Tesla reported its first annual revenue decline in 2025, down 3% to $94.8 billion amid EV weakness, but its energy storage business hit a record 46.7 GWh deployments, driving 26.6% revenue growth to $12.8 billion with 29.8% margins. The segment's success highlighted a strategic pivot to AI, robotics, and energy, though 2026 faces margin pressures from competition and policy shifts. Shares rose 3% after hours.
Tesla released its Q4 and full-year 2025 earnings on January 28, 2026, showing total revenue of $94.8 billion (down 3% YoY, first annual decline since IPO) and profits down 45%, driven by a 10% drop in automotive revenue to $69.5 billion from weaker EV demand, price cuts, and competition.
The energy generation and storage division shone, deploying a record 46.7 GWh (29% increase from 2024), including 14.2 GWh in Q4. Revenue rose 26.6% to $12.8 billion (13% of total, up from 10%), with Q4 at $3.371 billion (up 18% YoY), though tempered by falling Megapack prices. Gross margins hit 29.8%—nearly double automotive—contributing nearly 25% of total gross profit.
Highlights included a $430 million Megapack sale to Elon Musk's xAI for its Colossus data center in Memphis, powering AI training (3.4% of energy revenue), alongside Tesla's $2 billion xAI investment. Powerwall, Megapack, and Megablock drove growth across regions. Carbon credit sales fell 28% from 2024's $2.76 billion record (Q4: $542M). Tesla eyes $4.96 billion in deferred revenue recognition in 2026 from ongoing projects.
CEO Elon Musk framed 2025 as a transition to a 'physical AI company' pursuing 'amazing abundance' via autonomy and Optimus robots, announcing Model S/X discontinuation to repurpose factories. He emphasized energy's grid-stabilizing role amid AI load growth: 'Major investments in batteries... massive investments in AI chips.'
For 2026, Tesla plans >$20 billion capex, including Nevada LFP cells (7 GWh), Texas lithium refinery (30 GWh, 'world's most advanced'), and new Megafactories in Shanghai, Lathrop, Houston. CFO Vaibhav Taneja flagged margin compression from low-cost rivals, tariffs, policy changes (e.g., phasing residential tax credits), and competition despite strong backlogs and Megapack 3 launch. Analyst Charlotte Gisbourne attributed energy's rise to Megapack demand and auto weakness; Musk touted untapped solar via new residential retrofit panels, despite post-SolarCity declines.
Investors welcomed the energy bright spot, lifting shares 3% after hours, signaling focus on diversified bets in energy, AI, and robotics.