FLYW May 5, 2026

Flywire Q1 2026 Earnings Call - AI and Platform Complexity Drive Margin Expansion and Global Growth

Summary

Flywire reported a strong Q1 2026, beating on both revenue and earnings while raising full-year guidance. Revenue grew 37% FX-neutral to $184 million, driven by a 45% surge in transaction volume and broad-based strength across education, travel, and healthcare. The company’s strategy of targeting complex, fragmented payment workflows allowed it to capture significant vendor consolidation wins, including major contracts with Cornell University and Endeavor Health. Adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 452 basis points year-over-year to 21.4%, demonstrating clear operating leverage as gross profit growth outpaced operating expenses.

Management emphasized that AI is a core enabler of its efficiency, with internal automation already resolving 40% of customer inquiries and significantly reducing support costs. The company is undergoing a digital transformation to re-architect its operations around agentic AI, aiming to lower the cost of scale while accelerating product development. Flywire also announced a $50 million accelerated share repurchase program, signaling strong conviction in its intrinsic value. Looking ahead, the company raised its full-year revenue growth outlook to 18%-24% and expects EBITDA margin expansion to reach approximately 22.8%, driven by continued operating leverage and the maturation of recent payment processing ramps.

Key Takeaways

  • Q1 2026 revenue reached $184 million, up 37% on an FX-neutral basis, beating the upper end of guidance due to strong education and travel performance.
  • Adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 452 basis points year-over-year to 21.4%, reflecting significant operating leverage as gross profit growth outpaced operating expenses.
  • Transaction payment volume surged 45% year-over-year, driven by domestic education expansion and robust travel/hospitality growth.
  • Flywire is capitalizing on vendor consolidation, securing major enterprise wins like Cornell University and Endeavor Health by offering integrated software and payment workflows that generalist processors cannot match.
  • Non-Big Four education markets grew revenue over 40% year-over-year, with more than 60% of new education clients coming from outside the U.S., U.K., Canada, and Australia.
  • AI is being embedded natively into operations, with 40% of customer inquiries now auto-resolved and support handling times reduced by 30%, contributing to cost efficiencies.
  • The company announced a $50 million accelerated share repurchase program, the largest in its public history, citing compelling valuation and strong cash generation.
  • Full-year 2026 guidance was raised to 18%-24% FX-neutral revenue growth and an EBITDA margin midpoint of 22.8%, supported by lapping prior-year investments and maturing payment ramps.
  • Sertifi (hospitality) is accelerating global expansion, with management estimating $2.5 billion in additional payment volume capture potential within existing U.S. clients.
  • Management remains prudent on macro headwinds, assuming 30% visa declines in the U.S. and 10% in Canada, but sees underlying demand resilience driven by domestic payment adoption and software-led monetization.

Full Transcript

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire1: Welcome to Flywire’s first quarter 2026 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. After the speaker’s presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question, please press star 11 on your touch-tone telephone. Please note this call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Masha Kahn, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Masha Kahn, Investor Relations, Flywire: Thank you. Good afternoon. With us today are Mike Massaro, Chief Executive Officer, Rob Orgel, President and Chief Operating Officer, and Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer. Our first quarter 2026 earnings press release, supplemental presentation, and when filed, Form 10-Q are available at ir.flywire.com. Today’s call is being recorded and will be available for replay on our website. During the call, we’ll be discussing certain forward-looking information. Actual results could differ materially from those contemplated by these statements. Unless otherwise indicated, all financial measures discussed on this conference call are non-GAAP financial measures. Please refer to our press release and SEC filings for more information on the risks related to forward-looking statements and their required reconciliations of non-GAAP financial measures. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Mike.

Mike Massaro, Chief Executive Officer, Flywire: Thank you, Masha, and thanks to everyone for joining us here today. It was a great quarter with significant growth and a beat on both the top and bottom line, with broad-based outperformance across education, travel, healthcare, and B2B. We are building for scale while driving efficiencies into our operations. Our product and tech organization continues to generate high quality, high value, differentiated products and services, and our go-to-market teams continue to sign meaningful enterprise deals while also landing and expanding across our global client base. We are executing against our multi-year strategy to deliver $1 billion in revenue with impressive financial metrics. I want to spend a moment on why those metrics keep improving. We go where others are unable or unwilling to go. Most companies are built for simplicity. Ours is built for complexity: multi-currency, multi-method, multi-rail, deeply integrated, sector-specific payments and software at scale.

This is what Flywire is built for. Every new payment method, every new regulatory layer, every new integration only strengthens our differentiated position. The harder the workflow, the fewer companies can follow, and that is exactly where we specialize. This is what defines our moat. We have proven the thesis, and the execution continues to improve. We are signing larger clients, growing volumes and product attach rates within existing relationships. Our momentum is yet another proof point. When clients stay, expand, and refer others to Flywire, the market is telling you clearly our model works. The total addressable market continues to expand. Three years ago, Flywire was primarily a cross-border payments provider. Today, we serve the full suite of domestic and international payment flows across major geographies. In education alone, that expansion has grown our addressable market roughly tenfold. Many of our existing clients are still cross-border only.

Moving them towards processing 100% of their payment volume through Flywire is a growth engine that lives within our install base independent of macro conditions. Let me walk you through four priorities, each designed to build long-term value. First, optimizing and strengthening the core platform. The most important thing to understand about our platform is that it gets more efficient as it scales. As payment volume grows, our routing intelligence improves, banking relationships deepen, cost per transaction declines. This is not static infrastructure. It is a network that becomes more valuable with every new corridor, every new client, and every new additional dollar of volume we process. To put that in concrete terms, our payment platform today moves well over $30 billion per year, adds value to clients in more than 50 countries, and accepts payments from 240 countries and territories.

