RELY May 6, 2026

Remitly Q1 2026 Earnings Call - Record Revenue and EBITDA Surge on AI-Driven Efficiency and New Product Expansion

Summary

Remitly delivered a record-breaking first quarter of 2026, surpassing the high end of its guidance with revenue of $453 million, up 25% year-over-year, and adjusted EBITDA exceeding $100 million for the first time. The results were propelled by a resilient core remittance business, rapid adoption of new product categories including high-value senders and business customers, and aggressive integration of AI to drive operational efficiency and product velocity. CEO Sebastian Gunningham outlined a refined 4x4 strategic matrix to capture cross-border financial needs beyond simple transfers, emphasizing trust, speed, and fairness as durable competitive advantages. The company also announced a 4-fold increase in share repurchases, reflecting strong free cash flow generation and confidence in long-term growth.

Management highlighted significant progress in expanding its growth accelerators, with high-value sender volume growing 73% year-over-year and Remitly for Business scaling ahead of expectations. AI is being embedded across the organization to reduce costs, accelerate product development, and enhance customer trust through personalized experiences. The CFO noted that transaction losses were lower than expected due to AI-driven fraud prevention, and expense leverage was delivered across all categories. Looking ahead, Remitly expects revenue growth of 20% for the full year 2026, with accelerated growth in the second half driven by core strength and new product contributions.

Key Takeaways

  • Revenue surged 25% year-over-year to $453 million, beating the high end of guidance by $16 million, driven by record new customer acquisitions and elevated demand from U.S. tax refunds.
  • Adjusted EBITDA exceeded $100 million for the first time, reaching $102 million, which was $19 million above the midpoint of guidance, reflecting strong cost discipline and lower-than-expected transaction losses.
  • Quarterly active customers grew 20% year-over-year to over 9.6 million, with QAU growth accelerating due to a shift from offline to online channels, aided by recent U.S. regulatory changes.
  • High-value senders (transactions of $5,000 or more) saw volume grow 73% year-over-year, indicating strong traction in a lucrative segment that is now receiving dedicated product and engineering resources.
  • Remitly for Business scaled ahead of expectations, with over 20,000 users and 30% quarter-over-quarter growth in business send volume, which contributed more than twice the RLTE of the core business.
  • The company launched its receiver product in six countries, targeting the 30 million+ individuals who receive funds but are not yet senders, introducing a wallet that supports USD and USDC stablecoins.
  • AI is being aggressively integrated to drive cost efficiencies, speed up product development, and enhance customer trust, with AI-driven fraud prevention reducing transaction losses to 9.3 basis points of send volume.
  • Expense leverage was delivered across all categories, with G&A growing only 2% year-over-year, the lowest growth rate in the company's public history, and technology expenses growing at 14%, well below revenue growth.
  • Free cash flow reached over $70 million, and the company repurchased $44 million in shares, nearly doubling the pace of buybacks since the program's inception, reducing outstanding shares for the first time in company history.
  • Full-year 2026 revenue guidance is $1.96 billion to $1.975 billion, representing 20-21% growth, with expectations for accelerated growth in the second half of the year driven by core strength and new product contributions.

Full Transcript

Operator: Day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Remitly Q1 2026 earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker’s presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one one on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. In order to accommodate as many individuals as possible during the Q&A portion, each caller will be permitted to ask 1 question only with no follow-up questions. Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your first speaker today, David Beckel. Please go ahead.

David Beckel, Investor Relations, Remitly: Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us for Remitly’s first quarter 2026 earnings call. Joining me on the call today are Sebastian Gunningham, Chief Executive Officer of Remitly, and Vikas Mehta, Chief Financial Officer. Results and additional management commentary are available in the earnings release and presentation slides, which can be found at ir.remitly.com. Please note that this call will be simultaneously webcast on the investor relations website. Before we start, I would like to remind you that we will be making forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Federal Securities laws, including, but not limited to, statements regarding Remitly’s future financial results and management’s expectations and plans. These statements are neither promises nor guarantees and can involve risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to vary materially from those presented here. You should not place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements.

Please refer to the earnings release and SEC filings for more information regarding the risk factors that may affect results. Any forward-looking statements made in this conference call, including responses to your questions, are based on current expectations as of today, and Remitly assumes no obligation to update or revise them, whether as a result of new developments or otherwise, except as required by law. The following presentation contains non-GAAP financial measures. We will reference non-GAAP operating expenses, adjusted EBITDA, and free cash flow in this call. For a reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP metric, please see the earnings press release in the appendix to the earnings presentation, which are available on the IR section of our website. Now, I will turn the call over to Sebastian to begin.

Sebastian Gunningham, Chief Executive Officer, Remitly: Thank you, everyone, for joining our first quarter 2026 earnings call. Q1 was another exceptional quarter for Remitly. We delivered record revenue and adjusted EBITDA, both above the high ends of our guidance ranges and another quarter of record-adjusted EBITDA margin and net income. Adjusted EBITDA exceeded $100 million for the first time. These results reflect three durable characteristics of our business. First, a resilient business model, which led to another quarter of share gains. Second, growing contributions from new businesses and categories. Third, continued expense and capital allocation discipline. Each of these durable characteristics continue to compound, giving me great confidence in our ability to generate sustainable long-term growth and revenue profits and free cash flow. That confidence was reflected in nearly a 4-fold increase in the pace of share repurchases this quarter.

