor closely, and if it’s outperforming, you know, a product that’s currently on floors, then we switch floor samples and send it out to all the stores. We’re in that process right now, but everything’s looking fantastic. I’m loving, you know, the wood pieces, the designs, the shapes.

I just got back from the Salone del Mobile.Milano last week before, and I’ve gotta say, we should have had a booth there because I think our product looks better than anybody else’s I saw in Milan. I’ve never said that before, but I think it’s the truth. We are dead on right with the trends, and we’re way ahead of the competition in it. Yeah, it’s gonna be a fun year for that.

Jennifer Porter, Chief Marketing and Ecommerce Officer, Arhaus: Yeah. Christina, just to add a little bit of color there, too, you know, Mike and John both referred to our catalog being delayed earlier. you know, specifically, as I think you all know, we have various catalogs and direct mailings that we send out. Big book at 228 pages, a 12-pager, postcards. The catalog that was affected with those delays was that 228-page book, and that is really the supporting system for us introducing all of that incredible new product and getting it out to our customers and into their homes. you know, just looking at that, customers are really responding well to that product. Now getting that marketing into homes, launching digital campaigns throughout the quarter.

We actually have gotten our early summer catalog out into homes at the end of March here. We’re just really excited to continue to see that initial engagement and excitement to that product. It continuing to grow going into Q2 now that more people know that it’s out there and are being driven into stores to go and see it.

John Reed, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Arhaus: It’s obviously the beginning of the outdoor season. So far it’s been phenomenal. We’re very happy with the results and, learning a lot for next year to even get better.

Michael Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Arhaus: I would just add on the newness front, in Q1, I think our newness was at around 12% of sales, up from 8% of sales last year. Continuing to lean more into that, and that trend continued into April. Look, I know, you know, we talked about not getting into month-to-month, you know, disclosures, I think the question was has demand turned positive in April? It absolutely has turned positive. I can tell you April and May are performing even ahead of some of our internal forecasts. We are very encouraged by the momentum in the business. You know, we talk about U-shaped recoveries and V-shaped recoveries. I would say April was more like a V-shaped recovery in that regard.

Operator: Next, we’ll move on to Steven Forbes with Guggenheim Securities.

Steven Forbes, Analyst, Guggenheim Securities: Good morning, John Reed, Michael Lee, Jennifer Porter. John Reed or Michael Lee, maybe a two-part question. First, can you expand on the promotional change that you’re investing behind versus the traditional buy more, save more, just so we understand what you guys are leaning into? Secondarily, the new trade model that you’ve launched here, would love to just hear you talk about, you know, what are the key attributes of it and what’s really resonating with the trade professionals.

John Reed, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Arhaus: Sure, Steven, I can start, and Jen can help with the promotion side. The trade model is pretty simple. You know, we have these outside folks that have their own businesses, and they have their own clients. They bring various people and hopefully more and more to us. All we did was we offered a second way for them to make an income. We were giving them basically a commission, so to speak, type of format, and now we’ve offered them a discount instead. One or the other. They get to choose. Which is more the traditional way that many of them work. We just offered a second way of them to make income using our product.

So far the response has been phenomenal. Very early to say. I think it’s only 30 days we launched it or something.

So far so good. Then, Jen, maybe you can fill him in on the promotional thing because.

Jennifer Porter, Chief Marketing and Ecommerce Officer, Arhaus: Yeah, of course.

John Reed, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Arhaus: hasn’t been that different, I don’t think.

Jennifer Porter, Chief Marketing and Ecommerce Officer, Arhaus: Yeah, Steven, good question on the promotions. Looking at our Q1 approach to promotions, really strategy was very similar and in line with what we’ve talked about previously, in 2025, with a lot of the buy more, save mores, and those types of promotions that we’ve talked about on prior calls. Going into April, we purposely elevated our promotional activity, and that was in reaction both to what’s going on in the macro and then also the challenging Q1 environment that was spoken to prior on this call. You know, as Mike just said, we’re really pleased with what’s happening in April. We started to see that pick up at second half of May. Really pleased with April. Really pleased with what we’re seeing going into May as well.

I think when you look at our approach, you know, what we’re looking at is the underlying health and quality of our business. Even with the challenging environment in Q1, our customers are remaining highly engaged. We have, you know, an affluent customer. They’re still looking for the furniture. They’re still doing those big projects. We’re seeing that underlying quality of our demand remaining really strong. If you look at orders over $10,000, over $100,000, those bigger projects, they’re really good. We’re really pleased with that engagement, with clients coming in and working with our interior designers, as John just mentioned, with trade designers as well. That structure is looking good. What we are seeing is that customers are being more deliberate. They’re more considered.