That scale funds better banking relationships, better routing economics, and better localized experiences than a smaller platform can replicate. More volume improves the network. A better network attracts more clients. More clients deepen the integrations, and deeper integrations make us harder to displace. Every capability we build, whether in education, travel, B2B, or healthcare, becomes part of our shared platform designed to compound across every vertical. Our second priority is accelerating our revenue flywheel. We are seeing clear acceleration across our go-to-market motion. We are seeing bigger deals, more enterprise wins, and time to signature is decreasing. Across every vertical, clients get more. More conversion, more AR visibility, more staff time on high-value work, and less of everything that slows them down. Fewer payment failures, less reconciliation burden, less bad debt, less inbound questions. That ROI is what drives retention, and retention drives expansion.

Our land and expand strategy drives gross profit growth and paired with very low revenue churn across education and travel. It reflects a platform that, once adopted, becomes foundational infrastructure for our clients. Our third priority is innovating to deepen our ownership of critical workflows. What keeps clients with us is not just the payment. It is everything Flywire does around it. The software, the workflow, the visibility, the operational efficiency. We are continuously expanding our software platform to reduce operational burden and strengthen revenue management for our clients. This quarter in education alone, we enhanced our solution capabilities to better automate student communications, improve due date visibility, and scaled our U.S. loan disbursements for U.K. institutions. Similar innovation is happening across every vertical. In healthcare, travel, B2B, we are removing the complex workflows that our clients have managed manually for years.

Clients trust Flywire with their most critical workflows and look to us to deliver new products, features, and payment methods. One of our key moats is the network of integrations, compliance infrastructure, and operational connections around the transactions embedded into ERP systems, bank networks, and systems of record in ways that are genuinely hard to displace. As payment complexity increases, our relevance grows because clients do not want to solve orchestration, reconciliation, and compliance themselves. They want a trusted platform that absorbs that and streamlines operations for them. That is exactly what Flywire does. Our fourth and last priority, AI is an enabler for Flywire, not a threat. AI increases the value of whoever owns the workflow and the data. At Flywire, we own both. Generic AI solutions do not have our transactional data across education, healthcare, travel, and B2B.

They cannot replicate our deep ERP integrations and our regulatory licensing or the years of client-specific behavior data that underpin what we do. As AI becomes more powerful as a category, we believe our position becomes more valuable to our clients, not less. We are also already seeing internal AI benefits emerge in our cost structure, and the opportunity ahead is significant. We’ve seen approximately 40% of customer inquiries auto-resolved without human intervention, with 30% reduction in support handling time and cost per contact. We are also seeing faster onboarding thanks to AI-assisted implementations that increase throughput without a linear increase to headcount. Across the business, the impact is broad. Engineering teams shipping code faster, product teams innovating more quickly and incorporating client feedback more rapidly. A finance team automating routine analysis so they can focus on higher judgment work.

These improvements are already happening even while we continue our enterprise-wide digital transformation. Re-architecting not just our underlying operating systems and data, but also our organization, processes, and ways of working end to end with an agentic AI future in mind. The winners in an AI-driven world will be platforms that own the workflow, the data, and the client relationships, delivering results and doing so more efficiently than ever. That is the future of Flywire. Let me leave you with what defines Flywire. We run toward complexity. We operate a network of global and local payment methods coupled with regulatory expertise all around the world. We manage the deep software integrations that most payment companies cannot build and most software companies cannot operate. We have built the capability, the team, and the infrastructure to go exactly where others cannot or will not follow.

We focus on underserved large industries, education, travel, healthcare, and B2B, which have massive addressable markets with long-term structural growth tailwinds. These are not cyclical bets. They are durable, expanding opportunities, and Flywire is built to capture them at scale. We deliver innovative technology paired with exceptional client service, removing complexity for our clients so they can focus on their mission while fundamentally improving how they get paid. Flywire is uniquely positioned to do this. Our industry-leading software, our global payments platform, and our Flymates, genuine experts in the industries we serve, who execute every day to deliver real outcomes for our clients. That combination is rare. It is hard to replicate. It is what gives us confidence in where Flywire is headed.

Rob will now take you through the further evidence of what I’ve described, the wins, the go lives, and the client outcomes that are compounding into durable growth. Rob?

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire3: Thanks, Mike. The pattern across our business is consistent. We go where payment workflows are fragmented and operationally intensive, we embed deeply, and we expand as clients consolidate more of their financial operations onto our platform. Let me walk you through three themes that define Q1: strategic vendor consolidation of these workflows, geographic diversification beyond traditional markets, accelerated software-led monetization across travel, B2B, and beyond. Let me start with vendor consolidation. Clients are choosing to consolidate fragmented financial workflows onto a single trusted platform. We are leveraging this dynamic across our verticals, the reason we win is that we are the only platform that can handle all the complex workflows they need. As an example, Cornell University has committed to a long-term agreement for our full Student Financial Software Suite.

Cornell is a large institution, tens of thousands of students, significant international enrollment, multiple funding sources, including sponsor billing and loan disbursements, and a collections operation that touches separate debt types simultaneously. They are consolidating their billing, payments, payment plans, refunds, and collection processes onto a unified global platform that only Flywire can provide. This reduces the complexity and cost of managing multiple fragmented vendors while giving Cornell a simpler, more automated, and uniform view of their student financial activity. In the U.K., our SFS is delivering measurable results at institutions facing similar operational challenges. Kingston University reduced manual financial suspensions by over 30% this quarter through automated workflow management. We signed three additional U.K. SFS clients this quarter, all attracted by our ability to manage their unique operational needs.

Separately, the University of Edinburgh, one of our largest U.K. cross-border clients, achieved approximately GBP 1 million in savings in under a year by consolidating their international tuition flows and doing reconciliation via our platform. In healthcare, we expanded with Endeavor Health, where we are now managing their pre-service, point of service, and post-service patient payments, deeply integrated with Epic across this multi-system organization. Endeavor operates across multiple hospitals and care sites, each with its own billing environment and requiring us to support a high degree of specialized workflows. Our certified integrations with Epic, Cerner, and Oracle, combined with our regulatorily compliant vertical software workflows, are barriers that keep most payment providers out of this market. The second theme we are seeing clearly reaffirmed in 2026 is that demand for our solutions is truly global.

