Paychex (NASDAQ: PAYX) closed the books on fiscal 2026 with double-digit growth on every line that matters — and watched its stock slip about 1.5% anyway. The payroll and HCM software vendor reported fourth-quarter and full-year results on the morning of June 24, 2026, posting Q4 revenue of $1.61 billion, GAAP diluted EPS up 43% year-over-year, and a record full-year operating cash flow of $2.56 billion. The issue investors fixated on was the next page: management’s outlook for fiscal 2027 calls for total revenue growth of just 5% to 6%, a sharp step-down from the 17% the company put up in FY26 once the Paycor acquisition stops flattering year-on-year comparisons.
The Quarter: Margins Did the Heavy Lifting
Q4 was a clean print on the metrics Paychex bulls watch. Total revenue grew 12% to $1,605.5 million, service revenue rose 12% to $1,553.3 million, and operating income jumped 40% to $604.7 million — meaning operating margin expanded sharply versus the prior-year quarter. GAAP diluted EPS of $1.17 was up 43% year-over-year; adjusted diluted EPS of $1.32 grew 11%. The gap between the GAAP and adjusted numbers reflects acquisition-related amortization and integration costs from the Paycor deal that closed in April 2025.
| Q4 FY26 (3 mo. ended May 31, 2026) | Reported | YoY |
|---|---|---|
| Total revenue | $1,605.5M | +12% |
| Service revenue | $1,553.3M | +12% |
| Operating income | $604.7M | +40% |
| Diluted EPS (GAAP) | $1.17 | +43% |
| Adjusted diluted EPS | $1.32 | +11% |
FY26 Was the Year Paycor Showed Up
The full-year story is dominated by the Paycor integration. Total revenue grew 17% to $6,512.0 million, with Management Solutions — the segment that absorbed Paycor — leading the way at 20% growth to $4,867.9 million. PEO and Insurance Solutions, which is closer to a steady-state mid-market business, grew 7% to $1,433.2 million. Interest on funds held for clients rose 30% to $210.9 million, a function of higher short-term yields on the company’s float balance. Paychex disclosed that Paycor contributed roughly 8 percentage points of Management Solutions’ Q4 growth — making it clear that a chunk of FY26’s outperformance was acquisition arithmetic, not organic momentum.
That matters because Paycor closed in April 2025, so Q4 FY26 (May quarter) was the first quarter without a year-over-year acquisition tailwind — and it’ll be the same story for the rest of fiscal 2027. The bridge from “17% reported” to “5–6% guided” is mostly the end of those acquisition comparisons, not a fundamental break in demand.
The FY27 Guide Investors Fixated On
Here is what management is telling the market for the year ending May 31, 2027:
| FY27 outlook | Guided range |
|---|---|
| Total revenue growth | 5–6% |
| Management Solutions revenue growth | 5–6% |
| PEO and Insurance Solutions revenue growth | 6–7% |
| Adjusted operating margin | ~44% |
| Adjusted diluted EPS growth | 7–9% |
A 7–9% adjusted EPS growth target on a roughly 44% margin profile is, in absolute terms, a perfectly respectable outlook for a payroll software company. The problem is the optical compression. Shareholders just watched the headline revenue growth rate fall from 17% to a mid-single-digit range, and even the EPS growth rate is set to roughly halve from FY26’s adjusted 11%. PAYX traded down to $96.56 at midday on June 24, off about 1.5% versus the prior close of $97.99 and well below the 52-week high of $148.76.
Cash Return and the WISE AI Pitch
Two non-numerical items in the release are worth flagging. First, capital return: Paychex generated $2,556.7 million in operating cash flow in FY26 against capital expenditures of $234.9 million, and the company says it returned $2.2 billion to shareholders this fiscal year across dividends and buybacks. With about 355.6 million shares outstanding at year-end, that is a substantial portion of free cash flow being recycled to holders.
Second, the AI angle. CEO John Gibson highlighted the launch of WISE — described as a “patent-pending” agentic AI platform built into the company’s HCM products and internal operations. Management is framing WISE as the lever that drives productivity (and ultimately margin) in fiscal 2027 and beyond. Investors will want to see the WISE story show up in attach rates, churn, and per-employee revenue before underwriting it as a re-acceleration catalyst — but it is the answer Paychex is offering to the question “how do you grow faster than payroll headcount?”
The Setup From Here
Strip out the optics and Paychex’s print today says three things. The base business is healthier than the headline implies — Q4 operating income up 40% on revenue up 12% is real operating leverage, not just acquisition accounting. The Paycor wave has crested; FY27 is the first clean read on what organic Paychex looks like with its new larger Management Solutions footprint. And management is leaning hard on AI productivity (via WISE) plus mid-single-digit price/volume to grow EPS at 7–9% — credible, but not the double-digit story FY26 told.
The market’s instinct on June 24 was to mark the multiple down to match the slower headline. Whether PAYX re-rates from here depends on two things: how quickly the WISE-driven productivity story shows up in the segment math, and whether interest on funds held for clients — up 30% in FY26 on float yield — can hold up if the front end of the curve rolls over. Both will be in plain view by the time fiscal Q1 prints in late September.
Sources
- Paychex — “Paychex Reports Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2026 Results,” June 24, 2026
- Google Finance — PAYX intraday quote (June 24, 2026)
- Paychex Investor Relations — Press Release Archive
Disclosure: This article was produced with AI assistance and reviewed before publication. It is for informational purposes only and is not investment advice.