Starbucks Revenue 2003–2026: Annual Sales Statistics & Facts | BusinessTats
Industry Report Starbucks Revenue Data 2003 – Q1 2026

Starbucks Revenue 2003–2026 — Annual Sales Statistics & Facts

From $4.1 billion in FY2003 to $37.2 billion in FY2025 — and $9.9 billion in Q1 FY2026 alone — Starbucks' revenue history spans two decades of relentless growth, a financial crisis dip, a pandemic collapse, a CEO-driven near-stall, and one of the most closely watched turnarounds in modern retail. This report provides every verified fiscal year in full, Q1 FY2026 data through December 28, 2025, era-by-era analysis, segment breakdowns, and the complete outlook through FY2028.

20 min read Updated March 2026 Industry Report
$37.2BFY2025 Annual Revenue
$9.9BQ1 FY2026 Revenue
+6%Q1 FY2026 YoY Growth
+4%Q1 Global Comp Sales
+808%Revenue Growth 2003–2025
41K+Global Stores 86 Countries
Sources: Starbucks Investor Relations Statista MacroTrends Motley Fool CNBC About.Starbucks.com TickerGate

From $4.1 Billion to $9.9 Billion Per Quarter — Two Decades of Starbucks Revenue

Starbucks Corporation (Nasdaq: SBUX) is the world's largest coffeehouse chain by annual revenue, and its financial trajectory from fiscal year 2003 through the first quarter of fiscal 2026 is one of the most compelling long-arc growth stories in consumer business history. The company generated approximately $4.1 billion in net revenue in FY2003, expanding through aggressive global store growth, category innovation, loyalty program dominance, and a powerful international footprint to reach a full-year record of $37.18 billion in fiscal year 2025 — an increase of more than 800% in 22 years. In Q1 FY2026 (the 13-week period ended December 28, 2025), Starbucks generated $9.92 billion in a single quarter — up 6% year-over-year and the strongest quarterly growth rate in several years.

The journey spans five distinct strategic eras, defined as much by disruptions as by peaks. Starbucks navigated the 2008–2009 global financial crisis (the only modern full-year revenue decline), a COVID-19 shock in FY2020 that erased $3 billion in a single year, and most recently a near-total growth stall in FY2024 under CEO Laxman Narasimhan — which triggered a dramatic board intervention and the hiring of Chipotle turnaround architect Brian Niccol. The "Back to Starbucks" strategy Niccol launched in late 2024 has now delivered accelerating revenue growth across three consecutive quarters, with Q1 FY2026 marking the first U.S. comparable transaction growth in eight quarters — a decisive signal that the turnaround is working ahead of schedule.

📊 Starbucks Key Revenue Statistics — 2003 to Q1 FY2026
MetricValue / Figure
Revenue FY2003 (Base Year)$4.07 Billion
Revenue FY2025 (Full Year Record)$37.18 Billion ★
Q1 FY2026 Revenue (Dec 28, 2025)$9.92 Billion (+6% YoY) 🟢 Latest
Q1 FY2026 Global Comp Store Sales+4% (Transactions +3%, Ticket +1%)
Q1 FY2026 U.S. Comparable Transactions+3% — First Growth in 8 Quarters
Q1 FY2026 International Revenue$2.1 Billion (+10% YoY)
Q1 FY2026 China Comparable Sales+7% — Third Consecutive Positive Quarter
Total Revenue Growth 2003–2025+808%
Only Year of Revenue Decline (ex-COVID)FY2009 — $9.77B (–5.9%) — Financial Crisis
COVID-19 Revenue Drop (FY2020)$23.52B — down from $26.51B (–11.3%)
FY2024 Revenue (Near-Stall)$36.18B (+0.56%) — Narasimhan removed
FY2025 Gross Profit$25.53 Billion
FY2025 Net Income$1.86B (–50.6% YoY — restructuring charges)
Global Store Count (end FY2025)40,990 Stores across 86 Countries
Beverage Revenue Share (FY2025)~60.6% of total — $22.54 Billion
Starbucks Rewards Active Members (U.S.)33.8 Million — ~60% of U.S. Company Revenue
FY2026 Non-GAAP EPS Guidance$2.15 – $2.40
FY2026 Global Comp Sales Target3% or Greater
FY2028 Adjusted EPS Target$3.35 – $4.00

