Design software maker Figma (NYSE: FIG) reported first-quarter results after the close on May 14, 2026, that handily beat Wall Street estimates and lifted full-year guidance, sending shares sharply higher in extended trading. Revenue grew 46% year-over-year, and management raised its 2026 revenue outlook by roughly $60 million at the midpoint, citing accelerating adoption of its AI-native design products.
The print was Figma’s first earnings release since its July 2025 IPO lockup expired, putting the company under fresh scrutiny from a market that had punished the stock badly through early 2026. Shares closed the regular session up 6.9% at $20.24 and added another 11.7% to about $22.60 in after-hours trading following the release, according to Yahoo Finance quote data.
The Headline Numbers
Q1 revenue came in at $333.4 million, beating the consensus estimate by roughly $17.4 million, with non-GAAP earnings of $0.10 per share topping consensus by $0.04. The 46% top-line growth marked a slight reacceleration from prior quarters and underscored that paid seat expansion is more than offsetting any churn concerns analysts had flagged ahead of the print.
| Metric | Q1 2026 Actual | Consensus | Beat / (Miss) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | $333.4M | ~$316.0M | +$17.4M |
| Revenue Growth YoY | +46% | ~+38% | +8 pts |
| Non-GAAP EPS | $0.10 | $0.06 | +$0.04 |
| Q2 Revenue Guide | $348M-$350M | ~$340M | +$8-10M |
Guidance Raise Was the Real Story
The most consequential line in the release wasn’t Q1 itself — it was the upward revision to full-year targets. Management now expects FY2026 revenue of $1.422 billion to $1.428 billion, up from prior guidance of $1.36 billion to $1.37 billion. Non-GAAP operating income guidance was bumped to $125 million-$135 million, signaling that the company is funding AI investment from a position of expanding profitability rather than burning cash to chase the trend.
At the midpoint, the new revenue range implies roughly $58 million more revenue for the year — a healthy upward revision after a single quarter, and one that puts pressure on bears who had argued the AI revenue ramp was over-discounted in the stock.
Why the Market Cared: AI Conversion Is Working
On the call, CEO Dylan Field attributed the upside to “seat expansion and strong AI product traction.” The two products doing the heavy lifting are Figma Make, the company’s AI-assisted prompt-to-design tool, and Figma Weave, an agentic workflow tool that automates repetitive design-to-spec handoffs. Both ship as part of higher-tier plans, which makes them direct ARPU drivers when adoption converts free or starter users into paid seats.
That dynamic — AI capability gated behind paid tiers driving conversion rather than commoditizing the product — was the central question for Figma after its July 2025 debut, when the stock more than tripled on day one on the NYSE under the FIG ticker. The post-IPO trade had since unwound badly, with the stock down more than 55% year-to-date entering Wednesday on concerns that generative AI would erode design-tool moats.
Strategic Context: First Earnings Post-Lockup
This release also marked Figma’s first earnings print since its IPO lockup expired, meaning insiders are now free to sell. That overhang has been a recurring theme in the stock’s drawdown — the fundamentals had to deliver something material enough to absorb potential supply. A 46% growth quarter with a guidance raise is exactly the kind of print that does that, at least temporarily.
The OpenAI partnership announced earlier this year — a Codex integration linking Figma’s design canvas to code generation — also helps frame the moat narrative. Rather than being disintermediated by AI coding tools, Figma is positioning itself as the design-and-spec layer that AI agents work through, not around.
What to Watch From Here
Three things define the near-term setup:
- Q2 print and net retention. Guidance of $348M-$350M implies sequential growth roughly in line with recent quarters. Watch for net dollar retention to confirm seat expansion isn’t being offset by churn at the smaller-customer end.
- Operating margin progression. The non-GAAP operating income raise to $125M-$135M is a meaningful margin signal. If Figma can compound revenue at 40%+ while expanding margins, the multiple compression of early 2026 looks overdone.
- Insider activity. First post-lockup earnings is a natural window for insider selling. Form 4 filings on EDGAR over the next 30-60 days will tell the supply story.
The takeaway for investors: Figma’s Q1 didn’t just beat — it reset the AI-disruption narrative that had defined the stock since its IPO. Whether the rebound holds depends on whether AI tools keep driving paid conversion or whether the second derivative slows as the easy wins compound.
Sources
- Yahoo Finance — FIG quote, intraday and after-hours data, May 14, 2026
- Fortune — Figma IPO debut coverage, July 31, 2025
- SEC EDGAR — Figma insider filings
- Figma Investor Relations — Q1 2026 earnings release
Disclosure: This article was produced with AI assistance and reviewed before publication. It is for informational purposes only and is not investment advice.