Using education as an example, our solutions are proving themselves outside of our traditional Big Four markets, being the U.S., the U.K., Canada, and Australia. Education revenue outside those markets grew over 40% year-over-year in Q1, and more than 60% of new education clients signed were from outside the Big Four. In Europe, we are seeing momentum in Germany, Spain, Italy, and other markets as international students continue to diversify destination markets. These are not simple markets to operate in. Each requires navigating local requirements, including integrations, translations, reconciliation requirements, and payments infrastructure. Institutions need a platform that can absorb that layered complexity, and that is what we provide. In Asia, we are seeing the same strong demand. This quarter, we went live with a top global university in Singapore and now have the majority of the country’s universities using Flywire.

Singaporean institutions are managing multiple currencies, regional payment rails, and local compliance requirements on top of international tuition flows. Having the majority of this market using our platform also creates compounding network effects. That’s shared corridor economics, deeper regional banking relationships, and routing intelligence that improves with every additional dollar of volume we process there. We see lots of needs in Singapore and many other markets that are addressed by our software capabilities. Wrapping up my comments on why we win in global education. In Canada, where the broader market remains under pressure, our revenue has turned positive as we continue to expand our installed base and win competitive RFPs. This quarter, for example, we started processing payments for University of Calgary, a major Canadian university with over 30,000 students, and we see continued opportunity to take share in that market.

Finally, our software-led approach has been a key catalyst for capturing and monetizing payment volume. In travel, our hospitality solutions, formerly branded Sertifi, are continuing to grow well. Payment attachment is increasing and more volume is routing through Flywire as we replace legacy gateway processors with our solution. The complexity these clients face is specific to high-value hospitality. Contracts involving multiple signatories, card not present fraud prevention, multi-currency deposits, refund and chargeback management across jurisdictions, and reconciliation against property management systems. All workflows a generic payment gateway was never designed to handle. Unlike a gateway, we sit inside the contract workflow itself. Our sign and pay capability collapses the contract and payment into one moment. The client signs, the payment is captured, the booking is confirmed.

For operators running high-value cross-border transactions, that reduces chargeback exposure at the point of transaction, a level of workflow ownership no generalist processor can replicate. We estimate there is still an additional two and a half billion dollars of payment volume within our existing U.S. hospitality clients alone that we can capture. We are investing also in an international rollout this year as we see the same fragmented workflows exist in other major travel and hospitality markets. In luxury and experiential travel, Q1 was our second-largest quarter for ARR signings, with 15 deals over $100,000. Carr Golf and Travelling The Fairways both left large horizontal processors for Flywire, drawn by operational efficiencies and the ability to replace a separate invoicing tool with a single workflow. The reason we win in luxury travel has not changed.

Competitive rates, automated reconciliation, and a level of service generalist processors cannot match. Software-led monetization is also working well in our B2B business. StudyCast, a cloud-based imaging workflow platform for healthcare, came to us with unique invoicing scenarios across multiple markets. They were seeking to improve low cash flow visibility and improve an entirely manual AR process. We are giving them invoicing, payments, and global settlement in one workflow. That means automated reconciliation, faster collections, and better working capital visibility. CMC and Lula Life, two other clients that went live this quarter, are variations of the same story, complex billing and operations that are perfectly suited for Flywire. Across every vertical, the logic is the same. We go where others are unwilling or unable to go, we embed deeply, and our platform becomes critical infrastructure once deployed. Cosmin will show you what it looks like in the numbers.

With that, I’ll turn it over to Cosmin.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire: Thanks, Rob. I’ll detail our financial performance for Q1 2026, discuss our margin dynamics, and provide our updated full-year outlook. Q1 performance strength was broad-based and results exceeded expectations. Total revenue reached $184 million, up 43% on a spot basis and 37% FX neutral growth, including 7 points in organic contribution from Sertifi. Almost half of the 9-point outperformance versus the midpoint on an FX neutral basis was driven by a strong January education peak in some of our core markets, with the remaining beat coming from strength in our travel segment, specifically hospitality, in particular, Sertifi payments. In addition, we continued seeing stronger-than-expected payment processing volumes from Cleveland Clinic and invoice migration, which had approximately a mid-single digits tailwind in Q1 and expect to be of similar magnitude in Q2.

Transaction revenue was $155 million, up 43% year-over-year. This was driven by 45% growth in transaction payment volume, with continued contribution from education, both cross-border and domestic, as well as travel. As a reminder, quarter-to-quarter blended yields can vary with mix, especially as domestic payments ramp up. Higher domestic volumes and greater credit card penetration carry different economics than cross-border flows. On a like-to-like basis, pricing remains stable and competitive behavior continues to be disciplined. Our spreads reflect the value we deliver, compliance, reconciliation, ERP integrations, and enterprise-grade infrastructure, not commodity payment processing. Platform and other revenues were $29 million, up 40% year-over-year, primarily driven by growth in hospitality. Adjusted gross profit reached $110.5 million, increasing 34% year-over-year at spot, including three tailwinds.

Approximately eight points in organic contribution from Sertifi, a mid-single-digit points from FX translation, and a high single-digit benefit from stronger education performance in January. Importantly, this 34% gross profit dollar growth is successfully converting into Adjusted EBITDA margin expansion, demonstrating real operating leverage. Adjusted EBITDA was $39 million, resulting in a 21.4% margin expanding at 452 basis points year-over-year, which was above the upper end of our guide. The strength in Adjusted EBITDA reflects gross profit growth and continued operating leverage across every expense category as our non-GAAP operating expenses grew at a meaningfully slower rate than gross profit. Our adjusted gross margin of 60.1% was down by approximately 400 basis points. Margin dynamics are driven by three factors: mix, FX, and temporary large payment processing ramps, not competitive pressure.