Starbucks Revenue by Year — FY2003 to FY2025 + Q1 FY2026

The table below provides Starbucks' complete verified annual net revenue for every fiscal year from 2003 through 2025, plus the most recent quarterly result for Q1 FY2026. Starbucks operates on a fiscal year ending in late September. All figures are consolidated global net revenues as reported in official Starbucks annual reports and earnings releases.

Starbucks Annual Net Revenue — FY2003 to Q1 FY2026 (USD Billions)
Fiscal YearNet RevenueYoY ChangeKey Context
FY2003$4.07BBase year; aggressive U.S. expansion era
FY2004$5.29B+30.0%Global store count surpasses 8,500
FY2005$6.37B+20.4%International push accelerates; music partnerships
FY2006$7.79B+22.3%First store in Russia; deli category expansion
FY2007$9.41B+20.7%Peak pre-crisis growth; store count crosses 15,000
FY2008$10.38B+10.3%First $10B year; Howard Schultz returns as CEO
FY2009$9.77B ⚠️–5.9%Only modern decline — global financial crisis; 900 stores closed
FY2010$10.71B+9.6%Full crisis recovery; Via instant coffee launch
FY2011$11.70B+9.2%Loyalty program expansion; food category growth
FY2012$13.30B+13.7%La Boulange acquisition; Evolution Fresh launch
FY2013$14.89B+11.9%Teavana acquisition; 18,000+ global stores
FY2014$16.45B+10.5%Mobile payment app debuts; China growth accelerates
FY2015$19.16B+16.5%Highest growth rate of the decade; mobile order & pay
FY2016$21.32B+11.2%First $20B year; Kevin Johnson named CEO; Reserve Roastery
FY2017$22.39B+5.0%China/Asia Pacific +8%; Nitro Cold Brew launch
FY2018$24.72B+10.4%Nestlé Global Coffee Alliance (~$7.15B deal)
FY2019$26.51B+7.2%Record pre-COVID revenue; 31,000+ global stores
FY2020$23.52B 🦠–11.3%COVID-19 pandemic — global store closures & restrictions
FY2021$29.06B+23.5%Strongest single-year rebound in modern history
FY2022$32.25B+10.9%First $30B year; Narasimhan announced as incoming CEO
FY2023$35.98B+11.6%Narasimhan takes helm; first year above $35B
FY2024$36.18B ⚠️+0.6%Near-stall; Q4 comps –7%; Niccol hired September 2024
FY2025$37.18B ★+2.8%Niccol Year 1; restructuring charges weigh on net income
🟢 Q1 FY2026 (Oct–Dec 2025)$9.92B+6.0%Live 2026 data — first U.S. transaction growth in 8 quarters
📈 Starbucks Revenue Visual Timeline — FY2003 to Q1 FY2026
2003
$4.1B
2005
$6.4B
2007
$9.4B
2008
$10.4B
⚠️ 2009
$9.8B ↓ Crisis
2012
$13.3B
2015
$19.2B
2018
$24.7B
2019
$26.5B
🦠 2020
$23.5B ↓ COVID
2021
$29.1B
2022
$32.3B
2023
$36.0B
2024
$36.2B
2025
$37.2B ★ Record
🟢 Q1'26
$9.9B (+6%) Live

Five Eras That Define Starbucks Revenue History

Starbucks' revenue history is shaped by five strategically and macroeconomically distinct eras — each with its own accelerants, disruptions, and leadership turning points.