I wanna use my time today to reflect on what I’ve learned in my first 90 days, discuss our evolving approach to delivering customer value through new products and offerings, and expand how we plan to use AI to drive growth and continued operating efficiencies. In my first 90 days as CEO, I’ve been very focused on gaining a deeper understanding of the business. I traveled to a number of our global offices, spent time with teams on the ground, and conducted an internal deep dive spanning product, engineering, marketing, finance, and operations. I also spent time talking directly with our customers to understand firsthand what they value most of our product. It’s been an intense 90 days. My goal was straightforward: understand what is working, what can work better, and learn as much as I can about the people and the culture that built this great company.

I’ve also made some important people, product, and operational changes that are quickly helping accelerate the trajectory of the business. From this period of listening and learning, a clear set of operating priorities has emerged. I have already begun putting them into action. We rely on smaller teams to drive ownership and autonomy. We will distinguish clearly between our core remittance business and newer growth initiatives, allowing each to operate with the speed, focus, and rigor as required by their stage of maturity. We will adopt a disciplined approach to building products, starting with customer needs and working backwards. We will embed AI across everything we do, and we’ve designed the company so that speed is the default. My time with employees and customers also reinforced three things I believed about Remitly before joining. First, the culture is genuinely distinctive.

There is a missionary energy here and a sincere belief that moving money across borders should be reliable, fast, and fair, especially for a community that has historically been overcharged and underserved. What sustains that culture is the caliber of the people who carry it. Across every function and every country I visited, I encountered talented, deeply committed individuals who bring real energy and care to this mission every day. That culture and those people are a real competitive asset, and I intend to protect and amplify both. Second, our core strengths, trust, network breadth, and operating scale put us in a strong position to continue gaining share and growing our offerings to better serve the cross-border needs of our customers. My conversations with customers reinforce that trust is the most consequential of these factors.

These are people sending money for life-changing events, supporting family members, covering medical bills, building a future from a distance. For them, knowing the money will arrive reliably, quickly, and fairly is paramount. If things do go wrong, it is important that they know there’s an instant 24/7 global structure in place to fix it. As financial services become increasingly automated and digitized, trust becomes more valuable, not less. Our disbursement network, customer support excellence, and compliance capabilities create a trust and safety advantage, a durable, hard-to-replicate edge that protects our customers every corner of the world and strengthens our global platform. Third, I believe AI and stablecoins will accelerate our growth and not just incrementally. Companies like Remitly with trusted customer relationships, complex regulatory dependencies, and a proprietary network infrastructure will be great beneficiaries of AI tailwinds.

The company now knows I’m somewhat obsessed with taking this newly found intelligence into our business. As I will explain, we are moving quickly to ensure we take full advantage of AI to move faster, lower costs, improve product quality, and compress product development timelines. Stablecoins are a different kind of opportunity, not a universal solution, but a targeted one. In corridors where they offer a clear cost or speed advantage, stablecoins gives us another tool to reduce FX costs, improve settlement speed and efficiency, and deliver better outcomes for our customers. With that as context, let me turn to how I’m thinking about the opportunity ahead and why I believe we are only beginning to scratch the surface. When I joined Remitly, I was asked whether I planned to change Remitly’s strategy as the new CEO. The answer is no.

The vision, the customers we serve, the focus on cost, speed of delivery, and trust are right. They will not change. Where I differ is the pace with which we can achieve our vision and execute our strategy. I have full confidence Remitly will be a large, more diverse provider of cross-border financial services, and the most important app for those that send or receive money internationally. To explain why, let me share a framework I’ve used internally. I think about our opportunity as a 4-by-4 matrix. 4 customer categories on one axis, and the 4 primary ways we can deliver value to those customers on the other. The 4 categories are: 1 are core senders that are established base who send money for critical non-discretionary reasons. 2, highly valued senders, a fast-growing category with significant untapped share for Remitly.

3, businesses, a massive and underserved carrier for which we are seeing rapid traction, even with a very early feature set for this customer. The 4th category is receivers. The 30+ million people around the world who receive money through Remitly, most of whom are not senders today. For each of these customers, we are grouping 4 categories of product offerings, broadly defined around sending money, borrowing money, spending money, and saving money. At the intersection of the 4 customer and product categories are many unique opportunities to serve our customers with products they need to live their cross-border financial lives. Each customer category and product offering reinforces the others, drawing on shared infrastructure and data to create compounding benefits as we scale.

Core send comprises the vast majority of our revenue today and is the base from which all our offerings are built, leveraging 14 years of experience, network depth, an optimized cost structure, as well as a DNA of trust and speed that is difficult to replicate. Everything outside of core send we think of as growth accelerators. Our borrow, spend, and save products fuel a flywheel around sending money by addressing a broad set of cross-border financial needs. A more complete financial services experience, in turn, drives improved loyalty, higher remittance volumes, and diversifies our revenue sources. This matrix is not a change, but a refinement of the strategy we presented at Investor Day. It provides a blueprint for execution and a disciplined lens for prioritization. We will go deep where the opportunity is largest and where we have the clearest right to win.

When I look at where we stand today, we have honestly only just started addressing a handful of these opportunities. I’ll provide a brief update on recent progress and initiatives across each of our key near-term opportunities, starting with Core Send. In Core Send, we improved our distribution through new or expanded integration with WhatsApp and ChatGPT and deepened our network reach across every region we serve, improving reliability, speed, and access for customers around the world. On the receive side in Latin America, we integrated Bre-B, Colombia Central Bank-backed instant payment rail, and added Banco Bolivariano as a direct bank partner in Ecuador. In Asia, we added KBZpay in Myanmar, Rocket in Bangladesh, and Coins.ph in the Philippines, extending our reach to tens of millions of users with near-instant fiat and stablecoin wallet-based payouts.