This quarter, the margin change was primarily driven by approximately 250 basis points from the mix contribution of higher Cleveland Clinic and B2B invoice client payment revenues that began ramping in the second half of 2025. The balance of the margin change was due to continued vertical mix shifts. FX on settlement impact in Q1 was minimal on an absolute basis, but we did benefit from a favorable year-over-year comparison given the headwind we experienced in Q1 2025. Excluding the ramp activity, growth margin dynamics would be within our expected range. We emphasize that these ramp dynamics are temporary and will be largely complete by the end of 2026. In Q1, we delivered GAAP net income of more than $12 million.

It is a direct result of the operating leverage we have been building into this business. We remain on track to grow GAAP net income by approximately three to four times on a full year basis. Turning to capital allocation, our balance sheet remains strong, with approximately $250 million in corporate cash, giving us significant financial flexibility while continuing to invest in the business. Today, we’re announcing an accelerated share repurchase program of up to $50 million under our existing share repurchase authorization, the single largest capital return action in Flywire’s history as a public company. The ASR program reflects our conviction in the intrinsic value of the business and our view that the current share price represents a compelling opportunity. This is not a change in our growth investment philosophy. We’re acting on market dislocation.

The company intends to fund the ASR with available cash on hand. The ultimate amount and timing of repurchases will be informed by prevailing market conditions and price levels, ensuring alignment with our return thresholds and broader capital allocation priorities, including continued investment in organic growth and selective M&A. Since launching the repurchase program, we have now deployed $128 million in total share buybacks, which represents the majority of free cash flow over that time period. A track record of consistent execution, not episodic activity. Moving to guidance, we are raising both revenue and EBITDA guidance for the full year 2026.

We now expect 18%-24% FX neutral revenue growth with approximately 3-4 points from payment processing ramps in B2B and healthcare, mostly benefiting the first half of the year, and roughly 1.5 points of inorganic contribution as we lap Sertifi. Adjusted gross profit is expected to grow just above the mid-teen year-over-year at spot. We expect approximately 175-375 basis points of full year EBITDA margin expansion, reaching approximately 22.8% at the midpoint. Stock-based compensation remains targeted at approximately 10% of revenue, while we continue managing growth and net dilution in a disciplined manner and anticipates free cash flow conversion of 70%-75% of adjusted EBITDA. Our Q1 outperformance flows through to upgraded full year 2026 guidance.

Before I walk through the details, I want to flag one shaping dynamic. Second half revenue growth is expected to decelerate relative to first half, not because of any change in the underlying business, but because we are anniversarying the Cleveland Clinic and invoice payment volume ramps from the second half of 2025. Gross profit growth is less affected given the margin profile of that revenue. On macro, we are not changing our underlying assumptions. While Q1 benefited from a strong January education peak and favorable timing that we view as non-recurring, we continue to expect performance to normalize over the remainder of the year as we remain prudent and data dependent. For Q2 2026, we expect FX neutral revenue growth of 18%-24%. As we indicated last quarter, growth will moderate from Q1 as Sertifi laps out, but underlying organic momentum remains solid.

At current spot rates, we anticipate 1 point of FX tailwind. Gross profit dollar growth is expected in the mid-teen range at spot rate, including low single-digit estimated benefit from FX on settlement year-over-year dynamics. Adjusted EBITDA margin is expected to expand by approximately 75 basis points year-over-year at the midpoint of our guidance. Following a very strong Q1 margin expansion, the Q2 expansion is modestly below our typical annual expansion rate, reflecting 2 dynamics. First, we’re lapping the restructuring actions we took the first quarter of 2025, which created a more favorable cost base in the prior year period in Q2. Second, we’re making deliberate investments in domestic expansion, growth, data, and AI infrastructure alongside scaling Sertifi beyond the historically U.S.-focused business into a global platform as part of our broader hospitality strategy, all high conviction long-term priorities.

Note that Q2 is our seasonally lowest revenue and EBITDA quarter, with margin expansion weighted to the back half of the year as revenue scales seasonally. In closing, Q1 demonstrates the durability of our diversified platform, the scalability of our operating model, and our continued commitment to disciplined capital allocation. As Mike described, we are actively embedding AI and automation across our operations. We structured AI governance at the executive level to accelerate adoption and rigor. Having spent two decades believing in the power of data architecture and machine learning to empower people, today, that conviction is being supercharged by AI agents that are profoundly enhancing our human capabilities across the business. One of the core principles of the enterprise-wide digital transformation program is the concept of democratizing certified data, making accurate structured data available to everyone across the organization, both our people and AI agents working side by side.

We are actively investing in the capabilities our teams need to thrive in an AI-augmented environment, and we are being equally deliberate about aligning our organizational structure. The goal is an organization that is faster, more scalable, and structurally better suited to the next phase of Flywire’s growth. We’re redesigning how work gets done from the ground up, not layering new tools onto old workflows. This is the hardest part of any transformation and where the greatest long-term efficiency and scalability gains will be realized. In sales and marketing, this will enable us to match the right product to the right client with greater precision and less resource strain, and our sales reps to become even more productive with more revenue per rep and shorter sales cycles. In R&D and product, it enables us to iterate and innovate faster for our clients. In G&A, we see the longest runway ahead.

We’re re-architecting these functions from the ground up to be agent-ready, and we expect the productivity gains to be meaningful as that infrastructure matures. As gross profit continues to grow faster than OpEx over time, the operating leverage is driving our EBITDA margin expansion, and we expect to continue as growth and profitability reinforce each other. By normalizing our foundation, embedding AI natively, and re-architecting our systems and how we operate, we are structurally lowering the cost of scale while expanding our capacity to grow. Q1 is evidence the model is already working, and our digital transformation is how we make it more durable at scale. I’ll now turn it back to the operator for questions. Operator?

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire1: Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one one. If your question has been answered and you’d like to remove yourself from the queue, please press star one one again. One moment while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from Kenneth Suchoski with Autonomous Research. Your line is open.

