# OpenAI burned $3.7bn in the first quarter, The Information reports

> Source: <https://thenextweb.com/news/openai-burned-3-7-billion-q1-2026>
> Published: 2026-06-17 09:28:47+00:00

OpenAI burned through $3.7bn in the first three months of 2026, more than half its revenue of $5.7bn over the same period, according to The Information, which cited documents the company shared with shareholders.

Both numbers tripled from a year earlier, a symmetry that captures the company’s peculiar position: growing faster than almost any business in history, and spending faster still.

The tripling is the figure worth pausing on. Revenue of $5.7bn in a single quarter would be the envy of nearly any technology company; revenue that grew threefold year on year is rarer still. The trouble is that the cost of producing it grew at the same rate.

Scaling has not yet bought OpenAI the operating leverage that usually rewards a company this size, because the thing it sells, frontier-model inference, gets more expensive to deliver as more people use it.

The balance sheet looks, on its face, reassuring. OpenAI held more than $73bn in cash and marketable securities at the end of the quarter, up from $40bn at the end of December.

That jump reflects a large funding round announced at the end of March rather than money thrown off by the business, a distinction that matters when the quarterly burn is measured in billions. The cushion is real; it is also, in part, freshly raised.

That round was the one that [closed at an $852bn valuation](https://thenextweb.com/news/openai-122-billion-round-852-billion-valuation-retail-investors), a figure large enough that [some of the company’s own investors have questioned it](https://thenextweb.com/news/openai-852-billion-valuation-investor-scrutiny-anthropic-revenue) against the underlying revenue. The Q1 figures do not settle that argument so much as supply ammunition to both sides: the bulls point to the revenue curve, the bears to the burn beneath it.

OpenAI has also said it filed confidentially for a US initial public offering that could come as early as September and value the company at up to $1tn.

A flotation at that level would be among the largest in history, and it would put the kind of quarterly numbers reported this week in front of public-market investors who tend to ask harder questions about the path to profit than late-stage private backers do. The company has [moved quickly on the filing](https://thenextweb.com/news/openai-confidential-ipo-filing-rivals-race) as rivals race to list.

The pattern is not new for OpenAI, which has spent its way through every previous stage of its growth on the bet that scale eventually pays. The company has spoken about spending on the order of tens of billions in a single year on compute, research and infrastructure, and has indicated it does not expect to turn a profit until the end of the decade.

The Q1 burn fits that trajectory rather than departing from it. The novelty is the size of the numbers and the proximity of a public listing that will expose them to a different class of scrutiny.

None of the figures in the report came from OpenAI directly, and the company did not comment publicly on the specifics. What the numbers describe, if accurate, is a business operating at a scale and a loss that are both expanding in lockstep, ahead of a listing that will ask whether the second can ever stop chasing the first.

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