In Africa and the Middle East, we launched new receive markets, including the UAE, bringing total receive countries to 170. On the send side, we enabled Discover Card acceptance and launched access to FedNow and RTP in the U.S., allowing customers to fund transactions instantly from bank accounts while lowering our cost. Underpinning all of this, continued innovation in our payments and fraud system drove good card acceptance and authorization rates globally in Q1, reinforcing network strength while improving speed, reliability, and the customer experience. In the near term, we are focused on using AI to deliver real-time automated pricing across our 5,000 plus corridors, enabling regional leaders to capture incremental demand by delivering more customer value.

We will also apply AI across the Remitly experience to improve the moments that matter most to customers, how long that transfer takes to arrive, how they pay, and how we keep them coming back. We will accelerate the pace of geographic expansion, bringing our leading digital remittance experience to some of the largest, fastest-growing send and receive countries in the world. This quarter, we updated our definition of high-value senders to include only those who send $5,000 or more in a single transaction, which better aligns our strategy, focus, and resources with the specific needs of these who send higher transaction amounts. This customer needs a high-touch certainty-first experience, and when we earn their trust, they generate substantially more value per customer than our core senders.

In Q1, we continued to remove friction and improve the experience for these customers by increasing send limits with network partners and simplifying the onboarding experience. Our near-term focus for this category is to streamline pay-in methods and improve our risk assessment process while better targeting and addressing the specific and diverse needs of customers within this category. Our business offering continues to scale, growing volumes 30% quarter-over-quarter ahead of expectations. In Q1, we launched our business receiver product in five new countries, allowing freelancers and contractors in parts of Latin America and Asia to request and receive payments from clients in 26 countries around the world. We also launched a new feature that allows businesses to initiate the payment process by sending a link to the recipient’s email or phone, eliminating cumbersome data management and trust issues that often cause friction for small businesses.

Our near-term focus for our business offering is continued improvements on the onboarding experience, geographic expansion, and a steady drumbeat of features that appeal uniquely to small and medium-sized businesses sending money internationally. Our receiver strategy targets the more than 100 million people in the world who receive money in one currency and spend in another. Last month, we recorded our first receiver transaction following the launch of our receiver and request product in 6 countries, creating a new source of cross-border volume in countries where we already have a strong send presence. With this launch, we also introduced a wallet that enables receivers to hold funds in USD or USDC stablecoins and withdraw to local bank accounts, mobile wallets, or cash pickup locations. Our near-term focus for receivers is country expansion and enabling widespread access to stablecoin across our wallet offerings.

Moving to borrow, spend, and save, last year we announced a range of products aimed at supporting these use cases, send now, pay later for our customers’ liquidity needs, and wallet and card for sending, spending, and saving money with benefits. We have seen strong traction with these offerings as we continue to build, test, and iterate with revenue more than doubling year-over-year. Building on these learnings and experience, this quarter we will expand our offering for customers who have a need to send now, pay later, spend, and save. For a low monthly fee plan, these customers will receive access to a global debit card to spend, a wallet to save, a short-term line of credit offered by a bank partner for remittances and benefits that reward loyalty, remittance use, and the timely payment of credit balances.

We believe there’s a strong preference among customers with short-term liquidity needs for a card-based experience where loyalty and rewards are our central feature. This will be the first of our Remitly Card offerings that target specific use cases, addressing the unique needs of a broad cross-section of our customers. We have a long list of ideas for our card platform beyond send now, pay later that we plan to execute over the coming quarters. Our goal is to make the Remitly Card the most versatile and best debit card in the world for the 300 million international migrants and 80+ million small businesses worldwide. Our strategy is simple: expand the value and capabilities we deliver to the broad range of people and businesses sending money globally.

Investors should expect a meaningful acceleration in the pace of product enhancements as we expand our offerings, guided by the operating principles we have put in place around clear ownership, distributed accountability, and a bias for speed. Finally, I want to touch on the benefits we expect to derive from AI. Over the past several months, many of our peers have reported significant AI-driven gains in productivity and cost efficiencies. The pace of AI advancement is real and the impact is substantial. Remitly is fully part of the shift, and I will lead that effort aggressively. We have organized our thinking around 3 types of AI benefits. The first is the cost, which drives greater operating efficiency and long-term cost savings. We have gone methodically through the organization function by function to identify where we can use AI going forward to drive efficiency gains while maintaining or improving productivity.

Through this process, we have identified opportunities to streamline our organization, building on the more than 250 headcount reductions and over 50 roles redeployed through efficiency gains year-to-date. That is a deliberate choice, grounded in our confidence that the AI-driven efficiencies can allow us to do the same work, and in most cases, more work with a leaner organization. The second benefit of AI is speed, which helps unlock a faster operating cycle. Throughout our product and engineering teams, a new profile of skill set is emerging that combines product design, engineering depth, and AI fluency in one person. We are calling them knowledge development engineers. They are helping us disrupt the decades-long bottlenecks of product ideation, building, testing, and launching from months and years to days. I would note that eliminating one bottleneck quickly reveals the next.

As a company, we are actively rethinking every step in the process to deliver products that move seamlessly from idea to customer value to deliver exceptional products and services. The speed AI benefit is harder to quantify than the cost benefit, but we believe its potential compounding effect on our ability to build, ship, and iterate will be an enormous structural tailwind. The third and most consequential benefit of AI in the long run is the trust benefit. For our customers, trust means safety and comfort, speed and fair pricing, and a high-quality person to talk to when things go wrong. AI can improve our ability to deliver on all three. Take localization at scale.