Kenneth Suchoski, Analyst, Autonomous Research: Hey, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. Really good results here. I just wanted to dig into the success in the non-Big Four education markets. I think I heard 40% revenue growth, 60% of new clients coming from these markets. Are these just less penetrated? Are you taking more share? Maybe it’s a smaller base, but any additional detail there would be great. Thank you.

Mike Massaro, Chief Executive Officer, Flywire: Yeah. Hi, Kenneth. It’s Rob here, and I’m happy to take this one. You’re right, we called out the success in the non-Big Four markets, and really, it’s the product of our strategy and our capabilities combined with a lot of market opportunity out there. If you think about what we can bring to those markets, right? It’s the distinctive software capabilities, all of the global payment network, the solution tailored for the industry. In those markets, they don’t tend to have somebody who looks like us, can do the kinds of things we do. Take that, combine it with, a team that’s local, a customer service capability that’s local and suits them, and we really have a distinctively strong capability. I’d remind you that for even more of those places, we’ve expanded this capability.

It’s not just cross-border, it’s domestic plus cross-border in a lot of the major markets. It’s a set of markets that we’re really excited about, especially as students overall diversify their destinations.

Kenneth Suchoski, Analyst, Autonomous Research: Okay, great. That’s really helpful. Then maybe just on Sertifi. I think you talked about, you know, scaling that business, sort of outside the U.S. and taking that global. Maybe just give us an update there. What are the actions you’re taking? I mean, which markets you’re looking to prioritize, and what the roadmap is there. Thank you.

Mike Massaro, Chief Executive Officer, Flywire: Hey, Ken, this is Mike. In the hospitality business, I mean, I think the synergies still are very clear as they were at the time of deal, right? Which is, monetize more payment volume that sits next to the hospitality software that Sertifi had, and prepare the platform and take it global to hospitality clients all over the world. That second one is on track. You know, a lot of great work done by the tech teams to kind of integrate travel capabilities from the core Flywire travel business as well as the hospitality side. That team is being built out and super excited to continue that international expansion. Specifically, probably, think of us as going to Europe.

It’s a big area for us, obviously, with our existing travel business in Southeast Asia in particular, being our kind of two geo-geographies that we’d expect most of that growth to be coming from in the short term. It is a multi-year strategy.

Kenneth Suchoski, Analyst, Autonomous Research: Okay. All right. Thanks, Mike. Appreciate it.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire1: Thank you. Our next question comes from Tien-tsin Huang with JP Morgan. Your line is open.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire4: Hi, thank you. Great results. Thinking about the second quarter margin variance, I know you talked about there a little bit. I’m just curious, is that mostly discretionary on your part from an investing standpoint? What would drive you to go ahead and invest more? I’m sure that would translate into a pretty fast return if you did that. I’m just trying to, you know, better understand the puts and takes around where you might land and what would drive that.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire: Thanks, Tien-tsin. This is Cosmin. Following a very strong Q1, even in Q2, we’re investing obviously, you know, modestly around some of the high conviction areas that we’ve seen. As you’ve seen us, you know, for the rest of the year, we’re expecting to see margins expand even more so and raise the full year outlook. Feel good about the investments and the return of those. You know, plus, I would remind you just, you know, from last year, we’re lapping some of those one-offs. You know, in general.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire4: Yeah.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire: Q2 is pretty small. On a very small base, you know, overall, as you saw in my prepared remarks in terms of the EBITDA number, there.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire4: Got it. No, that makes sense. Mike and Rob, you both talked about enterprise wins and competing for larger deals. I know you’re comping out Cleveland Clinic. Just in general, do you feel like there’s some, I don’t wanna call them gorillas, but just larger deals like that, in the pipeline that you’re seeing maybe that’s a little bit different than maybe this time last year? Thank you. That’s all I have.

Mike Massaro, Chief Executive Officer, Flywire: We’re overall really pleased with the quality of pipeline growth. We’re pleased with the size of deals. You know, we called out the deal size growth here in Q1. You know, wanna be careful making reference to clients like Cleveland Clinic and so on. Like, that’s obviously, I don’t know exactly what animal you just referenced, but it’s a very, very big animal. You know, we don’t sort of call that out as being, you know, the norm. Overall, we’re very happy with the quality of pipeline, and we’re pursuing a lot of great accounts.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire4: Thank you.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire1: Thank you. Our next question comes from Dan Perlin with RBC Capital Markets.

Dan Perlin, Analyst, RBC Capital Markets: Thanks. Good evening. Again, great results. You know, Mike, I just wanna go back to the original topics you were gonna run in through, and the one that kinda stood out again is kinda vendor consolidation becoming more of, I think, a consistent theme. I think you always thought that was gonna be kinda the case, but it does feel like it’s picked up some, I guess, velocity here over the past several quarters. I’m wondering, is that a function of your go-to-market motion? Is it, like, just density in market and people are increasingly, you know, recognizing your capabilities, I guess, holistically? I’m just trying to get a sense of where that might ultimately lend itself going forward. Thanks.

Mike Massaro, Chief Executive Officer, Flywire: Sure, Dan. Yeah, you know, I think it’s a combination of things. I think, obviously, you know, we sit in an area where we’re dealing with lots of complexity. We’re offloading that for our customers. When you do that, they trust you to do more. I would say the more problems we solve, the more they come to us looking for other opportunities to leverage Flywire technology. You know, I think that’s probably the first one. The other thing I would just say is in this age of AI, right? You know, a lot of people talk about kind of disruption from AI. Like, if you innovate, if you deliver value leveraging this technology, customers see that value. They wanna work with you more. I think for us, our teams are moving faster.

They’re delivering better results. They’re delivering great client experiences. When their payers have challenges, we’re there to help. I think all those things are just driving people to realize all the potential they have to work more with Flywire. I think that’s what you’re likely to see, right? We’re sitting there with the regulated infrastructure to process complex payments, we have industry-leading software, and we have an amazing team. I think that combination is really powerful and hard to beat.