☕ Era 1 — 2003 to 2007
$4.1B → $9.4B (+130%)
The golden expansion era. Starbucks opened thousands of stores annually and began meaningful international growth. Revenue more than doubled in four years on pure store count growth and rising average tickets, with the "third place" concept resonating powerfully in a near-monopoly premium coffee environment.
📉 Era 2 — 2008 to 2010
$10.4B → $10.7B (reset)
Crisis and reinvention. Revenue crossed $10B for the first time in 2008, then fell to $9.77B in 2009 — the only full-year decline in modern Starbucks history. Howard Schultz returned as CEO, closed 900 stores, and built the operational foundations for the decade of growth that followed.
🚀 Era 3 — 2011 to 2019
$11.7B → $26.5B (+126%)
Digital and global dominance. Mobile ordering, Rewards loyalty, the Nestlé Global Coffee Alliance, China expansion, and Reserve Roastery innovation drove nine consecutive years of strong growth. Revenue crossed $20B in 2016 and $26B in 2019 — the highest CAGRs in the company's modern history.
🦠 Era 4 — 2020 to 2023
$23.5B → $36.0B
Pandemic disruption and post-COVID surge. FY2020 saw an 11.3% decline as COVID-19 forced global closures. FY2021 rebounded 23.5% — the strongest single-year growth in modern history. FY2022 and FY2023 continued the momentum as consumers returned and cold beverage innovation drove record transactions.
🔄 Era 5 — 2024 to Present
$36.2B → $37.2B + Q1 $9.9B
Narasimhan decline and Niccol turnaround. Revenue growth stalled in FY2024 (+0.56%) as traffic collapsed. Brian Niccol joined September 2024, launched "Back to Starbucks," and by Q1 FY2026 delivered the first U.S. transaction growth in eight quarters — Q1 revenue up 6% to $9.9B, the clearest confirmation yet of a genuine recovery.
Starbucks barista preparing coffee — Starbucks annual revenue grew from 4.1 billion dollars in FY2003 to 37.2 billion in FY2025 with Q1 FY2026 delivering 9.9 billion in a single quarter under Brian Niccol Back to Starbucks strategy
Starbucks grew from a $4.1B U.S.-centric brand in FY2003 to a $37.2B global enterprise in FY2025, with Q1 FY2026 delivering $9.9 billion in a single quarter — the strongest quarterly growth rate in years under CEO Brian Niccol's "Back to Starbucks" turnaround strategy.

How Starbucks Lost Its Growth Momentum — and the Board's Response

After three consecutive years of double-digit growth (FY2021: +23.5%, FY2022: +10.9%, FY2023: +11.6%), FY2024 represented a severe and sudden stall. Consolidated net revenues grew just 0.56% to $36.18 billion. Q4 FY2024 saw revenues actually decline 3% year-over-year, with global comparable store sales down 7% and comparable transactions collapsing 8% — the worst quarterly traffic performance in the company's modern history. FY2024 GAAP EPS was $3.31, down 8% year-over-year.

The causes were structural: Starbucks had over-indexed on mobile order and pay, creating chaotic in-store experiences; menus had become operationally complex, slowing service and throughput; price-sensitive customers were being captured by Dutch Bros., 7 Brew, and convenience store coffee options; and in China — the second-largest market by store count — Luckin Coffee's aggressive price competition compounded the pressure.

+0.56%FY2024 Revenue Growth
–7%Q4 FY2024 Comp Sales
–8%Q4 Comp Transactions
–3%Q4 Revenue YoY
–8%FY2024 GAAP EPS Decline
Sep'24Niccol Hired as CEO
⚡ Board Intervention — August 2024

Laxman Narasimhan Out — Brian Niccol In

Starbucks' board ousted Laxman Narasimhan after just 18 months in the role and recruited Brian Niccol directly from Chipotle Mexican Grill — where he had rebuilt the brand completely following food safety crises. Niccol joined as Chairman and CEO in September 2024, immediately suspended full-year guidance, and launched a comprehensive strategic assessment. Howard Schultz, the founder who built Starbucks into a global brand, publicly endorsed the hire, reportedly saying he did "a cartwheel" upon hearing of Niccol's appointment.