With AI giving us a broader and deeper understanding of our customers, we can now tailor the experience across every corridor with a level of personalization that wasn’t previously possible. That relevance builds trust, and trust underpins everything we do. 3 to 4 years from now, I believe this company will generate significantly more revenue with roughly the same number of people. The AI benefits is how I believe we will generate the investment capacity to get there, and we intend to put a large portion of that capacity back into growth. Let me close with this. Q1 was an exceptional start of the year. Record results above guidance and a business that continues to demonstrate its resilience and its upside. What energizes me most is not what is behind us, it is what lies ahead. We have a core business that is growing and improving.

We have a strong portfolio of growth accelerators that are at the very early stages of what they can become. The early benefits of AI are beginning to create real measurable capacity for investment, and we have a team and a culture I believe is among the most mission-driven I’ve encountered in my career. I want to thank every member of the Remitly team. The execution, the energy, and the commitment to our customers that shows up every day are what makes these results possible. I want to thank our investors for their continued confidence and trust in this company. With that, I will turn the call over to Vikas.

Vikas Mehta, Chief Financial Officer, Remitly: Thank you, Sebastian. Good afternoon, everyone. We delivered another quarter of profitable growth and strong free cash flow, reflecting continued share gains and solid execution. First quarter revenue was $453 million, up 25% year-over-year, and $16 million above the midpoint of our guidance. Revenue outperformance this quarter was driven by a number of factors. Recent regulatory changes in the U.S. drove an increase in customers’ use of digital remittances, resulting in record new customer acquisitions. We also benefited from elevated demand associated with higher tax refunds in the U.S. and favorable market conditions in key corridors. Adjusted EBITDA was $102 million, $19 million above the midpoint of our guidance. Adjusted EBITDA outperformance was driven by higher than expected revenue, lower than expected transaction losses, and short-term pause in hiring following in-quarter headcount reductions.

Let me share an overview of our first quarter results and then provide our outlook for the second quarter of 2026 and our updated guidance for the full year. Unpacking revenue growth drivers for Q1. Send volume grew 37% to $22.1 billion. Supporting this strong volume growth, send volume per active customer increased to nearly $2,300 or 14% year-over-year growth, a record on both an absolute and percentage growth basis. This was driven by growth in both transactions per active customers and record growth in average transaction size as we continue to win share and gain traction with high-value senders and business customers. Quarterly active customers grew 20% year-over-year to over 9.6 million ahead of our expectations.

QAU growth accelerated quarter-over-quarter, reflecting the shift in offline to online conversions associated with recent regulatory changes in the U.S. Our Skip the Line campaign, highlighting the lower cost and convenience of digital remittances, has been effective in attracting new customers seeking alternatives to traditional cash-based remittance methods. QAU growth was further supported by improved retention, reflecting enhancements in the core product to improve speed, reliability, and overall customer experience. As expected, volume and revenue exceeded QAU growth as we saw a greater mix of send volume from high-value senders and businesses. Our take rate this quarter was 2.05% in line with expectations. The year-over-year change was driven primarily by growth in volume from high-value senders and business customers, as well as a higher digital payout mix, which improved by more than 250 basis points year-over-year.

As I have discussed in previous quarters, take rate is heavily influenced by mix, so it is not a great metric for analyzing our underlying business performance. We believe RLTE dollar growth and RLTE per active user are more indicative of our success than take rate when analyzing our performance. Let me dive deeper into our revenue performance from a geographic and new products perspective. From a send perspective, U.S. revenue grew 25% driven by continued share gains. Rest of the world grew 31% year-over-year, showcasing the geographic diversification of our business. Our broad footprint means no single corridor disproportionately dictates our outcomes. Notable highlights from the rest of the world this quarter include continued strength in the U.A.E., where we saw a meaningful increase in activity.

Send volumes in the UAE rose over 150% year-over-year, due in part to a short-term surge in volumes during a period of heightened regional uncertainty. On the receive side, revenue from transactions to regions outside of India, the Philippines, and Mexico grew faster than the overall revenue growth and now comprise over half of our revenue mix, further diversifying our business. I’ll now move to discuss the performance of our growth accelerators. As a reminder, growth accelerators include all customer categories and offerings outside of core send. Let me dive deeper into a few notable highlights for Q1. As Sebastian shared earlier, this quarter we are simplifying our structure for defining customers based on average transaction size. High-value senders are now those who send a transaction of $5,000 or more.

This change reflects a refined focus on customers whose needs are specific to larger transaction amounts. In Q1, high-value senders volume grew 73% year-over-year, reflecting a 220 basis point year-over-year increase in mix. We’ll continue to see outsized growth from high-value senders as we improve the customer experience and expand and refine our targeting of this customer category. We’ll continue to build on this momentum with product enhancements that further reduce friction and cater to the specific needs of these senders. Remitly for Business continues to scale ahead of expectations. We ended Q1 with over 20,000 Remitly for Business users and more than 30% quarter-over-quarter growth in business send volume. Send volume and RLTE contribution for business customer was more than 2 times higher than our core during the quarter.

We launched our receiver product this quarter, enabling direct access to the more than 30 million individuals and businesses who receive funds today from Remitly senders, but are not yet themselves Remitly customers. While nascent, we are very optimistic about this new offering. Moving to borrow, spend, and save initiatives. Revenue from these offerings more than doubled in Q1. This quarter we are expanding our send now, pay later offering, the comprehensive and simpler card-based experience for customers who have a need to send now, pay later, spend, and save. This evolved offering will provide customers with a global debit card, a wallet, a short-term credit line for remittances funded by a banking partner, and rewards for timely payments, all for a low monthly plan fee. As with prior send now, pay later offerings, this product will be made available only to existing Remitly customers with demonstrated repayment behavior.

