Google and YouTube parent company Alphabet has posted its Q4 earnings on Wednesday, showing robust growth figures, as per an official press release.
The unaudited results estimated Q4 revenues at $113.8 billion with double-digit percentage growth across its two core segments, from which most revenue was earned, Google Services and Google Cloud.
The update comes after the technology company crossed $100 billion in quarterly revenue for the first time in Q3 2025, and at a point when competition among tech firms in Silicon Valley and in California is ramping up, especially in the AI sector.
Google services—the firm’s main cash cow—reported revenues of $95.9 billion, primarily owing to advertising income across multiple platforms: YouTube, Google Search, Google Play, Android, and Chrome. Subscription models for premium versions of its services, such as YouTube Premium and YouTube Music, also contribute hefty revenues to this segment.
Revenue from YouTube advertising and subscriptions crossed $60 billion.
The Google Cloud segment disclosed earnings of $17.7 billion, where the company stacks its cloud services and products across AI infrastructure services, focused on the enterprise side.
“It was a tremendous quarter for Alphabet and annual revenues exceeded $400 billion for the first time,” said Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai.
“The launch of Gemini 3 was a major milestone and we have great momentum. Our first party models, like Gemini, now process over 10 billion tokens per minute via direct API use by our customers, and the Gemini App has grown to over 750 million monthly active users. Search saw more usage than ever before, with AI continuing to drive an expansionary moment,” he also said.
In the second half of 2025, Alphabet was viewed as the top-runner AI stock by hedge funds and analysts among the magnificent seven, with AI models being integrated across its main offerings.
The Gemini feature arguably gets the most usage due to its being stacked in mainstream services such as Google search and Gmail, which is used every day by billions of people globally.
At the time of writing, Alphabet shares were trading at $333.4, down by 2.16%.