Q1 FY2026 Results (December 28, 2025) — The Turnaround Confirmed

Q1 FY2026 results, reported January 28, 2026, are the most current Starbucks financial data available as of March 2026. Consolidated net revenues reached $9.92 billion, up 6% year-over-year (5% on constant currency basis). Global comparable store sales grew 4%, driven by a 3% increase in comparable transactions — the first U.S. transaction growth in eight quarters. This is the single most important indicator of brand health for a high-frequency coffeehouse business, and its return to positive territory signals that the "Back to Starbucks" strategy is translating into genuine consumer re-engagement rather than price-driven revenue.

Geographically, the results showed broad-based recovery. North America and U.S. comparable store sales grew 4%, driven entirely by transactions rather than price. The international segment grew revenue 10% to $2.1 billion, with positive comparable sales in nine of Starbucks' ten largest international markets. China — the most scrutinised international market — delivered comparable store sales growth of 7%, its third consecutive quarter of growth, led by transactions. CEO Brian Niccol commented: "It's great to see the sales momentum driven by more customers choosing Starbucks more often — and this is just the beginning."

$9.92BQ1 FY2026 Revenue
+6%YoY Revenue Growth
+4%Global Comp Sales
+3%U.S. Comp Transactions
+10%International Revenue
+7%China Comp Sales

Our Q1 results demonstrate our 'Back to Starbucks' strategy is working and we believe we're ahead of schedule. More customers are choosing Starbucks more often — and this is just the beginning.

— Brian Niccol, Chairman & CEO, Q1 FY2026 Earnings Call, January 28, 2026 — Starbucks Q1 FY2026 Press Release

Brian Niccol's Six-Pillar Revenue Recovery Plan

When Brian Niccol joined Starbucks in September 2024, the company's most fundamental challenge was a customer experience crisis, not financial engineering. The "Back to Starbucks" strategy is a comprehensive operational, cultural, and commercial reset designed to restore the warm, welcoming coffeehouse experience that originally built the brand. At the January 2026 Investor Day, Niccol declared the turnaround is "ahead of schedule" and laid out the framework for sustainable growth through FY2028.

🟢
Green Apron Service & SmartQ Algorithm — Speed Meets Hospitality
Niccol introduced the Green Apron service model, prioritising both throughput and genuine customer connection. The new SmartQ algorithm optimises drink sequencing, and increased staffing rosters target average service times below four minutes. The 650 pilot stores using this model outperformed the broader fleet by 200 basis points in comparable sales — a clear signal that speed and hospitality reinforce rather than trade off against each other at scale.
📋
Menu Simplification — 25–30% SKU Reduction
Starbucks reduced its menu by approximately 25–30%, eliminating lower-margin, operationally complex items. The leaner menu reduced waste, shortened prep times, and improved customer satisfaction by reducing decision fatigue — while creating operational space for sharper innovation: the 1971 Roast dark blend, protein cold foam beverages, and premium artisanal bakery offerings designed to attract new segments and drive incremental revenue.
🪑
Coffeehouse Reinvestment — 25,000 New Seats & 1,000 Store Uplifts
Niccol committed to restoring Starbucks as a genuine third place by adding more than 25,000 café seats and completing 1,000+ physical store uplifts by end of FY2026. By Q1 FY2026, approximately 200 uplifts had been completed — primarily in Southern California and New York City — featuring warm paint, cozy seating, ceramic mugs for in-café customers, and locally inspired design intended to rebuild the coffeehouse dwell experience that originally differentiated the brand.
Rewards Program Relaunch — Three-Tier Green, Gold & Reserve
Starbucks Rewards — which drives approximately 60% of U.S. company-operated revenue from 33.8 million active members — was relaunched on March 10, 2026 with a three-tier structure (Green, Gold, Reserve) designed to deliver personalised value and deepen engagement among high-frequency customers while reducing margin-dilutive mass discounting. The program aims to increase average spend per member and improve retention of the highest-value customer cohorts.
🤖
AI Tools — Green Dot Assist & Digital Efficiency at Scale
Starbucks scaled Green Dot Assist — a generative AI virtual assistant — across all North American coffeehouses in November 2025. The tool helps baristas troubleshoot, manage deployment adjustments, and improve operational efficiency, freeing staff to focus on customer connection. Combined with the SmartQ ordering algorithm, AI-driven efficiency is expected to contribute approximately $2 billion in cost savings over two years, providing the margin improvement that translates top-line growth into earnings recovery.
🇨🇳
China Joint Venture — Boyu Capital Partnership (Q2 FY2026)
To structurally address China market headwinds, Starbucks announced a joint venture with Boyu Capital in which Boyu will hold up to a 60% interest — with Starbucks retaining 40% and brand control. China operations were reclassified as held-for-sale in Q1 FY2026, with the deal expected to close in Q2 FY2026. The JV will improve international operating margins from approximately 13% toward the high teens. Critically, China already delivered 7% comparable sales growth in Q1 FY2026, marking the third consecutive positive quarter even before the JV structure is finalised.