Unit economics for this product are expected to be strong as it will generate platform and interchange fees and float income. The short-term loans will be issued by a bank partner. The lines of credit tend to perform better than non-recourse advances. Moving forward, we expect the majority of growth in our send now, pay later borrowing solution to come from this card-based format. Continue to expect revenues from new products as we previously defined to more than double this year. High-value senders are expected to be additive to prior expected growth ranges associated with new products. Including high-value senders, revenue from all growth accelerators is expected to be around 5% of total revenue in 2026 and exceed 10% of total revenue by 2028.

These growth accelerators address customer needs that are adjacent to core centers, providing an efficient means of diversifying our business revenue base while driving cost synergies from the shared use of our technology. Turning to our focus on driving profitable growth on slide 13. As I noted earlier, Revenue Less Transaction Expenses or RLTE is a useful indicator of our business model’s long-term success. RLTE dollars grew 28% to $308 million, outpacing revenue growth and reflecting strong customer activity, improved partner economics, routing optimization, and economies of scale. RLTE as a percentage of revenue this quarter was 68%, improving 156 basis points year-over-year. We remain focused on long-term RLTE dollar growth as we continue to attract new customers, innovate with new products, and scale.

Transaction expenses this quarter were $145 million. As a percentage of revenue was 32%. Excluding provisions for transaction losses, other transaction expenses were $124 million, improving 114 basis points year-over-year as a percentage of revenue and reflecting improved network economics. Provision for transaction losses was $21 million or 9.3 basis points as a percentage of send volume, better than our expectations as we continue to benefit from efficiencies afforded by the AI-driven fraud prevention and detection model deployed late last year. With that, let me walk you through the specific non-GAAP expense categories. Notably, we delivered leverage across all expense categories once again in Q1. In Q1, we reduced our corporate workforce by more than 10% as a part of a broader effort to sharpen our organizational focus and drive e-efficiencies across the business.

These were not easy decisions, but were necessary to ensure we continue driving operating efficiencies as we scale our growth accelerators. Marketing investments remain disciplined and growth focused. We spent $82 million on marketing in Q1, up 20.7% year-over-year. As a percentage of revenue, marketing expense was 18.2%, improving more than 67 basis points year-over-year due to continued efficiencies. Marketing spend per active customer was $8.56, up 0.7% year-over-year, in line with our expectations. This quarter, we launched a Skip the Line campaign, a strategic initiative targeting offline senders in the U.S. who historically relied on in-person cash agents to send money to Latin America.

By meeting these customers where they already are, whether on WhatsApp or on billboards in their neighborhoods, we were able to drive meaningful growth in new customer acquisition from a category that is difficult to reach. Campaign results across our targets show strong lift in Remitly awareness, consideration, and intent to try. Our lifetime value to customer acquisition cost ratio was about 6 times, while our payback period remained under 12 months. Continued efficiencies reflect growth in customer acquisition through unpaid channels and word of mouth. As a reminder, our marketing investments drive returns for many years beyond our initial investment given our growing base of repeat users. Customer support and operations expense was $25 million, and as a percentage of revenue was 5.5%, improving 69 basis points year-over-year and continuing a multiyear trend of steady operating leverage.

Today, over 97% of transactions are completed without any agent contact, a remarkable milestone that reflects both the reliability of our service and the sophistication of our AI-driven support capabilities. When customers do need help, our AI-based assistants are meaningfully reducing the need for human intervention, and early customer satisfaction scores tell an encouraging story with AI-led interactions performing as well as human agent interactions. Technology and development expense was $58 million, and as a percentage of revenue was 12.7%, improving by 127 basis points year-over-year. Technology and development expenses grew 14% year-over-year, meaningfully below the pace of our revenue growth. We are beginning to see the benefits from embedding agentic AI deeply into our engineering and product development teams.

Our engineers are using AI-assisted code generation and automated testing to compress development cycles, ship faster, and reduce the cost per feature delivered. We are still in the early innings and expect AI to be a durable contributor to technology-related operating leverage going forward. G&A expense was $41 million, growing only 2% year-over-year, our lowest growth rate in ever as a public company. We delivered significant leverage, 209 basis point as a percentage of revenue year-over-year, reflecting deliberate and disciplined attention to our cost structure. In total, expense efficiencies this quarter reflect both benefits of operating leverage and a pause in hiring as we optimize our organization to better enable Sebastian’s operating principles. Moving forward, we expect AI benefits to contribute significantly to the funding of our growth accelerators.

Strong revenue growth combined with efficiency and discipline led to adjusted EBITDA of $102 million. We also delivered $49 million of GAAP net income, more than 300% growth compared to $11 million of net income in the first quarter of 2025. As we noted at Investor Day, our North Star is driving free cash flow growth while managing dilution, and Q1 demonstrated continued progress on both fronts. Free cash flow grew to over $70 million in Q1. The difference between adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow is explained by working capital expenditure, and restructuring payments. Outstanding shares were 210 million, down quarter-over-quarter for the first time in our company’s history, reflecting our disciplined approach to dilution management, including an elevated pace of share repurchase activity.

Stock-based compensation was down 23% year-over-year, coming in at 6.1% of revenue, approximately 382 basis points lower than the first quarter of 2025. This benefit was partially aided by forfeitures associated with headcount reductions in Q1. For all of 2026, we expect some stock-based compensation to increase in absolute terms year-over-year but decrease as a percentage of revenue as grants associated with recent leadership changes are partially offset by higher forfeitures. Q2 stock-based compensation will be elevated, reflecting both hiring activity that shifted out of Q1 and challenging year-over-year comparisons as forfeitures in prior year were concentrated in Q1.