We started talking about that last year. We saw that in Q1. Our approach to promotions, our approach to marketing, our approach to really just outreach to the customers is really focused on that. Focusing on what we are doing really well, which is John has referenced. Clients are responding really well to the products. They’re responding really well to our quality, our unique assortment, the craft that only we can offer. That is really what we’re positioning out in the market. We’re looking to engage them with marketing, really trying to be creative with the content and the ways that we’re getting that messaging out to customers.

Similarly with promotions, really looking at, you know, what are those drivers where we can First off, keep Arhaus top of mind, continue to introduce Arhaus to new potential clients who maybe don’t know about us yet, also really looking at those levers to drive the consideration to conversion window. Pleased with what we’ve seen in April, pleased with our plans for the next coming months here, we’ll continue to monitor our business, the macro, and adapt and evolve throughout the year as needing.

Steven Forbes, Analyst, Guggenheim Securities: Thank you.

Michael Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Arhaus: Thank you, Steven.

Operator: Next, we’ll hear from Peter Benedict with Baird.

Andrew Carter, Analyst, Stifel1: Good morning, guys. This is Zach back on for Peter. Thanks for taking our question. Mike, you mentioned a flattish gross margin view for the year. I think you had previously discussed 60 to 70 basis points of expansion. Could you help us understand the change there in your assumptions for oil and fuel costs over the balance of 2026? Then maybe on the Q2 EBITDA range as well. Realize you have some tough compares in the quarter, if you could unpack the drivers of compression there and help us understand how that moderates in the second half, that’d be helpful. Thank you.

Michael Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Arhaus: Yeah, Zach. Look, fuel costs are highly uncertain at this point, but that’s really the driving force behind gross margin. You know, there’s about a 40 basis point impact in Q1, and that impact really is about half a quarter’s worth of impact. When you know, take into account that, you know, we’ve got a full quarter impact coming up, and we also have a lag effect between any mitigations taking place and when they actually flow through the P&L. A little bit more cautious as it relates to fuel. Look, everything we’re hearing is that even if the war ends, the lag effect on fuel prices coming down is going to really be in months and quarters, not weeks.

If anything, we’re just being a little bit cautious there. Again, I wanna emphasize that, you know, we’ve got mitigation steps that are underway, and we think we can fully offset that in terms of ongoing structural costs. It just, you know, takes a little bit of time to get it going in the P&L and for it to flow through to delivery. That’s something just to be mindful of. It’s just that lag effect. In terms of the overall EBITDA for the balance of the year, you know, look, inflation is persistent and it’s real. You know, sort of setting aside the fuel costs, there are indirect impacts from fuel costs and even little things like fuel costs impacting the foam in our manufacturing business, right?

These, these aren’t huge. Maybe there are a lot of, you know, I’ll call it ankle biters in terms of these, you know, impacts that are happening across the business, but we’re increasingly, you know, leaning on productivity initiatives to help offset that. The, the inflation impacts are real. That’s something that we’re, you know, continuing to manage, you know, day in, day out. Some of it’s, you know, more business as usual, you know, with our suppliers around the world. Different suppliers are facing different cost pressures. Some aren’t facing any, and some are facing more than others. We continue to work through that. I don’t see as much from a product cost perspective as I do from a, you know, supply chain logistics perspective, even container costs, right?

Getting containers, now are more expensive than they were even, you know, three months ago. Really managing through that, but nothing that I would say is a structural change to our business. It’s really just leaning on productivity initiatives to help offset those. More to come as we get through Q2 on some of those mitigation steps, but we’re really excited about some of the opportunities that we’re discussing internally to help absorb some of those headwinds.

Andrew Carter, Analyst, Stifel1: Great. Thank-

Operator: Our next question, we’ll hear from Jonathan Matuszewski with Jefferies.

Andrew Carter, Analyst, Stifel2: Hi, this is Andreas. I’m on for Jonathan. Thanks so much for taking the question. With S&P at all-time highs and the wealth effect historically being a key driver of your consumer, what’s the broader macro and housing environment you’re embedding in the back half? Thank you.

Michael Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Arhaus: Yeah. It’s a great question. The stock market volatility and its impact on our business, it is real. Even going back to last April when a lot of the tariffs were announced for the first time and the stock market reaction, there’s a pretty good correlation between what we see and the capital market outlook. Our guide is really based on, you know, continuation, a lot of the fundamentals that we’re seeing today. I wouldn’t say that we build our plans based on the S&P being at an all-time high, but we’re certainly not building into our full year guide, you know, a recession. Look, we know that job growth is a bit anemic right now. We know that inflation’s real.