Dan Perlin, Analyst, RBC Capital Markets: Yeah. Totally makes sense. Just a quick one on travel. Understanding that you guys obviously tilt more towards affluent travelers, but have you seen any evidence that higher oil prices or jet fuel or any of those things are putting any kind of organic crimp? I mean, obviously there’s kinda some non-cyclical overlays just given the pace of winds that you guys have in that business that would mask it. Like, if you thought about it on a same-store basis, are you seeing anything creep in yet? Thank you.

Mike Massaro, Chief Executive Officer, Flywire: Yeah. Yeah. This is Mike again. I haven’t seen anything creep in. Obviously, Q1 was good, as Cosmin mentioned, in travel. I would say, you know, I just point, you know, obviously something that causes, you know, us to continue to be prudent in how we talk about the year. It’s early in the year. You know, you’ve started to hear a little bit of disruption around, you know, oil availability for airplane travel. It’s something we’re watching closely. Haven’t seen any impacts yet. Again, you’re exactly right. We’re dealing typically with a luxury traveler, and if they’ve kinda committed to this once in a lifetime or big trip a year, if something changes in their logistics, they’re probably gonna figure out how to go a little earlier or adjust around some of those changes.

That’s our expectation. Our clients haven’t seen any hit yet, obviously the world’s quite dynamic and we continue to be prudent in how we talk about the year.

Dan Perlin, Analyst, RBC Capital Markets: Great. Thank you so much.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire1: Thank you. Our next question comes from Cristopher Kennedy with William Blair. Your line is open.

Christopher Kennedy, Analyst, William Blair: Yeah, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. Cosmin, thanks for the comments on the Data Platform Initiative. Is there a way to think about kinda where we are in that journey and when most of the benefits that you talked about, you know, will be fully realized?

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire: Hey, Chris, thanks for the question. Certainly, as you can probably tell, a very exciting and passionate kind of area for me. We’re sort of, I would say we’re past the early innings. We’re certainly deep in already in sort of the architecture and systems integration side. We have a very ambitious, you know, one of the reasons you see G&A, you know, sort of, you know, that area kind of investments, this is where we’re putting a lot of investments there. Already kind of off to the races and expect as you get into next year, you know, a lot of that platform around the data and the systems architecture and the capabilities will be built out. We’re actually seeing some early results.

Even now, we’re doing some work around how we manage vendors internally, how we manage a lot of our processes. You’re seeing some of that already play out. I would say exiting this year into next year, you’ll see a lot more. I think with the launch of some of the new tools, certainly Claude, as many of us here are using that on a daily, hourly basis, the sort of acceleration and amplification of the impact of what we’re putting in place, we’re even more excited about it. Certainly, look forward to that.

Christopher Kennedy, Analyst, William Blair: Great. Thanks for that. It was great to see the Penn State win. Can you just talk about kind of the traction or the momentum that you guys have for SFS in the U.S.? Thank you.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire3: Yeah, I can take that. This is Rob. As you called out, we announced the go-live for Penn State just recently. We announced Cornell today, along with Flagler. We’ve announced a number of other wins over recent quarters here in the U.S. I think there’s a bunch of things going on that are helping us build this momentum, right? There is this theme of vendor consolidation that is strong, and I referenced. There’s a strong push for modernization that’s happening inside our client base, particularly inside U.S. EDU. I think the third thing that’s happening that I’d call out is sort of our reference base of clients is growing. Sort of our reputation and our standing in the segment continues to improve as the premier provider of SFS and domestic-type capabilities.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire: That, along with the skill of our team, is all what’s driving our momentum.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire1: Great. Thanks for taking the questions. Thank you. Our next question comes from Michael Infante with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.

Michael Infante, Analyst, Morgan Stanley: Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my question. Can you just break down what you’re seeing with respect to payer attention at schools that are only using cross-border payments for schools that have adopted domestic payments and SFS? Are you beginning to see evidence that SFS is improving payer attention, just given the traction that you guys are seeing on the net new side?

Mike Massaro, Chief Executive Officer, Flywire: Yeah. This is Mike, and I’ll, you know, Kaz has made some comments too about the different cohorts of users as well that I’ll let him jump in on later. You know, I would just say in general, remember, when you get SFS, you get all the volume, right? You’re getting all the tuition dollars, whether they’re coming in via cross-border, whether they’re coming in domestically. For us, the core strategy is to own that student account portal, and if you own that student account portal, you get full utilization. Obviously, as you’re dealing with just a cross-border solution, you’re getting a percentage of that. Kaz has spoken in the past about what that is. I’ll let him comment.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire: If you look, you know, because one of the questions we always get is around the U.S., in particular. Within the U.S., you can think of the U.S. revenues, for example, last year, about a third each. A third is first year, a third is first years of, you know, the international. About a third that are, sort of every other cohort, if you will, international, and another third is domestic. That third of first year and the existing cohort of international students, we see, as Mike said, the, you know, the continued, you know, retention from that comes from a few different sources. One, we talk about the domestic expansion. The more SFS domestic full suite we have, the better that retention gets.

Second, we obviously can improve user experience and as we work on that. That is also the second thing. Third is all of our banking, you know, partnerships in those source markets help us to, you know, improve that retention. Now we don’t have a lot of that necessarily baked into guidance. We’re taking a prudent approach with that. We’re seeing, you know, good trends around retention, and overall feel good about, you know, kind of the mix of the different cohorts, you know, over time, even with, again, I’m sure the, you know, the pressure on that first year part of it.

