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How ARM Holdings Makes its Money: Revenue Breakdown

A breakdown of ARM Holdings (ARM) financials. See how ARM makes money from chip design licensing and royalties using their FY2025 annual report.

ARM Holdings at a Glance
Company
ARM Holdings
Ticker
ARM
Sector
Semiconductors
Market Cap
$165B
Last Updated
March 13, 2026
Source
SEC Filings (10-K)

How Does ARM Make its Money?

ARM Holdings designs the instruction set architecture (ISA) and CPU core designs used in virtually every smartphone, most tablets, and an increasing share of laptops, servers, and automotive chips. The key distinction: ARM doesn’t manufacture or sell chips. Instead, it licenses its designs to chipmakers (Qualcomm, Apple, MediaTek, Samsung, etc.) who build chips based on ARM’s architecture. ARM earns money through two streams: licensing fees (upfront payments for access to designs) and royalties (per-chip fees on every ARM-based chip sold).

Over 280 billion ARM-based chips have been shipped globally, and ARM technology powers 99% of the world’s smartphones.

ARM Holdings (ARM) Business Model

ARM Holdings operates in the semiconductors sector. Below is a summary of ARM Holdings’ revenue streams, how the company generates income, and the key financial metrics from its most recent annual report. This breakdown uses data from ARM Holdings’ 2025 fiscal year filings with the SEC.

ARM Holdings Competitors

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

ARM Holdings Competitors

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

ARM Holdings Competitors

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

ARM Holdings Competitors

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

ARM Holdings Competitors

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

ARM Holdings Competitors

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

ARM Holdings Competitors

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

ARM Holdings Competitors

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

Revenue Breakdown

Revenue Stream FY2025 (Mar) FY2024 (Mar) YoY Growth
Royalty Revenue $2.33B $1.89B +23.3%
License & Other $1.33B $0.94B +41.5%
Total Revenue $3.94B $2.83B +39.2%

Royalty Revenue — 59% of Revenue

ARM earns a small royalty (typically 1-5% of the chip’s selling price) on every ARM-based chip shipped by its licensees. Royalty revenue is driven by:

  • Smartphone chips: Qualcomm Snapdragon, Apple A-series/M-series, MediaTek Dimensity, Samsung Exynos — all ARM-based
  • Data center CPUs: AWS Graviton, Ampere Altra, Microsoft Cobalt, Nvidia Grace — ARM is gaining share against Intel x86 in cloud servers
  • Automotive chips: ADAS, infotainment, and vehicle compute platforms increasingly use ARM cores
  • IoT and embedded: Billions of microcontrollers in smart devices, wearables, and industrial equipment

Royalty growth is driven by two factors: volume (more chips shipped) and value (higher royalty rates on premium chips). ARM has been successfully shifting customers to newer, higher-value architectures (Armv9 vs. Armv8), which carry higher per-chip royalties.

License & Other Revenue — 34% of Revenue

Upfront fees paid by chip designers to access ARM’s intellectual property:

  • ARM Total Access: A subscription package giving licensees access to a broad portfolio of CPU, GPU, and system IP for a flat annual fee. Has grown to 30+ customers including AMD, Intel, and Samsung.
  • Technology licensing: Customers licensing specific CPU cores (Cortex-A, Cortex-X, Neoverse) for new chip designs.
  • Flexible Access: A program allowing exploration and prototyping before committing to full licenses.

License revenue tends to be lumpier than royalties, as it depends on when new licensing agreements are signed.

Income Statement Overview

Metric FY2025 FY2024
Total Revenue $3.94B $2.83B
Cost of Revenue $0.58B $0.52B
Gross Profit $3.36B $2.31B
Operating Expenses $2.72B $2.46B
Operating Income $0.64B -$0.15B
Net Income $0.63B -$0.04B

Key Financial Metrics

  • Gross Margin: 85.3% — Exceptionally high. ARM’s product is intellectual property (chip designs), which has near-zero marginal cost to distribute once designed.
  • Operating Margin: 16.2% — ARM swung to profitability in FY2025 after its September 2023 IPO, benefiting from AI-driven demand for new chip designs and higher royalty rates.
  • Revenue Growth: +39.2% — Accelerating growth driven by Armv9 adoption, data center expansion, and AI-related chip design starts.
  • Royalty Revenue per Chip: Trending higher as Armv9 chips carry 2x the royalty rate of older Armv8 designs.

Is ARM Holdings Profitable?

Yes, ARM Holdings is profitable. The company reported net income of $0.63B on total revenue of $3.94B. With an operating margin of 16.2%, ARM Holdings demonstrates solid profitability for the semiconductors sector. The gross margin of 85.3% reflects ARM Holdings’ pricing power and cost structure.

Where Does ARM Spend its Money?

  • R&D (~$1.87B): ARM’s primary expense. Designing next-generation CPU, GPU, and NPU (neural processing unit) architectures requires deep investment in circuit design, verification, and software tooling. ARM employs ~7,500 engineers globally.
  • Sales & Marketing (~$0.37B): Business development with licensees, ecosystem partnerships, developer outreach.
  • G&A (~$0.48B): Corporate overhead, including costs associated with being a recently re-listed public company.
  • Cost of Revenue (~$0.58B): Primarily amortization of acquired IP, software tools, and support costs for licensees.

What to Watch

  1. Armv9 transition — As more chips ship with Armv9 architecture (vs. older Armv8), ARM’s royalty rate per chip increases. Management has stated Armv9 royalties can be 2x higher. This transition is the most important revenue growth driver for the next 3-5 years.
  2. Data center penetration — ARM-based server CPUs (AWS Graviton, Microsoft Cobalt, Google Axion) are taking share from Intel x86. Every percentage point of server market share gained represents significant incremental royalty revenue.
  3. PC market — Apple’s M-series chips proved ARM can compete in laptops. Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X Elite and Microsoft’s push for ARM-based Windows PCs could open a massive new royalty opportunity.
  4. AI compute — GPU makers (Nvidia) and custom AI accelerators increasingly pair ARM CPUs as host processors. AI-driven chip design starts expand the total addressable market.
  5. Valuation premium — At $165B market cap on ~$4B revenue (~41x revenue), ARM is priced for sustained high growth. Any deceleration in the Armv9 transition or data center adoption could compress the valuation significantly.

ARM Holdings (ARM) Financial Summary

ARM Holdings (ARM) is a semiconductors company that generated $3.94B in total revenue in fiscal year 2025. Revenue grew +39.2% year-over-year. The company earned $0.63B in net income, making it profitable. For a deeper look at ARM Holdings’ revenue breakdown, business segments, and financial performance, review the detailed analysis above.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does ARM Holdings make money?

A breakdown of ARM Holdings (ARM) financials. See how ARM makes money from chip design licensing and royalties using their FY2025 annual report.

What is ARM Holdings's stock ticker symbol?

ARM Holdings trades on the stock market under the ticker symbol ARM.

What is ARM Holdings's market cap?

ARM Holdings's market capitalization is approximately $165B.

What sector does ARM Holdings operate in?

ARM Holdings operates in the Semiconductors sector.

Is ARM Holdings publicly traded?

Yes, ARM Holdings is a publicly traded company listed under the ticker ARM with a market capitalization of approximately $165B.