
Google Q1 2026 earnings arrived after the closing bell on Wednesday, April 29, and the numbers left little room for debate. Alphabet, Google’s parent company, posted total revenue of $109.9 billion for the first quarter up 22% from $90.2 billion in the same period a year ago and well above the $107.1 billion Wall Street had expected. It marks the company’s 11th consecutive quarter of double-digit revenue growth. Moreover, it delivered the fastest growth rate Alphabet has seen since 2022. Shares climbed in after-hours trading following the report.
Google Cloud hits $20 billion for the first time and crushes every estimate
The number that dominated the post-earnings conversation was Google Cloud. The division posted revenue of $20.03 billion in the quarter. That figure beat the $18.41 billion analyst estimate by nearly $1.6 billion and represents 63% growth year over year from $12.26 billion in Q1 2025. Furthermore, it surpasses the 48% growth rate the division posted in Q4 2025, signaling genuine acceleration rather than a plateau.
The Cloud backlog nearly doubled quarter over quarter to more than $460 billion. That is roughly four times annual Cloud revenue and suggests the division’s growth has significant runway ahead. Additionally, revenue from products built on Google’s generative AI models grew nearly 800% year over year in the quarter. Gemini Enterprise, the company’s paid AI product for businesses, saw 40% quarter-over-quarter growth in paid monthly active users. Together, those figures make the case that Alphabet’s massive AI infrastructure investment is now generating real, measurable enterprise revenue at scale.
The quarter also reflects the impact of Alphabet’s $32 billion acquisition of Wiz, the cloud security platform, which closed on March 11. It was the largest acquisition in company history. While near-term revenue from Wiz was not expected to be material, management signaled that integration momentum is strong and that the deal strengthens Google Cloud’s position across enterprise security.
Search holds firm and AI overviews are driving more queries not fewer
One of the central fears heading into the report was that Google’s AI Overviews feature which provides direct answers inside search results would reduce the number of clicks and, in turn, advertising revenue. The Q1 results pushed back firmly against that concern. Search and Other revenue reached $60.4 billion, beating the $59.08 billion estimate and growing 19% year over year. Total advertising revenue of $77.25 billion also topped the $76.21 billion consensus.
In fact, CEO Sundar Pichai noted on the earnings call that AI Mode and AI Overviews are bringing people back to Search more often. Queries are at an all-time high. Additionally, the company said 75% of all new code written internally at Google is now AI-generated. That level of internal AI adoption is powering both product development speed and search quality improvements. Furthermore, Alphabet’s paid subscriptions reached 350 million total in the quarter, another record.
YouTube misses but the gap is small and the full-year picture remains strong
YouTube advertising was the one area that fell short. The platform posted $9.88 billion in ad revenue, just below the $9.97 billion analyst estimate. However, it still represents 11% growth year over year from $8.93 billion in Q1 2025. The miss was narrow and the growth was real. As a result, most analysts are treating it as a speed bump rather than a structural problem.
The platform’s FIFA World Cup 2026 highlights deal was expected to provide a lift in upcoming quarters. Whether that deal boosted Q1 slightly or will show up more clearly in Q2 remains to be seen. Either way, the broader picture for YouTube is one of steady, if unspectacular, growth.
Alphabet raises capex and delivers record profit margins
Operating income of $39.7 billion was perhaps the most strategically important beat of the entire report. It significantly exceeded the $36.19 billion estimate and expanded the operating margin by 2 percentage points to 36.1%. That means Alphabet absorbed one of the largest capital investment programs in corporate history $35.67 billion in capex for the quarter alone and still delivered record-level profitability.
Additionally, Alphabet raised its full-year 2026 capital expenditure guidance from $175 billion to $185 billion up to a new range of $180 billion to $190 billion. That increase signals confidence in the demand pipeline for AI infrastructure. Net income for the quarter reached $62.58 billion, up from $34.54 billion in Q1 2025. Earnings per share came in at $5.11, well ahead of the $2.63 consensus estimate. For more on how Big Tech AI investments are reshaping the market.
What Google’s blockbuster quarter means for the AI race
The Google Q1 2026 earnings report does more than confirm Alphabet is healthy. It makes a direct argument that the company’s AI strategy built around Gemini, Google Cloud, and Search is compounding faster than most investors expected. As a result, the report shifts pressure squarely onto Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta, all of which report earnings in the same week.
Source: Alphabet Q1




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