We know that the housing market’s weak. We know that the 10-year continues to move up. Consumer credit is being impacted. You know, again, a lot of our business comes from the high-end consumer, and when we look at high-end housing, high-end housing continues to perform well. As recent as the last 30, 60 days measures on luxury home sales continuing to perform well. High-end consumers are still investing in projects, home remodels, that continues to do well. That’s really what’s underscoring our full year outlook from a, call it, an infrastructure perspective. You know, most of our outlook is weighted on the promotion plans, the product that’s coming, the marketing, you know, new showroom expansion, things like that which fit into the category of controllable.

I can tell you that, you know, one of the reasons why we’ve held our guide is that we feel really good about the balance of this year from a product perspective, from an inventory perspective. I know there’s some questions about why inventory is up, but we are coming out of a cycle where, you know, we had out of stocks on a number of items. We’re in a pretty good spot overall. Yes, we recognize the volatility of the backdrop is still there, and I would say that’s what’s driving maybe a wider range than we would normally have on our guide, is just protecting against that uncertainty. Hopefully that helps give some context.

Jennifer Porter, Chief Marketing and Ecommerce Officer, Arhaus: Thanks so much.

Operator: Our next question, we’ll hear from Peter Keith with Piper Sandler.

Alexia Morgan, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Hi, this is Alexia Morgan on for Peter Keith. Thanks for taking our question. We’ve been monitoring supply chain disruptions stemming from the Texas chemical plant incident in March. Could you frame up your exposure there to the resulting foam and polyol shortages? Are you anticipating any material delays in upholstery or other categories? How do we model the potential impact there?

Michael Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Arhaus: No, it’s a good question. Yes, we’re fully aware of that incident, and we are very comfortable, confident with our foam supply. Not expecting any disruption in terms of the supply chain. We are experiencing some cost pressures on foam. That’s a relatively small percentage of the overall product cost. It’s not a meaningful factor. It’s just another example of those ankle biter headwinds that we’re fighting through, candidly. Since you mentioned it, I do wanna just acknowledge the great work that our manufacturing team is doing. We continue to set new records on upholstery sales each and every month, we’re sort of battling through a surge in special order upholstery. We’re producing at higher levels than we’ve been in a long time. We’ve even added a second shift in manufacturing to keep up with that demand.

That continues to be an area of our business that is a strategic advantage for us and feel really well positioned to to deliver on those 700 fabrics and leathers that we offer through our special order program.

Alexia Morgan, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Great. Thank you.

Operator: We’ll hear from Simeon Gutman with Morgan Stanley.

Simeon Gutman, Analyst, Morgan Stanley: Hey, good morning. It’s Simeon Gutman. How are you? I wanted to ask, I guess, 2 parts. First, the decel in written orders, quarter to date, can you talk about how that shapes the visibility for the rest of the year? I know you mentioned a lot of other factors and variables at play. Then can you talk about new gallery productivity, how they’re performing, and then, you know, what that implies, I guess, for, I guess, older or existing galleries? I assume they’re doing less good, but can you talk about the dispersion between them? Thanks.

John Reed, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Arhaus: Sure, Simeon. I can start with the galleries. Yeah, I mean, we track obviously new ones, old ones, and so forth every single month. Yeah, Over the big picture on new galleries have been open a year or so, we’ve been very, very happy with their performance. They’ve been hitting our plans and exceeding them in quite a few cases. That’s not only new galleries, but galleries we came back and renovated or moved. You know, example, we had a great gallery in Pittsburgh for, gosh, 20 years. We moved it down the street, a little larger, better looking, far better looking, and sales have been through the roof.

So things like that have been working in both brand new ones and moving or renovating existing ones. Yeah, I think they’re outperforming as a whole. The, you know, the fleet as a total, but both are doing well. Pockets are, you know, pockets in the country are doing better than others just because of the weather and so forth. Yeah, and then the second question-

Michael Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Arhaus: Just to follow up on your question, Simeon, about how the written orders are performing and the momentum there. Again, I would underscore our earlier remarks that we really started to see improvement in the second half of March and even what I would call an acceleration into April and May. It certainly has felt like a V-shaped recovery from that moment onward. We are shooting for the high end of our Q2 guide as a result. A reminder that that guide’s really informed by the uncertainty that’s out there. As we sit here today, we’re really confident in how the Q2 orders are shaping up. With that, we’ll leave it at that.

Operator: Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. We have reached the end of the question and answer session. I would now like to turn the floor over to Tara Atwood-Saja for closing remarks and comments.

Andrew Carter, Analyst, Stifel0: Thanks, everyone, for joining us today.

John Reed, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Arhaus: Thanks, everybody.

Michael Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Arhaus: Thank you.

John Reed, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Arhaus: Appreciate your questions.

Michael Lee, Chief Financial Officer, Arhaus: Bye.

Andrew Carter, Analyst, Stifel0: Bye.

John Reed, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Arhaus: Bye.

Operator: Thank you, everyone. You may disconnect.