Michael Infante, Analyst, Morgan Stanley: That’s helpful. Then maybe just on the macro side of the equation, obviously saw the reiterated assumptions on some of the visa trends. Can you just sort of level set with us in terms of what you’re seeing by market? Looks like the U.S. and Australia broadly tracking in line with those expectations, maybe the U.K. and Canada a little bit soft. Just what are you sort of seeing with respect to things like deposit trends and your conversations with schools and agents? Thanks, guys.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire: Yeah, I can start. Yes, our macro assumptions haven’t changed. For the U.S., while even last year, you know, we didn’t see, you know, much above sort of 20% as you’re getting to the mid-part of the year into September. For U.S., we’ve assumed visas down 30%, which is, you know, quite prudent as we, you know, as we look into it. Look, we’ve looked at some of our data, and if you look at some of the application data is down sort of in the high single digits, as we’ve mentioned before. Not yet, and again, you saw the performance in Q1, quite strong, but we’re not counting on that for the rest of the year. We’re taking a prudent approach as we think about the Q3 peak.

That’s on the U.S., and certainly lots of headlines, lots of headlines everywhere, technically. You know, we’ve taken a pretty prudent approach across the board. Canada, again, coming off several years of being down almost 60%, we’ve assumed down 10%. Again, lots of headlines there too, but so far we feel pretty good about our, you know, path to basically continuing to now that market actually growing again for us, which is great to see, and again, driven by a lot of our new client wins. Then U.K., Australia, roughly flat visas. You know, some again, some headlines there, but overall, you know, both of those markets are growing faster than the visa trends, which is kind of what we normally watch for.

You know, hopefully, that’s helpful.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire1: Thank you. Our next question comes from Jeff Cantwell with Seaport Research. Your line is open.

Jeff Cantwell, Analyst, Seaport Research: Hey, thanks. I apologize if I missed this earlier. I wanna see if you could elaborate maybe a little bit more on RLAS growth, which grew faster than your TPV growth this quarter. That was by over 600 basis points. What are you seeing in terms of the underlying strength in RLAS growth across your four businesses that are the biggest drivers of that? Could you maybe help us understand on your outlook for the remainder of the year, how durable is that spread between RLAS growth and volume growth, or what are the main things to be thinking about? Thanks.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire: Yeah. Hey, Jeff. Thanks for the question. In general, when we look at the spreads, you know, still pretty stable overall, as you saw in my prepared remarks. Q1 was, you know, a slight jump, but, you know, as you’ve seen in the past, there’s, you know, volatility from one quarter to another, in that number. Overall, we feel, you know, feel pretty good about, you know, it’s not necessarily, you know, an impact of pricing, for competitive pricing specifically, but really it’s, you know, it’s a mix, it’s a mixed effect. Overall spreads are pretty stable, and feel good where we, you know, as we look ahead for the rest of the year.

Jeff Cantwell, Analyst, Seaport Research: Great. Great. Maybe if I could just squeeze in a quick follow-up on AI. I’m curious if you guys are thinking about that as an OpEx opportunity as well. We’re seeing some other payments companies, payment/software companies start to rationalize some of their OpEx lines in the spirit of, you know, we’re finding efficiencies on the AI side of things. I’m just curious what your thoughts are there, and maybe if you’re seeing some opportunities you think out, you know, over the next call, year, 2 years, and so forth. Thanks.

Mike Massaro, Chief Executive Officer, Flywire: Yep. Hey, hey, Jeff, it’s Mike. I think there’s huge opportunity for us internally and externally. If you look at internally, you know, imagine, you know, all various teams inside Flywire are leveraging it, you know, whether it’s product designs faster, whether it’s development faster, whether it’s, you know, we had some great stats on the call around customer support, and ways we’re leveraging it. You know, I think every company has to be looking at a world in which they’re gonna become more efficient, they’re gonna be able to do more with less as they grow their business over the next couple of years, and that’s how we’re thinking about it here at Flywire. I’d say we’re definitely thinking about it.

You know, I share Cosmin’s excitement about the data and the transformation efforts we have at the system layer. Being able to do that at a time when so much is emerging around AI, it’s really a lot of fun running a company when you have all those different tools at your disposal.

Jeff Cantwell, Analyst, Seaport Research: Great. Thanks very much.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire1: Thank you. Our next question comes from Nate Svensson with Deutsche Bank. Your line is open.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire0: Hey, guys. Nice results, thanks for the question. Wanna follow up on a couple questions that have been asked earlier. First on SFS, obviously nice to see all the new wins. I was hoping you could remind us on how long it takes for the SFS deals to ramp once you sign them. I think the typical SFS contract is something like a low single-digit million revenue contributor on an annual basis. Maybe that old commentary was U.K.-specific, you can correct me if I’m wrong there. Really just wondering how long it takes for these wins from 1 queue to ramp and then fully flow through to the P&L for the year.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire3: Hey there, Nate Svensson. It’s Rob Orgel here. You know, from the time of a client go live, we would expect that ramp to essentially initiate right away, but to get to the full maturity, what we would call the target ARR, in the way we look at these things, you’d expect that to take you well into the second year, right? You’ve kinda got the adoption and learning cycle that comes with the payment plans. You’ve got the full rollout of all the other capabilities that may follow the initial launch. That’s kind of the range of timeframe that we’d be focused on for achieving the significant majority of what would be the target ARR.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire0: Got it. Helpful. I did wanna ask for a little more color on the January education outperformance. I think you had called out that it was some of your key markets, so I assume that’s Big Four, but was hoping for a little more specifics there. I know Canada returned to growth in 1Q, but don’t know if that was a driver of the outperformance relative to expectation or if there was better performance in some of the other markets, U.S., U.K., Australia, that caused you to call out January specifically.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire: Yes, it’s your latter. It’s actually, it’s U.S. and U.K. with a bit of Australia we saw, sort of strong from a destination market. You know, we saw that coming from across our main corridors that we usually see. We also saw some strong domestic performance within the U.K., where we continue seeing strong growth. Those are the markets. U.S., U.K., Australia with again, kind of our main corridors and as far as the outperformance and a bit of the domestic performance in the U.K. Again, that’s why we’re also just being prudent. You know, we’re not flowing that through into the rest of the year, but feel good that we had that strong start to the year.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire0: Yep, makes sense. Thanks, Cosmin. Thanks, Rob.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire1: Thank you. Our next question comes from Charles Nabhan with Stephens. Your line is open.

