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How Snowflake Makes its Money: Revenue Breakdown

A breakdown of Snowflake (SNOW) financials. See how Snowflake makes money from consumption-based cloud data warehousing using their FY2025 annual report.

Snowflake at a Glance
Company
Snowflake
Ticker
SNOW
Sector
Cloud Computing
Market Cap
$55B
Last Updated
March 13, 2026
Source
SEC Filings (10-K)

How Does Snowflake Make its Money?

Snowflake operates a cloud-based data platform that allows organizations to store, process, and analyze large volumes of data. Unlike traditional software that charges flat subscription fees, Snowflake uses a consumption-based pricing model — customers pay only for the compute and storage resources they actually use. This creates revenue that scales directly with how much data customers process.

Snowflake’s platform runs on top of AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud (all three major public clouds), giving customers flexibility to run workloads wherever their data lives.

Snowflake (SNOW) Business Model

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

Snowflake Competitors

Snowflake’s key competitors and comparable public companies in the cloud computing sector include CrowdStrike, Palantir, and Nvidia. Each of these companies competes for market share, investor attention, and revenue in overlapping segments. See how Snowflake stacks up by comparing their revenue breakdown, margins, and growth metrics.

Snowflake Competitors

Snowflake’s key competitors and comparable public companies in the cloud computing sector include CrowdStrike, Palantir, and Nvidia. Each of these companies competes for market share, investor attention, and revenue in overlapping segments. See how Snowflake stacks up by comparing their revenue breakdown, margins, and growth metrics.

Snowflake Competitors

Snowflake’s key competitors and comparable public companies in the cloud computing sector include CrowdStrike, Palantir, and Nvidia. Each of these companies competes for market share, investor attention, and revenue in overlapping segments. See how Snowflake stacks up by comparing their revenue breakdown, margins, and growth metrics.

Snowflake Competitors

Snowflake’s key competitors and comparable public companies in the cloud computing sector include CrowdStrike, Palantir, and Nvidia. Each of these companies competes for market share, investor attention, and revenue in overlapping segments. See how Snowflake stacks up by comparing their revenue breakdown, margins, and growth metrics.

Snowflake Competitors

Snowflake’s key competitors and comparable public companies in the cloud computing sector include CrowdStrike, Palantir, and Nvidia. Each of these companies competes for market share, investor attention, and revenue in overlapping segments. See how Snowflake stacks up by comparing their revenue breakdown, margins, and growth metrics.

Snowflake Competitors

Snowflake’s key competitors and comparable public companies in the cloud computing sector include CrowdStrike, Palantir, and Nvidia. Each of these companies competes for market share, investor attention, and revenue in overlapping segments. See how Snowflake stacks up by comparing their revenue breakdown, margins, and growth metrics.

Snowflake Competitors

Snowflake’s key competitors and comparable public companies in the cloud computing sector include CrowdStrike, Palantir, and Nvidia. Each of these companies competes for market share, investor attention, and revenue in overlapping segments. See how Snowflake stacks up by comparing their revenue breakdown, margins, and growth metrics.

Snowflake Competitors

Snowflake’s key competitors and comparable public companies in the cloud computing sector include CrowdStrike, Palantir, and Nvidia. Each of these companies competes for market share, investor attention, and revenue in overlapping segments. See how Snowflake stacks up by comparing their revenue breakdown, margins, and growth metrics.

Revenue Breakdown

Revenue Stream FY2025 (Jan) FY2024 (Jan) YoY Growth
Product Revenue $3.43B $2.67B +28.5%
Professional Services & Other $0.22B $0.19B +15.8%
Total Revenue $3.65B $2.86B +27.6%

Product Revenue — 94% of Revenue

Product revenue is the consumption-based core of Snowflake’s business. Customers use Snowflake credits to pay for:

  • Compute: Running SQL queries, data transformations, and ML workloads. Priced per “virtual warehouse” (compute cluster) per second of usage.
  • Storage: Storing structured and semi-structured data in Snowflake’s managed storage layer. Priced per terabyte per month.
  • Data Transfer: Moving data between cloud regions or providers.
  • Snowpark (data engineering): Running Python, Java, and Scala code natively within Snowflake.
  • Snowflake Cortex (AI/ML): Running AI models, vector search, and LLM functions directly on Snowflake data.
  • Snowflake Marketplace: A data marketplace where third-party providers list datasets and services.

The consumption model means Snowflake’s revenue is driven by customer data growth and usage intensity rather than seat count. When customers run more queries, build more dashboards, or train more models, Snowflake earns more.

