Figma stock was trading around $24.97 on Monday morning, up roughly 4.5% on the day, as the rally sparked by its May 14 earnings report continued to build.
The move puts FIG more than 30% above its late-April close near $17.70.
The broader market offered no help — the S&P 500, Dow Jones, and Nasdaq were all in the red — making the gain entirely stock-specific.
Figma’s Q1 2026 numbers were the catalyst. Revenue came in at $333.4 million, up 46% year-over-year, ahead of its own guidance range and above the $316 million analyst consensus by about 5.5%.
That growth rate also accelerated from 40% in Q4 2025 and 38% in Q3 2025 — two consecutive quarters of acceleration.
Non-GAAP EPS of $0.10 beat the $0.06 forecast by a wide margin. CEO Dylan Field put it plainly: “Q1 was an incredible quarter for Figma. When code is a commodity, design is the competitive edge.”
The underlying numbers backed up the headline beat.
Net Dollar Retention Rate reached 139%, its highest level in more than two years. Paid customers with more than $100,000 in ARR grew 48% year-over-year, and total paid customers surged 54% to approximately 690,000.
Those figures matter because they show existing customers are spending more, not just new logos coming in.
AI credit monetization — a key watch item for investors — also came in strong. More than 75% of Org and Enterprise users who had previously hit their credit limits kept consuming credits after the limits were enforced. That’s a real monetization signal, not just usage.
Full-year 2026 revenue guidance was raised to between $1.422 billion and $1.428 billion, a $55 million lift from prior guidance, implying 35% year-over-year growth at the midpoint.
Goldman Sachs responded by lowering its price target from $35 to $30 — citing a peer multiple recalibration — while simultaneously raising its revenue estimates to $1.428 billion for 2026, $1.729 billion for 2027, and $2.039 billion for 2028.
The results appear to have shifted a specific narrative that had weighed on FIG. Investors had been concerned that free AI design tools from Google and others would undercut Figma’s pricing power. The Q1 data pushed back on that fear.
Integrations with Claude Code, Cursor, and VS Code are helping position Figma as part of the AI-driven development stack, not a casualty of it.
The net loss for the quarter came in at $142.4 million, compared to net income of $8.61 million a year earlier — a reminder that the company is investing heavily and is not yet consistently profitable.
Analysts projecting longer-term growth expect $1.7 billion in revenue and around $214 million in earnings by 2028, which would require roughly 21% annual revenue growth from here.
Goldman Sachs currently holds a price target of $30, against a current price just under $25.
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