Key Takeaways
- First quarter earnings per share reached $0.42, surpassing the $0.36 Wall Street forecast
- Top-line revenue totaled $4.04B, falling short of the $4.15B analyst projection
- Platform gross order value reached $31.6B, exceeding the $31.5B analyst consensus
- Shares climbed approximately 11% during Thursday’s premarket session
- Second quarter GOV outlook of $32.4B–$33.4B aligns with Street expectations
Shares of DoorDash (DASH) climbed approximately 11% during Thursday’s premarket session, touching $184.50, following the delivery platform’s first quarter results that showed earnings strength alongside softer revenue figures.
The delivery platform delivered earnings of $0.42 per share, clearing the Street’s $0.36 projection. Top-line revenue totaled $4.04 billion, landing below the $4.15 billion figure analysts anticipated.
Gross order value — representing the aggregate dollar amount of all platform transactions — totaled $31.6 billion, slightly surpassing the $31.5 billion Street consensus while remaining within management’s previously issued forecast range.
The average value per transaction also showed improvement, rising from $31.52 during the first quarter of 2025 to $33.87 in the current period. This reflects a gradual increase in customer spending per transaction.
Management attributed the quarter’s performance to “continued product improvements and healthy consumer demand trends,” acknowledging that shoppers remain price-conscious amid elevated living costs.
Second Quarter Outlook Shows Steady Trajectory
Management projected second quarter GOV between $32.4 billion and $33.4 billion, encompassing the analyst consensus figure of $32.75 billion.
The company’s adjusted EBITDA forecast of $770 million to $870 million landed marginally below the $828 million analyst midpoint — representing a reasonable, if unremarkable, outlook.
Analysts at Citi highlighted that market participants were closely monitoring the GOV projections, particularly considering DoorDash’s active $50 million quarterly initiative reimbursing delivery drivers for elevated fuel expenses.
Goldman Sachs analyst Eric Sheridan highlighted expanding adoption of the DashPass subscription offering as an encouraging trend, fueled by improved conversion rates and reduced customer attrition.
Artificial Intelligence Powers Majority of Code Development
During the quarterly conference call, CEO Tony Xu revealed that artificial intelligence now generates approximately two-thirds of DoorDash’s codebase — a disclosure that captured attention throughout the investor presentation.
Xu explained the company leverages AI-generated efficiency improvements while consolidating acquired properties Wolt and Deliveroo onto a single integrated technology infrastructure.
“We’re seeing productivity gains, we’re trying to figure out how do productivity gains now translate to what team setups should look like,” Xu said.
The chief executive also mentioned DoorDash is incorporating logistics strategies from European cities with irregular street layouts and merging them with the company’s U.S. retail catalog capabilities.
DoorDash shares entered Thursday’s session carrying a 26% year-to-date decline, making the morning’s rally a significant, though incomplete, reversal.
The platform’s first quarter GOV of $31.6 billion landed within management’s prior guidance range of $31.4 billion to $32.4 billion.

