Alphabet Inc., the corporate parent of Google, reported its third-quarter 2025 earnings on Wednesday, shattering a significant psychological and financial milestone. The company announced its first-ever quarter with over $100 billion in revenue, a feat driven by what CEO Sundar Pichai called a “terrific quarter” of double-digit growth across every major business segment, decisively proving that its massive investments in artificial intelligence are fueling, not cannibalizing, its core empire.
The Google parent $100B revenue milestone was reached with a total Q3 revenue of $102.35 billion, a 16% jump from the $88.27 billion reported in the same period last year. The results, released after the market closed on October 29, 2025, significantly beat Wall Street expectations, sending the company’s stock (GOOGL) surging more than 6% in after-hours trading.
This landmark quarter provides a resounding answer to the central question that has hovered over the tech giant for the past two years: would the rise of generative AI, which Google itself is pioneering, disrupt its cash-cow search advertising business? The Q3 data suggests the opposite is happening. AI is not just a defensive moat; it has become Alphabet’s primary offensive weapon, accelerating growth in its Cloud division and, crucially, driving more engagement in its reimagined Search product.
Q3 2025 Earnings
Here is a quick take on Alphabet’s record-breaking third-quarter performance (ending September 30, 2025):
- Total Revenue: $102.35 billion, a 16% increase year-over-year (YoY). This is the first quarter to exceed $100 billion.
- Net Income: $34.98 billion (or $2.87 per share), a robust 33% increase from $26.3 billion in Q3 2024.
- Google Cloud Revenue: $15.16 billion, marking a blistering 34% YoY growth, demonstrating significant acceleration.
- Total Advertising Revenue: $74.18 billion (up 12.6% YoY), calming investor fears as both Search and YouTube showed strong growth.
- AI-Driven Capital Expenditure: Alphabet again raised its full-year 2025 capital expenditure (CapEx) forecast to a range of $91 billion to $93 billion, up from a previous estimate of $85 billion, signaling a massive continued investment in AI data centers and infrastructure.
- Regulatory Charge: The quarter’s results included a $3.5 billion fine from the European Commission (EC), which was accrued in general and administrative expenses.
The $100 Billion Milestone: A New Era
To put the $102.35 billion figure in perspective, CEO Sundar Pichai noted the company’s staggering growth trajectory. “Five years ago our quarterly revenue was at $50B. Our revenue number has doubled since then, and we’re firmly in the generative AI era,” Pichai stated on the earnings call.
This explosive growth from a $50 billion quarter in Q3 2020 to over $100 billion in Q3 2025 illustrates the company’s successful navigation of the post-pandemic digital acceleration, supply chain fluctuations, and the sudden, seismic shock of the generative AI boom.
While the top-line revenue number captured headlines, investors were equally focused on profitability. The company delivered a net income of nearly $35 billion, a 33% surge from the prior year. This profit surge came despite absorbing a massive $3.5 billion fine from the EC related to competition laws.
Excluding the fine, the company’s operating margin was 33.9%, showcasing remarkable discipline. According to Thomas Monteiro, an analyst at Investing.com, this was a key data point for the market. “Given the competitive environment, it’s impressive that Alphabet managed to pull this off without hurting margins,” Monteiro told SiliconANGLE. “What’s even more interesting is that capex didn’t put the pressure on margins many expected, leaving the company with a healthy outlook ahead.”
AI and Cloud: The Growth Engine
The undeniable star of the earnings report was Google Cloud. For years, the division was a distant, cash-burning third-place competitor to Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Microsoft Azure. Wednesday’s report cements its status as a core pillar of Alphabet’s future.
Cloud’s Financial Surge
Google Cloud posted $15.16 billion in revenue, a 34% jump from the $11.35 billion it earned in Q3 2024. This growth rate, which outpaces its larger rivals, shows clear market share gains.
More importantly, the division is increasingly profitable. Google Cloud reported $3.59 billion in operating income for the quarter, a massive increase from $1.95 billion in the year-ago period. This profitability is being driven by what Pichai calls a “full-stack approach to AI innovation.”
