Amagi registers Rs 34 Cr net profit for Q4 of FY26
Amagi bounced back into profit for the fourth quarter of FY26 and revenue growth was 28.5%
Amagi Media Labs, the Bengaluru headquartered SaaS company reported a net profit of Rs 34.3 crore for the fourth quarter of FY26 as against a loss of Rs 10.6 crore in the similar period a year ago.
The revenues for the fourth quarter came in at Rs 397 crore which was a 28.5% year-on-year rise.
For the full fiscal year of FY26, it saw revenue rising 29.5% year-on-year to Rs 1,506 crore, driven by continued customer expansion and growing adoption of cloud-native streaming and broadcast workflows by global media and entertainment companies.
The company’s adjusted EBITDA increased more than six-fold to Rs 156 crore from Rs 23 crore in FY25, while adjusted EBITDA margin expanded to 10.3%. Profit after tax turned positive at Rs 72 crore compared with a loss of ₹69 crore in the previous fiscal, reflecting improved operating leverage and disciplined execution.
Amagi also strengthened customer engagement during the year, with net revenue retention reaching 125.9%. The number of customers contributing over $1 million in annual revenue increased to 35 from 28 a year earlier, indicating deeper adoption among large global media enterprises.
As of March 31, 2026, Amagi’s cash balance, including investments and bank balances, stood at Rs 1,664 crore. The company said the liquidity position would support continued investments in platform innovation, AI capabilities, and selective inorganic opportunities.
Commenting on the performance, Baskar Subramanian, Managing Director and CEO, described FY26 as a defining year for the company, marking both its first full year as a public company and a broader industry shift toward cloud-native and AI-driven media infrastructure.
He said the company was seeing strong momentum around NEWSPULSE and other AI initiatives, adding that early collaborations with leading global news organisations reinforced Amagi’s belief that AI-driven operational layers would become foundational to modern media operations.