We were meaningfully more active in repurchase of shares in Q1, opportunistically buying back $44 million or 2.8 million shares, nearly double the shares we repurchased since launching the program in the second half of last year. This reflects conviction in our long-term growth opportunities and a view that share repurchases are an attractive use of capital. We’ll continue to be disciplined and opportunistic in how we deploy capital towards buybacks. We ended the quarter with around $650 million of cash. As a reminder, cash and access to liquidity are strategic assets in scaled global money movement businesses like ours. This quarter, cash on hand along with our revolving credit facility were optimally used to fund customer transactions and satisfy regulatory safeguarding requirements across thousands of corridors and regulatory jurisdictions.

Our top priority for free cash flow after an organic investment and customer pre-funding requirements remains the repurchase of shares. With that, I’ll move to our outlook. For the second quarter of 2026, we expect revenue of $483 million-$485 million or 17%-18% growth. Second quarter growth reflects the shifting and timing of Ramadan and Easter to earlier in the year, elevated U.S. tax refunds benefiting send volumes in Q1, an increase in volumes late in Q1 associated with geopolitical events, and tougher comps. We continue to see strong momentum in our core, and we expect a continued shift towards digital remittances, share gains, and the scaling of our growth accelerators to contribute to total company revenue growth of around 20% in the second half of the year, an increase relative to prior expectations.

Breaking down our revenue growth expectations, in Q2, we anticipate send volume growth to exceed revenue growth and revenue growth to be in line with quarterly active customer growth. Send volume per active customer is expected to grow in the mid to high single-digit range, supported by a shift in mix toward high-value senders and businesses. For the full year, we expect revenue between $1.96 billion and $1.975 billion, reflecting a growth rate of 20%-21%. As noted, we expect growth to accelerate in the second half of the year, reflecting strong demand in our core and additional contributions from our growth accelerators. Let us pivot to profitability and expense guidance. Starting with RLTE, we expect Q2 RLTE margins to be modestly higher year-over-year, driven primarily by normalization of transaction losses.

As a reminder, Q2 of last year was impacted by an outsized transaction loss stemming from a sophisticated fraud attack in May. For the full year, we expect RLTE margins to be broadly in line with 2025 on a normalized basis. As always, transaction loss rate may fluctuate quarter to quarter, and we remain disciplined about optimizing customer lifetime value while rigorously managing risks across our platform. Shifting to marketing, we expect continued marketing efficiencies in 2026 as we prioritize high ROI marketing opportunities. For Q2, we expect marketing spend per QAU to be slightly higher year-over-year as we engage customers around the timing of the World Cup, expanding our Skip the Line campaign to select countries and launch brand marketing in the UAE.

Putting this all together, we expect Q2 adjusted EBITDA to be between $86 million and $88 million, translating to an adjusted EBITDA margin around 18%, an expansion of around 250 basis points year-over-year. For the full year, we expect adjusted EBITDA to be between $370 million and $385 million, representing an adjusted EBITDA margin of around 19%, also an expansion of around 250 basis points year-over-year. This improved EBITDA outlook reflects a more favorable outlook of revenue and our commitment and ability to balance growth and profitability, leveraging the benefits of AI as we continue to invest in driving top-line growth. Our outlook also assumes normal levels of transaction losses for the remainder of the year.

We expect to generate positive GAAP net income each quarter this year and strong year-over-year growth in GAAP net income and free cash flows. To summarize, in Q1, we delivered another quarter of exceptional results across our key financial metrics, achieving 25% revenue growth and 22% adjusted EBITDA margins. We also delivered record GAAP profitability and strong free cash flow, underscoring the power and scalability of our business model. With that, Sebastian and I will open up the call for your questions. Operator.

Operator: Thank you. Thank you. At this time, we will conduct the question and answer session. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press star 11 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 11 again. In order to accommodate as many individuals as possible during the Q&A portion, each caller will be permitted to ask 1 question only with no follow-up. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from the line of Tien-Tsin Huang with JPMorgan. Your line is live.

Tien-Tsin Huang, Analyst, JPMorgan: Hi. Thanks a lot. Nice results here. I, if you don’t mind, because I know you went through this in the guidance, but maybe can you drill down a little bit more in the upside factors in the quarter, the thinking for the second quarter and the balance of the year? There’s a lot of moving pieces with the tax refunds being higher and the remittance tax, and you talked about some of the geopolitical, the favorable market conditions and whatnot. How does this impact your thinking on seasonal trendings for the second quarter and second half? What new risk might there be here or versus upside opportunity that may have been different than, say, 90 days ago?

Vikas Mehta, Chief Financial Officer, Remitly: First of all, thank you for the question. As I shared on the call, Q1 was an exceptional quarter. Really, strong highlights across the board, all the way from record new customer acquisition, to record send per quarterly active users. Some of the highlights in the quarter included, you know, just a, you know, positive impact that we got from remittance tax and the shift from offline to online customers that aided our record new customer acquisitions. In addition to that, you know, the higher U.S. tax refunds as we have seen, especially in the core sender segment, this is a really positive impact that we saw.

A lot of it is art than science, clearly there was some correlation there, especially in the late March timeframe. Beyond that, as we highlighted holiday timing, both Easter as well as Ramadan moved up couple weeks earlier in the year, which gave us a positive overall Q1 shape. Finally, as we noted, the global uncertainty with regards to geopolitics, especially in the Middle East corridors, created, you know, an upside on the UAE volumes, which grew north of 150%. Overall, you know, really strong quarter. As you know, Q1 becomes the foundation for a full year, with a record new customer acquisition, that creates a nice follow-through in our quarters.