The division’s sales pipeline is also swelling. Alphabet reported that Google Cloud’s backlog—a measure of future contracts signed but not yet fulfilled—has hit a record $155 billion.
The AI Flywheel in Action
The cloud results demonstrate that Alphabet’s strategy of building its own advanced AI models (like the Gemini family) and custom infrastructure (like Tensor Processing Units, or TPUs) is a key differentiator for enterprise customers.
Our full stack approach to AI is delivering strong momentum and we’re shipping at speed,” Pichai said.
The company shared several key metrics proving this AI adoption:
- More than 70% of existing Google Cloud customers are now using its AI products.
- Alphabet has signed “more deals over $1 billion through Q3 this year than we did in the previous two years combined.”
- The company is seeing tremendous demand for its TPUs, with partner Anthropic recently sharing plans to access up to 1 million of the custom AI chips.
Holger Mueller of Constellation Research Inc. summarized the performance bluntly: “Google is firing on all cylinders, with all of its major business units across all regions showing strong growth during the quarter,” he said in commentary provided to SiliconANGLE.
The Core Business: Advertising’s AI-Fueled Resilience
The biggest fear for Alphabet investors was that AI-powered chat interfaces would teach users to bypass traditional Google Search, gutting the company’s $200+ billion-a-year advertising business. The Q3 2025 data indicates this fear was misplaced.
Total Google advertising revenue rose to $74.18 billion, a solid 12.6% increase from $65.85 billion last year.
Search Reimagined, Not Replaced
The core “Google Search & other” segment performed exceptionally well, bringing in $56.57 billion, up 15% from $49.39 billion in Q3 2024.
Pichai explained that new features like “AI Overviews” (which provide generative AI-powered summaries at the top of results) and the new “AI Mode” in Search are actually increasing user engagement.
- AI Mode in Search, which was rolled out globally in 40 languages, now has over 75 million daily active users.
- In the U.S. alone, queries in AI Mode doubled during the third quarter.
- Critically, Pichai stated that “AI Mode is already driving incremental total query growth for Search,” confirming that the new technology is expanding the market, not just shifting it.
YouTube and Subscriptions Hold Strong
The other pillars of the “Google Services” segment also showed strength.
- YouTube ads revenue grew to $10.26 billion, beating estimates and up from $8.92 billion last year.
- The “Subscriptions, platforms,, and devices” unit, which includes Google One, YouTube Premium, and hardware like Pixel phones, grew to $12.87 billion.
- Pichai announced that Alphabet has now crossed 300 million paid subscriptions across its services, providing a powerful and growing source of recurring revenue.
The Cost of Dominance and What to Watch Next
This record-breaking performance is not without its costs or risks. The company’s massive spending and persistent legal battles remain the two key issues for investors to watch.
Alphabet once again raised its capital expenditure forecast for 2025 to a staggering $91 billion – $93 billion. This is up from an $85 billion forecast just last quarter and an original estimate of $75 billion at the start of the year. This spending, largely on data centers and custom chips, is a clear signal that Alphabet intends to out-spend its rivals in the AI infrastructure arms race.
At the same time, the company faces an unprecedented legal assault. The $3.5 billion EC fine accrued this quarter is just one of many battles. In the United States, the Department of Justice (DOJ) has two landmark antitrust cases against the company: one targeting its dominance in Search (which recently concluded its trial phase) and another, potentially more damaging case, targeting its entire ad-tech stack.
While the Search trial’s outcome was seen as a mild rebuke, the ad-tech case threatens to break up the very advertising machine that just generated $74 billion in a single quarter.
For now, however, Alphabet is operating from a position of unparalleled financial strength. By successfully integrating AI into its core products, it has turned a mortal threat into a powerful new growth engine. It has silenced Wall Street’s doubts, proven its core business is resilient, and firmly established its Cloud division as a dominant, profitable force. The $100 billion quarter is not just a number; it’s a statement that the age of AI is here, and Google intends to be its primary architect.
The Information is Collected from ABC News and MSN.