Professional Services — 6% of Revenue

Implementation support, training, and optimization consulting. This segment is intentionally small and low-margin — Snowflake prefers partners (Deloitte, Accenture, etc.) to handle implementation work.

Income Statement Overview

Metric FY2025 FY2024
Total Revenue $3.65B $2.86B
Cost of Revenue $1.32B $1.09B
Gross Profit $2.33B $1.77B
Operating Expenses $3.20B $2.74B
Operating Income -$0.87B -$0.97B
Net Income -$0.83B -$0.84B

Key Financial Metrics

  • Product Gross Margin: 73.5% — Strong for a cloud-native platform. The main cost is cloud infrastructure (AWS/Azure/GCP) where Snowflake is a tenant. Margins have been improving as Snowflake negotiates better cloud pricing at scale.
  • Operating Margin: -23.8% — Still unprofitable on a GAAP basis, primarily due to massive stock-based compensation (~$1.5B). On a non-GAAP basis (excluding SBC), Snowflake achieved a 7% operating margin.
  • Revenue Growth: +27.6% — Solid but decelerating from 36% the prior year. Growth deceleration is Snowflake’s most debated metric among investors.
  • Net Revenue Retention Rate: 127% — Existing customers increased their spending by 27% year-over-year. This high retention rate means Snowflake can grow significantly even without acquiring new customers.
  • Remaining Performance Obligations (RPO): $6.9B — Committed future spend from existing contracts, providing strong revenue visibility.

Is Snowflake Profitable?

No, Snowflake is not currently profitable on a net income basis. The company reported a net loss of $0.83B on total revenue of $3.65B. The operating margin of -23.8% indicates the company is still investing heavily in growth. Investors watching SNOW should monitor the path to profitability closely.

Where Does Snowflake Spend its Money?

  • Cloud Infrastructure (~$1.1B): Paying AWS, Azure, and GCP for the compute and storage that powers the Snowflake platform. This is the largest cost and directly tied to customer consumption.
  • R&D (~$1.83B): The largest operating expense. Snowflake employs some of the highest-paid engineers in enterprise software, building Cortex AI, Snowpark, Iceberg Tables, and performance optimizations.
  • Sales & Marketing (~$1.48B): Enterprise sales is expensive — large company deals involve long sales cycles, solution architects, and proof-of-concept engagements. Snowflake’s sales team targets Fortune 500 and Global 2000 companies.
  • Stock-Based Compensation (~$1.5B): The elephant in the room. SBC is ~41% of revenue, among the highest ratios in enterprise software. This is the primary reason GAAP profits remain deeply negative.
  • G&A (~$0.40B): Legal, finance, and administrative functions.

What to Watch

  1. Consumption growth reacceleration — Snowflake needs existing customers to increase usage meaningfully. AI workloads (Cortex, vector search) are expected to drive the next wave of consumption growth.
  2. AI and Cortex adoption — Snowflake Cortex puts AI capabilities directly in the data platform. If customers adopt Cortex for inference and fine-tuning instead of going to separate AI platforms, it could drive significant incremental consumption.
  3. SBC trajectory — Stock-based compensation at 41% of revenue is extraordinarily high. Investors want to see this ratio declining toward 20-25% as the company scales.
  4. Competition — Databricks (private) is Snowflake’s most direct competitor, offering a similar data lakehouse platform. Google BigQuery, Amazon Redshift, and Microsoft Fabric also compete. The data platform market is intensely competitive.
  5. Iceberg Tables and open formats — Snowflake is embracing Apache Iceberg, an open table format. This reduces data lock-in but could lower switching costs. Snowflake bets it can win on performance and ease of use even without proprietary formats.

Snowflake (SNOW) Financial Summary

Snowflake (SNOW) is a cloud computing company that generated $3.65B in total revenue in fiscal year 2025. Revenue grew +27.6% year-over-year. The company reported a net loss of $0.83B, as it continues to invest in growth. For a deeper look at Snowflake’s revenue breakdown, business segments, and financial performance, review the detailed analysis above.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does Snowflake make money?

A breakdown of Snowflake (SNOW) financials. See how Snowflake makes money from consumption-based cloud data warehousing using their FY2025 annual report.

What is Snowflake's stock ticker symbol?

Snowflake trades on the stock market under the ticker symbol SNOW.

What is Snowflake's market cap?

Snowflake's market capitalization is approximately $55B.

What sector does Snowflake operate in?

Snowflake operates in the Cloud Computing sector.

Is Snowflake publicly traded?

Yes, Snowflake is a publicly traded company listed under the ticker SNOW with a market capitalization of approximately $55B.