As we highlighted, you know, the full year guidance is north of 20%, which, you know, means that in second half of the year, there is a re-acceleration that happens. Especially this is driven by both the strength in our core business as well as propelled by the growth accelerators Sebastian talked about. Overall, we remain very confident as we, you know, start the year. Just the overall business model that we have, which drives predictability, resilience, as well as diversification, gives us more and more confidence.

Operator: One moment for our next question. Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Ramsey El-Assal with Cantor Fitzgerald. Your line is open.

Ramsey El-Assal, Analyst, Cantor Fitzgerald: Hi. Thanks so much for taking my question tonight. I wanted to ask about your M&A approach. It seems like in the last several quarters, the kind of growth vectors in your business have just exploded just in terms of product proliferation, monetizable services. Is that changing the way you’re looking at M&A to, you know, so many more opportunities to sort of accelerate these different growth paths through M&A? If you could just clarify one point, Vikas, on Tien-Tsin’s last question. How much should we think about that 1% cash remittance tax impact, which has been positive, you know, trending through the rest of the year? Is that something that you guys are counting on, or is it something that you’re seeing now or you’re not sure you’ll continue to see? Just a finer point on that, too.

Thank you.

Sebastian Gunningham, Chief Executive Officer, Remitly: Yeah. Let me take the acquisition question. Clearly, as we see all the growth in these new customer categories, the high-value senders, the business senders, and the receivers, we are starting to analyze acquisitions a little bit differently. As you know, we have not been a very acquisitive company. We are starting the process to understand what does it mean to have this kind of growth in these categories and where can we accelerate that. On the core business, as of right now, standing here today, I don’t see anything obvious on the horizon.

We are, you know, we’re building up the muscle to learn how to do this, and I anticipate that sometime in the future we will probably be able to answer this question more specifically. On the 1%, you know, we don’t have any science behind the 1%. We’ve got a lot of anecdotes. We saw this in Q1. I suspect it’s probably gonna continue for the remainder of the year. It’s hard to tell whether we captured a lot of it now or a lot of it is coming. There still is a, you know, a fairly large group of people that transact in cash. I think it’s inevitable that this will continue. Maybe it’ll take 2 years. Maybe it’ll take the remainder of this year.

As I said, we take it as an article of faith that it was one of the tailwinds to our business, and we expect it to continue for the rest of the year.

Vikas Mehta, Chief Financial Officer, Remitly: Yeah. Just to add a point or two to Sebastian’s thoughts. You know, we’ll continue to invest in the Skip the Line campaign. We have seen a lot of success coming through that. Secondly, you know, the product enhancements, we want to meet where the customers are. As we shared earlier in the quarter, we came out with enhancements to WhatsApp. We launched a ChatGPT integration. We feel that, you know, by creating strong product enhancements, we can continue to, you know, drive the offline to online shift.

Operator: One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Darrin Peller with Wolfe Research. Your line is open.

Darrin Peller, Analyst, Wolfe Research: All right. Hey, guys. Thanks. Look, I wanna back out. If we take out of the equation the, you know, let’s call it the remittance tax, the Mid East impact, or the even tax refunds, just anything that might be shorter term and not a business model opportunity for you guys, when I think of the sustainable drivers of upside, the growth accelerators effectively, help us understand where, you know, where they came in versus your prior expectations. I mean, if you looked at high-value senders or business or receivers or even some of the borrow and spend and save areas, I’m curious to know where they’re trending versus what you initially thought. Then maybe a little more on go-to-market around high-value senders and business, just ’cause it seems like. I mean, it’s really contributing to the volume growth rate.

I know it’s an area of real focus for you guys. So I’m curious where you see that going from here in terms of your ability to invest in it and ensure that it stays a key contributor?

Sebastian Gunningham, Chief Executive Officer, Remitly: Yeah. I’ll make the comment that First of all, you know, these are not segments that we invented. As we looked at all the data and we looked at the customers coming to Remitly, we started to see this high value, we put in that is greater than $5,000 transactions, $10,000, $50,000. It was customers finding us and starting to use the platform. We have a lot of ideas to make the product that much better. Without much investment, we started, we see a lot of growth in this area, and it’s overachieved all our plans so far. As of right now, we’ve now dedicated a full team. We have a full engineering team.

We’re launching new features for that customer daily at this point. The business, the same thing happened. We started to see small businesses using the Remitly infrastructure. As you know, if you’re a small business in the U.S., it’s very painful to move money across the world. We’ve done the same thing. We’ve, you know, that business continues to overachieve our plans. We’ve now dedicated a team. We have a full engineering team. We have a new. That’s a different go-to-market model. We have more partnerships. We are also seeing week-to-week improvements. As you know, that’s a very large market.

You don’t need to win that much to make it a pretty big business. I was in Manila last week, and I was talking to a group of freelancers, and this is a very active group of people who are requesting money to be paid from the U.S. You know, they’re virtual assistants, virtual salespeople, and this is happening all over the world. We see a lot of traction there. The final category is a little bit more unknown. That’s these 30 million customers around the world who receive money from Remitly. We’ve launched our first set of products. It’s very early days. I, you know, that’s not contributing much yet.

We think it’s a big opportunity. We have to navigate our way through that, see what the right products are. Over-achievement in high-value senders, and we’re doubling down on that. Over-achievement on the business side, and we’re doubling down with that. On the receiver side, seems a very exciting market, TBD.