Charles Nabhan, Analyst, Stephens: Hey, guys. Congrats on the result, and thanks for taking my question. Good to see another strong quarter of bookings activity. I was hoping you could comment on the composition of those bookings as well as whether you’re seeing any changes in the size of the new clients that you’re bringing in.

Mike Massaro, Chief Executive Officer, Flywire: Yeah, this is Mike. We’re actually seeing a whole bunch of positive trends. You know, we even timed the signature being faster, but deal size being up, and the number also being up from prior quarters. Again, back to that kind of 200 range that we had talked about previous quarters. We feel good about all those metrics. Again, I think Rob, you know, mentioned a little bit earlier just some of the reasons. Again, I think it’s great execution by our go-to-market teams. I think you’re seeing us continue to kind of cross-sell exceptionally well with that land and expand strategy, and I think that’s what’s driving it.

Charles Nabhan, Analyst, Stephens: Got it. As a follow-up, you’ve announced a number of new integrations and partnerships over the past few quarters. It sounds like you have the key ones in place, like Ellucian and Oracle and Workday. Curious, as we think about the medium to long-term outlook of the business, how much opportunity is there to expand business through new integrations? If you could give us a sense for, you know, how we should think about that portion of the TAM, that would be helpful.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire3: Yeah, this is Rob. I can jump on that one. There’s really two dimensions that get us excited about the partnership piece. First is having coverage across the key partners that really matter, in our verticals. You know, the most recent one that we announced was the partnership with Workday, which we are indeed very excited about. That builds on successful capabilities we have across the other major systems in education, you know, namely, Ellucian and PeopleSoft for Oracle or the Oracle Suite. Know that we have partnerships in a whole bunch of other parts of the world that are relevant for the work that we do there.

Mike Massaro, Chief Executive Officer, Flywire: We take a lot of pride in the work that’s done by that integrations team, and it’s what helps make it possible for us to do things all around the world.

Charles Nabhan, Analyst, Stephens: Got it. Thanks again, guys. Appreciate it.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire1: Thank you. Our next question comes from Madison Suhr with Raymond James. Your line is open.

Madison Suhr, Analyst, Raymond James: Hey, good afternoon, everyone. Thanks for taking my questions here. I wanted to start on the payment processing ramps. You raised the expected contribution from 2% to 3%-4% for the year. Just how much of that increase was driven by existing signings that you already had in place that are maybe going live more quickly or seeing greater volume than you initially thought, versus how much of that incremental 150 basis points was driven by new customer signings throughout the quarter?

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire: Hey, Madison Suhr. Thank you. It is, it is all the existing signings, and it’s really the Cleveland Clinic and some of the B2B invoice migration that we talked about. It’s those existing ramps. Just obviously you saw, you know, much stronger Q1 performance from those coming through. We expect that to continue into Q2, and then you sort of lap it as you get into the second half. It’s existing clients.

Madison Suhr, Analyst, Raymond James: Okay. Got it. Just a follow-up here on incremental margin. It looks like the updated guide implies like a low to mid 30% incremental for the year. I understand that there’s some investments in 2Q, but it does seem like the second half will need to step up even from 1Q levels. Cosmin, maybe can you just help, you know, bridge what gives you the confidence that incremental margin should accelerate in the second half? Thanks again, guys.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire: Yep. Thank you. Yeah, partially it’s a dynamic of lapping last year, so we had a number of investments even in the second half of last year. We’re, we’re lapping that, so that’s why we feel good that we’re gonna see that acceleration into the second half, and also just some of the investments start to pay off. Feel good about the sort of mid thirties for the year with higher kind of leaning into second half. 24%-25% EBITDA margins into next year, certainly look, you know, like well within our sights then as we exit this year with that kind of strength.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire1: Thank you. Our next question comes from Patrick Ennis with UBS. Your line is open.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire2: Yeah. Thanks for taking the question, guys. On Cleveland Clinic, I know you talked about maybe some higher margin revenue coming online in Q2. Just wanted to confirm that’s still the case and should be supportive of gross margins, all else equal.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire3: Yeah. Hi, this is Rob. I can jump in there. You said that exactly right. As we’d called out earlier in the explanation for the rollout plan for Cleveland Clinic, we went with the payment processing first and the software piece is what comes next. Still on track for Q2 launch and just as you say, that improves the margin of the overall Cleveland Clinic opportunity.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire2: Okay, awesome. Then just on the hospitality business, I mean, impressive TPV growth there. Could you talk about maybe the success you’re having cross-selling payments into Sertifi clients and then maybe just talk more generically about what the net take rate looks like there compared to kinda maybe some of the more non-cross-border related volume you have, so domestic education, B2B, healthcare payment processing?

Mike Massaro, Chief Executive Officer, Flywire: Yeah. This is Mike Massaro. You know, I guess what I’ll say is, you know, that was a core thesis when we acquired the Sertifi hospitality business, I think the team’s doing a great job executing, right? We knew that there was a lot of volume that was kind of going through that workflow and that software. We knew with our kind of focus in our network, we could monetize more, more of that volume. The team’s doing a great job doing it. Plenty of room to go on that. It’s a multi-year synergy that we’ve always talked about. I would say you can think about that, you know, that monetization is mostly being domestic. Remember, 20,000 hotel locations in the U.S. were the primary customer set of that.

As we go international, you can expect some of that to be, you know, a little more cross-border there. The U.S. volume does have some ACH and some card, but I think you can, you can think about it, kind of as domestic volume monetization, initially with international expansion, and expected more foreign exchange impacts potentially as we go international with that product.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire2: Okay. Great. Thanks, Mike.

Cosmin Pitigoi, Chief Financial Officer, Flywire1: Thank you. That’s all the time we have for questions. This does conclude the question and answer session. You may now disconnect. Everyone, enjoy the rest of your day.