Ooma's Q2 2026 Earnings Call: Contradictions Emerge on AirDial Growth, Sales Strategy, Partner Revenue Ramp, and 2600Hz Market Potential
The above is the analysis of the conflicting points in this earnings call
Date of Call: August 26, 2025
Financials Results
- Revenue: $66.4M, up 3% YOY
- EPS: $0.23 non-GAAP diluted EPS, compared to $0.15 in the prior year
- Gross Margin: 62%, compared to 62% in the prior year
Guidance:
- Q3 revenue expected at $67.2M–$67.9M; product revenue $5.7M–$6.2M.- Q3 non-GAAP net income $6.0M–$6.4M; EPS $0.22–$0.23; 27.9M diluted shares.- FY26 revenue $267M–$270M (unchanged).- FY26 mix: 91%–92% subscription & services.- FY26 Business subscription/services +5%–6% YOY; Residential -1% to -2% YOY.- FY26 non-GAAP net income raised to $24.5M–$25.0M (includes ~ $0.5M tariffs).- FY26 adjusted EBITDA $28.5M–$29.0M.- FY26 non-GAAP EPS $0.87–$0.89; 28.2M diluted shares.
Business Commentary:
- Revenue Growth and Profitability:
- Ooma, Inc. reported
revenueof$66.4 millionfor Q2,up 3%year-over-year. The growth was driven by the expansion of OomaOOMA-- Business, including AirDial, and improved operating leverage leading to record non-GAAP net income of
$6.5 million.AirDial Performance and Expansion:
- AirDial more than doubled new bookings year-over-year and secured the largest national retailer with over
3,000 locations. The success was attributed to its leadership in the POTS replacement market and strategic partnerships that accelerated sales.
Product Revenue and Gross Margin:
- Product and other revenue reached
$5.2 million, up15%year-over-year, primarily due to growth in AirDial installations. The year-over-year improvement in product and other gross margin was primarily due to consuming higher cost components procured during the pandemic.
Operating Expenses and Efficiency:
- Total operating expenses were
$35.1 million, down year-over-year, with a notable reduction in R&D expenses of6%. Efficiency gains and headcount management were key factors in reducing expenses while maintaining growth and innovation.
Dividend and Share Repurchase:
- Ooma generated
$6.4 millionin operating cash flow and$5 millionin free cash flow, enabling a share repurchase program of$4.5 millionin Q2. - The company's strong free cash flow generation and strategic use of capital were drivers for shareholder value.
Sentiment Analysis:
- Record adjusted EBITDA of $7.2M (11% margin), up 27% YOY; revenue $66.4M, up 3% YOY; Business subscription and services revenue grew 6% YOY; raised FY26 non-GAAP net income guidance to $24.5M–$25.0M; AirDial bookings more than doubled YOY and won a large national retailer with rollout starting in 2H.
Q&A:
- Question from Michael Joshua Nichols (B. Riley Securities): Is AirDial contributing meaningfully to ARR, and when will you provide more granularity?
Response: AirDial is now materially contributing to ARR, drove a significant share of 9k Business user adds, and doubled bookings YOY, supporting stronger 2H.
- Question from Michael Joshua Nichols (B. Riley Securities): Update on AirDial partner ramp, including ComcastCMCSA-- and CLECs?
Response: Nearly 35 resellers; two switched from competitors; Comcast orders have begun but ramp is gradual; T-MobileTMUS-- strongest to date; CLEC starting to scale; expect back-half acceleration.
- Question from Eric Martinuzzi (Lake Street Capital Markets): Are buybacks replacing M&A, or just better use of cash now?
Response: Buybacks are sensible at current valuation, but the company continues to pursue small, user-accretive tuck-in M&A without overpaying.
- Question from Eric Martinuzzi (Lake Street Capital Markets): Is the 5%–6% Business growth outlook conservative due to churn?
Response: No incremental churn expected; variability reflects customer-driven timing of AirDial installations, prompting conservative ranges.
- Question from Kincaid LaCorte (Citizens): What won the large national retailer and when will revenue show?
Response: Won after extensive trials with T-Mobile’s support; rollout has started with installs expected through 2H; pace uncertain.
- Question from Kincaid LaCorte (Citizens): What revenue per location should we model?
Response: Use AirDial ARPU of about $25 per line per month; no customer-specific disclosures.
- Question from Matthew Joseph Harrigan (The Benchmark Company): What is 2600Hz’s growth trajectory and monetization plan?
Response: 2025 focus is adding Ooma IP to deliver turnkey apps while keeping API flexibility; a handful of wins (incl. ServiceTitan); more meaningful growth expected next year.
- Question from Matthew Joseph Harrigan (The Benchmark Company): Any plans to expand AirDial beyond North America?
Response: Only with a lead carrier or similar anchor customer; existing Ooma services in 32 countries provide a head start, but focus remains North America.
- Question from Alinda Li (William Blair): What drove NRR to 100% and what’s the outlook?
Response: Churn improved after lapping IWG impact; expect NRR to remain around 99%–100%.
- Question from Alinda Li (William Blair): Why raise net income guidance while keeping revenue unchanged?
Response: U.S. tax-law benefit plus operating efficiencies—especially R&D leverage and disciplined S&M—lift profitability.
- Question from Kevin for Brian Kinstlinger (Alliance Global Partners): Trends with your largest UCaaS customer over the next 12–18 months?
Response: IWG/Regus rollout is complete; expect stability rather than material growth.

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