Operator: One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Cristopher Kennedy with William Blair. Your line is open.

Cristopher Kennedy, Analyst, William Blair: Good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. Just wanted to follow up on the Remitly, the business initiative. Clearly, it’s outperforming your expectations. Is there any way to frame kind of how that business is ramping relative to the high-value send initiative that was launched maybe 18 months ago? Thanks for taking the question.

Sebastian Gunningham, Chief Executive Officer, Remitly: I think from a, you know, the high-value sender is an extension of our core sender market. If you look at the product needs of that sender, it’s a close cousin to all the needs of the core sender. The business sender is different, has different requirements. They need bulk send. They need, you know, different integrations to their ERPs and payment systems. It’s a bit of a different customer. It’s a little bit of an unfair comparison because the go-to market is going to be different. We’ve seen the overachievement without much go-to-market investment yet.

I’d say that if you were to look at the numbers, it’s probably a pretty similar ramp of growth between the high-value senders and the business senders, but quite, you know, different potential as to what we need to do to continue to accelerate that growth.

Operator: One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Aditya Bhusavarapu. Your line is open.

Aditya Bhusavarapu, Analyst: Hey, Sebastian. Thanks for taking my question. Can you just give an update on the rollout of the wallet and card? The U.S. was of course the first market, but any update on maybe on the rollout into other markets during 2026? Also maybe somewhat related to that, the lifestyle brand focusing on the card as the main channel for send out a later product, what did you see which made you take that route?

Sebastian Gunningham, Chief Executive Officer, Remitly: Yes. Well, first I’ll start by, you know, for the last year we’ve been experimenting with this send now, pay later idea, which is the short-term liquidity loan. We’ve had a very, very strong signal. This is a killer idea, we think. Customers have told us that the use of a card is extremely valuable. We’re wrapping up a number of ideas under this card construct, which obviously are gonna help the economics and allows us to really simplify how we go to market with this. Remember that the send now, pay later is an invite only. The customer’s already sent once on Remitly. We know some stuff, so we think it’s a very interesting product.

The signals of all the testing over the last year are very good. We see that launch as quite a lot of potential. We’ve obviously got a long list of things that we’re gonna add to a card to make it, you know, to make customers use it and loyalty, and you can imagine all the things that we can add to a card. It is U.S.-focused first. We’re doing it with the bank partnership. Our ambition is to make this global. As of right now we’re gonna go for the next few quarters with a U.S. launch only.

Operator: One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of David Scharf with Citizens JMP Securities. Your line is live.

Zach (on behalf of David Scharf), Analyst, Citizens JMP Securities: Hi, this is Zach on for David. Thanks for taking our questions, and congratulations on another strong quarter. Wanted to dig in a little bit on the mix with the high-value senders. Obviously as it’s ramping up, you know, it sounds like over 10% of revenue by 2028. Wanted to see if there was any kind of commentary or anything to kind of highlight in terms of how that shift will impact, yeah, any kind of geographic mix or concentration or any expectations for loss rates versus the kind of core senders book.

Vikas Mehta, Chief Financial Officer, Remitly: Thank you for the question. As you highlighted, we’re very excited about the high-value senders, you know, customer category. As we highlighted, this used to be part of just our core send, but we are increasing our focus, putting a dedicated, you know, organizational structure and muscle behind it, putting, you know, a product thought process as well as a marketing focus around it. As we do that, we see the potential is massive, right? We’re super excited for the potential here. Even as we do that, in parallel, we are seeing very strong performance. As you saw this quarter, the high-value senders volume grew 73%.

Sebastian Gunningham, Chief Executive Officer, Remitly: As we, you know, look at a lot of product enhancements, increasing our send limits, we feel that, you know, the volume, especially on the, call it 10,000-plus, 25,000-plus, 50,000-plus, a lot of those are really big greenfield opportunities for us, where we can start attracting more and more customers. If you even think about our marketing message, that is more generic. As we try to make it more targeted and focused towards these customers, we feel the awareness, as well as the, you know, overall service that we provide should resonate really well. So, you know, very excited about it. The availability is across the globe, same as what our core sender availability is.

From a mix, from a, you know, targeting the customers, we believe that it should be a global, you know, adoption and global growth, and that makes it even more exciting for us.

Operator: One moment for our next question. Thank you. We have time for one final question. Our next question and final question comes from the line of Alex Markgraff with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Your line is live.

Cristopher Kennedy, Analyst, William Blair0: Hi, this is Zoe on behalf of Alex Graf. Thank you for taking my question. I was wondering if you could provide more context on Remitly in ChatGPT, any financial consideration in it? Also a question on WhatsApp expansion. How can we assume Remitly to expand on this? Obviously, there’s more geo coverage, but seems there’s also an opportunity on the receipt side partnership as well. Thank you.

Sebastian Gunningham, Chief Executive Officer, Remitly: Yes, thank you. Good question. No, no financial interchange with ChatGPT. These are early days. We, you know, we’re clearly entering a time where customers are probably gonna interface with all their financial services with different interfaces and be it WhatsApp and WeChat and ChatGPT, all the LLMs and the chats and eventually agents also. We have a lot of experiments going on. We’ve announced the WhatsApp integration, which allows customers to interact directly with Remitly through WhatsApp. ChatGPT is an early experiment. We see some use there, and it’s growing day by day. I follow that every day.

We have a long list of ideas to make sure that all the Remitly infrastructure and all the benefits of the cost efficiencies, the speed, and the service behind moving money is available and relevant if these evolutions in how people interface with money movement changes. Early days, good signals so far, and we’ll keep you posted on what the next set of ideas are.