What Drives Starbucks Revenue — Segments, Products & Geography

Beverages — $22.5B / ~61% of FY2025 Revenue

Beverages are the dominant revenue source at 60.6% of FY2025 total revenue ($22.54B). In Q1 FY2026, beverages represented 59.95% of quarterly revenue. Cold beverages are the growth engine — over 60% of U.S. drink sales — led by the $2B+ Refreshers platform, iced espresso, Nitro Cold Brew, and premium cold foam innovations targeting health-conscious and afternoon-occasion customers.

🥐
Food — $7.1B / ~19% of Revenue — Fastest Growing

Food generated $7.05 billion in FY2025, up 4.46% year-over-year — 18.96% of total revenue. Niccol's premium bakery and food attachment strategy targets higher food attach rates among beverage-only customers. Food items carry higher incremental margin at point of order, making attachment rate improvement a direct operating leverage driver that compounds across millions of daily transactions.

🛒
Channel Development — ~$2B / Nestlé Alliance & CPG

The Channel Development segment — packaged coffee sold through the Nestlé Global Coffee Alliance, ready-to-drink beverages, and CPG channels — contributes approximately $1.8–2B annually. Nearly passive margin income requiring minimal capital, it serves as a financial buffer during periods of in-store traffic softness while building the brand across retail environments where Starbucks has no physical presence.

🌏
Geography — U.S. 73%, International 18.5%, China 8.5%

In Q1 FY2026, the U.S. accounted for 73.06% of quarterly revenue, the international segment 18.51%, and China 8.43%. The international segment grew 10% to $2.1B in Q1 FY2026, with positive comparable sales in nine of Starbucks' ten largest international markets. The Boyu Capital JV will shift China from company-operated to licensed in reported revenue but significantly improve international operating margins.

📱
Digital & Rewards — 60% of U.S. Revenue via 33.8M Members

Starbucks Rewards remains the company's most powerful competitive moat. With 33.8 million active U.S. members driving approximately 60% of U.S. company-operated revenue, the program's digital ordering, personalised offers, and gamified earning mechanics create structural revenue predictability. The March 2026 three-tier relaunch targets higher spend-per-member, improved retention, and reduced cost-of-loyalty for the mass base.

🏪
Licensed vs. Company-Operated — ~48% Licensed Globally

Approximately 48% of Starbucks' 41,000+ global stores are licensed — earning royalties and product revenue with minimal capital invested. This asset-light structure underpins the ability to grow global store count without proportional capex. FY2026's net 600–650 new coffeehouse guidance is weighted toward licensed formats, maximising capital efficiency while extending the brand's global footprint.


