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How AMD Makes its Money: Revenue Breakdown

A breakdown of AMD (AMD) financials. See how AMD makes money from data center chips, GPUs, CPUs, and gaming processors using their 2024 annual report.

AMD at a Glance
Company
AMD
Ticker
AMD
Sector
Semiconductors
Market Cap
$175B
Last Updated
March 13, 2026
Source
SEC Filings (10-K)

How Does AMD Make its Money?

AMD (Advanced Micro Devices) designs and sells processors for data centers, PCs, gaming consoles, and embedded systems. The company competes with Nvidia in AI accelerators (MI300X) and Intel in CPUs (EPYC server chips, Ryzen desktop/laptop chips). Like Nvidia, AMD is “fabless” — Taiwan Semiconductor (TSMC) manufactures the chips.

AMD (AMD) Business Model

AMD operates in the semiconductors sector. Below is a summary of AMD’s revenue streams, how the company generates income, and the key financial metrics from its most recent annual report. This breakdown uses data from AMD’s 2024 fiscal year filings with the SEC.

AMD Competitors

AMD’s key competitors and comparable public companies in the semiconductors sector include Nvidia, ARM Holdings, and Microsoft. Each of these companies competes for market share, investor attention, and revenue in overlapping segments. See how AMD stacks up by comparing their revenue breakdown, margins, and growth metrics.

AMD Competitors

AMD’s key competitors and comparable public companies in the semiconductors sector include Nvidia, ARM Holdings, and Microsoft. Each of these companies competes for market share, investor attention, and revenue in overlapping segments. See how AMD stacks up by comparing their revenue breakdown, margins, and growth metrics.

AMD Competitors

AMD’s key competitors and comparable public companies in the semiconductors sector include Nvidia, ARM Holdings, and Microsoft. Each of these companies competes for market share, investor attention, and revenue in overlapping segments. See how AMD stacks up by comparing their revenue breakdown, margins, and growth metrics.

AMD Competitors

AMD’s key competitors and comparable public companies in the semiconductors sector include Nvidia, ARM Holdings, and Microsoft. Each of these companies competes for market share, investor attention, and revenue in overlapping segments. See how AMD stacks up by comparing their revenue breakdown, margins, and growth metrics.

AMD Competitors

AMD’s key competitors and comparable public companies in the semiconductors sector include Nvidia, ARM Holdings, and Microsoft. Each of these companies competes for market share, investor attention, and revenue in overlapping segments. See how AMD stacks up by comparing their revenue breakdown, margins, and growth metrics.

AMD Competitors

AMD’s key competitors and comparable public companies in the semiconductors sector include Nvidia, ARM Holdings, and Microsoft. Each of these companies competes for market share, investor attention, and revenue in overlapping segments. See how AMD stacks up by comparing their revenue breakdown, margins, and growth metrics.

AMD Competitors

AMD’s key competitors and comparable public companies in the semiconductors sector include Nvidia, ARM Holdings, and Microsoft. Each of these companies competes for market share, investor attention, and revenue in overlapping segments. See how AMD stacks up by comparing their revenue breakdown, margins, and growth metrics.

AMD Competitors

AMD’s key competitors and comparable public companies in the semiconductors sector include Nvidia, ARM Holdings, and Microsoft. Each of these companies competes for market share, investor attention, and revenue in overlapping segments. See how AMD stacks up by comparing their revenue breakdown, margins, and growth metrics.

Revenue Breakdown

Segment 2024 2023 YoY Growth
Data Center $12.6B $6.5B +93.8%
Client (PCs) $7.2B $4.7B +53.2%
Gaming $1.2B $6.2B -80.6%
Embedded $3.7B $5.8B -36.2%
Total Revenue $25.8B $22.7B +13.7%

Data Center — 49% of Revenue

The star segment. Includes EPYC server CPUs (gaining share from Intel) and MI300X AI accelerators (competing with Nvidia’s H100). Data center nearly doubled revenue as AI demand surged and EPYC gained meaningful server market share (~30%+).

Client — 28% of Revenue

Ryzen CPUs for desktops and laptops. Revenue rebounded strongly as the PC market recovered from the 2022-2023 downturn and the Ryzen 7000/8000 series gained share from Intel.

Gaming — 5% of Revenue

GPU chips for gaming consoles (PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X) and Radeon discrete GPUs. Revenue dropped sharply as the console cycle matured and AMD deprioritized discrete gaming GPUs to focus on data center.

Embedded — 14% of Revenue

FPGA and adaptive SoC chips acquired through the $49B Xilinx acquisition in 2022. Serves industrial, automotive, aerospace, and communications markets. Revenue normalized after a 2022-2023 inventory overbuild.

Income Statement Overview

Metric 2024 2023
Total Revenue $25.8B $22.7B
Gross Profit $13.5B $11.1B
Operating Income $5.4B $1.3B
Net Income $4.7B $0.9B

Key Financial Metrics

  • Gross Margin: 52.3% — Expanding as Data Center (higher-margin) becomes a larger share. Nvidia’s ~77% margin shows upside potential if AMD’s AI accelerator mix shifts higher.
  • Operating Margin: 20.9% — Up dramatically from 5.7% as Data Center scale provides operating leverage.
  • Data Center Growth: +93.8% — The story stock metric. MI300X AI accelerator revenue exceeded $5B in its first full year.

Is AMD Profitable?

Yes, AMD is profitable. The company reported net income of $4.7B on total revenue of $25.8B. With an operating margin of 20.9%, AMD demonstrates solid profitability for the semiconductors sector. The gross margin of 52.3% reflects AMD’s pricing power and cost structure.

What to Watch

  1. MI300X and MI400 adoption — AMD needs to prove it can be a credible #2 to Nvidia in AI accelerators. ROCm software (AMD’s CUDA competitor) must improve to attract AI developers.
  2. EPYC server share — AMD’s EPYC processors are winning share from Intel. Continuing to take server market share from 30% toward 40%+ would drive significant revenue growth.
  3. Gaming deprioritization — AMD appears to be shifting resources away from discrete gaming GPUs toward data center. This risks ceding the consumer GPU market to Nvidia.
  4. Xilinx integration — The $49B Xilinx acquisition needs to show returns. FPGA revenue has been declining, though the embedded market is cyclically recovering.
  5. Nvidia’s dominance — Nvidia controls ~80%+ of the AI accelerator market. AMD’s MI300X is competitive on specs but faces the CUDA software moat. Closing the software gap is essential.

AMD (AMD) Financial Summary

AMD (AMD) is a semiconductors company that generated $25.8B in total revenue in fiscal year 2024. The company earned $4.7B in net income, making it profitable. For a deeper look at AMD’s revenue breakdown, business segments, and financial performance, review the detailed analysis above.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does AMD make money?

A breakdown of AMD (AMD) financials. See how AMD makes money from data center chips, GPUs, CPUs, and gaming processors using their 2024 annual report.

What is AMD's stock ticker symbol?

AMD trades on the stock market under the ticker symbol AMD.

What is AMD's market cap?

AMD's market capitalization is approximately $175B.

What sector does AMD operate in?

AMD operates in the Semiconductors sector.

Is AMD publicly traded?

Yes, AMD is a publicly traded company listed under the ticker AMD with a market capitalization of approximately $175B.