FY2026 Guidance & FY2028 Targets — Starbucks Revenue Forecast

At the January 29, 2026 Investor Day — the first formal guidance since Niccol suspended it in October 2024 — Starbucks reinstated a clear financial framework. For FY2026: global and U.S. same-store sales growth of 3% or greater, with consolidated net revenues growing at a similar rate; non-GAAP operating margin to slightly improve year-over-year; and non-GAAP EPS of $2.15 to $2.40. For FY2028: at least 5% annual revenue growth, at least 3% same-store sales growth, adjusted EPS of $3.35 to $4.00, and more than 2,000 net new global stores. Q1 FY2026's 6% revenue growth and +4% comparable sales already track ahead of FY2026 full-year targets, giving the company a strong early platform.

CFO Cathy Smith stated the company has "a clear line of sight to translating top-line strength into sustainable earnings growth." Investors will watch Q2 FY2026 closely — as Q2 is typically the lowest-margin quarter due to natural seasonality — to confirm that Q1's momentum was not solely holiday-driven. Management expects margin improvement to build through the back half of FY2026 as Green Apron service investments are anniversaried and coffee price and tariff pressures ease.

📅 Financial Projections — Reinstated January 2026
Starbucks Revenue Trajectory — Current Results & Forward Targets
$9.9BQ1 FY2026 Revenue
+6%Q1 FY2026 YoY Growth
+4%Q1 Global Comp Sales
3%+FY2026 SSS Target
$2.15–2.40FY2026 Non-GAAP EPS
$3.35–4FY2028 Adj. EPS Target

Key Revenue Growth Drivers Through FY2028

📈
U.S. Transaction Recovery — The Core Revenue Engine
Restoring U.S. comparable transaction growth is the most critical single revenue lever. Q1 FY2026 delivered +3% U.S. comparable transactions — the first growth in eight quarters. Sustaining this through Green Apron service, menu simplification, and coffeehouse investment projects same-store sales growth of at least 3% in FY2026 and beyond, compounding over 16,000+ U.S. store locations.
🧃
Cold Beverage & Afternoon Occasion Innovation
Cold beverages — Refreshers, Nitro Cold Brew, iced espresso, cold foam variants — now exceed 60% of U.S. drink sales and are Starbucks' fastest-growing revenue category. The afternoon occasion (2–5pm) is the highest-opportunity daypart, with Energy Refreshers, protein cold foam, and flavoured cold brew targeting health-conscious and energy-seeking consumers who historically underindexed for Starbucks visits.
🥖
Premium Bakery & Food Attachment Rate Improvement
Increasing food attach rates — the proportion of customers adding food to a beverage order — is a high-leverage margin driver. Niccol's artisanal bakery and "visual pastry" strategy targets higher attachment through appealing premium display and quality positioning that reinforces the brand's premium credentials and carries incrementally higher margin than beverages alone.
🌐
International Recovery — Nine of Ten Largest Markets Growing
Q1 FY2026's result — positive comparable sales in nine of the ten largest international markets — demonstrates that the international segment's recovery is broad-based. As the Boyu JV improves China's operating structure, international revenue quality and margins will improve substantially even if aggregate reported international revenue moderates following the JV classification change.
💰
$2 Billion Cost Savings & Operating Leverage Target
Niccol has committed to approximately $2 billion in cost savings over two years through procurement, AI-driven labour efficiency (SmartQ, Green Dot Assist), and supply chain simplification. Combined with top-line recovery, these savings are expected to drive operating margin improvement in the back half of FY2026 and beyond — translating revenue growth into disproportionate EPS expansion.
Reimagined Rewards March 2026 — Higher Spend, Better Retention
The March 2026 three-tier Rewards relaunch targets higher average spend per member and improved retention of Starbucks' most valuable customer cohorts through personalised offers, premium Reserve-tier access, and loyalty mechanics tied to in-café visits. With ~60% of U.S. company-operated revenue already flowing through Rewards, even modest improvements in spend-per-member generate meaningful revenue and margin uplift at scale across 33.8 million active members.

Frequently Asked Questions

Starbucks Q1 FY2026 consolidated net revenues were $9.92 billion, up 6% year-over-year (5% on constant currency basis) for the 13-week period ended December 28, 2025, reported January 28, 2026. Global comparable store sales grew 4%, driven by a 3% increase in comparable transactions and a 1% increase in average ticket. This was the first quarter of U.S. comparable transaction growth in eight quarters. International revenue grew 10% to $2.1 billion. China comparable sales grew 7% — third consecutive positive quarter. Non-GAAP EPS was $0.56.

Starbucks reported annual net revenue of $37.18 billion in fiscal year 2025 (ended September 28, 2025), a 2.79% increase from $36.18 billion in FY2024 and a new all-time annual revenue record. Net income fell to $1.86 billion (from $3.76 billion in FY2024) due to restructuring charges from closing 627 underperforming stores and eliminating 1,100 corporate roles. Gross profit was $25.53 billion. Global store count ended the year at 40,990 across 86 countries.

Starbucks crossed the $10 billion annual revenue threshold for the first time in fiscal year 2008, recording $10.38 billion. Howard Schultz had returned as CEO that year to arrest overexpansion. The global financial crisis caused revenue to decline to $9.77 billion in FY2009 — the only year of revenue decline in the modern era — before recovering above $10B in FY2010. Other milestones: $20B first crossed in FY2016, $30B in FY2022, and $37B in FY2025.

FY2024 revenue grew just 0.56% to $36.18 billion due to a deep traffic crisis. U.S. comparable transactions fell 8% in Q4 alone, driven by a degraded in-store experience (chaotic mobile order pickup, long wait times, overly complex menus), consumer price sensitivity, intensifying competition from Dutch Bros. and 7 Brew, and severe pressure from Luckin Coffee in China. GAAP EPS fell 8% to $3.31. CEO Laxman Narasimhan was removed August 2024, and Brian Niccol was hired immediately to lead the turnaround. Q1 FY2026 — showing +6% revenue and +3% U.S. transactions — confirms the recovery is now underway.

"Back to Starbucks" is CEO Brian Niccol's comprehensive turnaround launched in late 2024. Key initiatives: Green Apron service model for speed and hospitality; menu reduction by 25–30%; 25,000+ new café seats and 1,000+ store uplifts; Starbucks Rewards relaunched as a three-tier program (Green, Gold, Reserve) in March 2026; AI tools including Green Dot Assist and SmartQ at scale; and a China joint venture with Boyu Capital. Revenue impact: FY2025 revenue +2.8% to $37.2B; Q1 FY2026 +6% to $9.9B with U.S. transaction growth confirmed for the first time in eight quarters. At Investor Day 2026, Niccol stated the turnaround is "ahead of schedule."

COVID-19 caused Starbucks' sharpest annual revenue decline since the 2009 financial crisis. FY2020 revenue fell 11.3% to $23.52 billion from $26.51 billion in FY2019, as stores globally closed or operated under severe restrictions for months. The recovery was exceptionally rapid: FY2021 rebounded 23.5% to $29.06 billion — the strongest single-year growth rate in the company's modern history — as consumers returned, digital ordering accelerated structurally, and pent-up demand drove elevated transaction volumes that established a permanently higher revenue baseline.

Starbucks reinstated formal guidance at Investor Day, January 29, 2026. FY2026: global and U.S. same-store sales growth of 3% or more, consolidated net revenues growing at a similar rate, non-GAAP operating margin to slightly improve year-over-year, non-GAAP EPS of $2.15–$2.40, and approximately 600–650 net new coffeehouses globally. FY2028: at least 5% annual revenue growth, at least 3% same-store sales growth, adjusted EPS of $3.35–$4.00, and more than 2,000 net new global stores including 400 net new U.S. company-operated locations. Q1 FY2026 results — $9.9B, +6% YoY, +4% global comp sales — already track meaningfully ahead of these targets.

StarbucksRevenue StatisticsSBUXFinancial DataCoffee IndustryBrian NiccolBack to Starbucks2003–2026Q1 FY2026Annual RevenueIndustry Report

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