CI
CI
Year ended Dec 31, 2025 · FY2025 10-K

The Cigna Group (CI) 10-K Summaries & Annual Filing History

Review The Cigna Group (CI) 10-K filings from 2023 through the latest annual report, including business, financial performance, risks, and liquidity.

Key takeaway

Year ended Dec 31, 2025 · FY2025 10-K

The Cigna Group filed its annual report for the most recent fiscal year. The filing describes the company's business, risk factors, and financial condition.

Financial snapshot

Selected annual figures reported with the filing, shown separately from the narrative summary.

Annual revenue

$274.9B

Revenue reported for the fiscal year.

Operating income

$9.2B

Income from operations reported for the year.

Net income

$6B

Net income reported for the year.

Operating cash flow

$9.6B

Cash generated by operating activities.

Annual revenue trend

Reported annual revenue and its change from the preceding fiscal year.

Period endedRevenueYear-over-year change
Dec 31, 2022$180.5B+3.7%
Dec 31, 2023$195.3B+8.2%
Dec 31, 2024$247.1B+26.6%
Dec 31, 2025$274.9B+11.2%

Business overview

The Cigna Group operates in the health services and insurance sectors. Its business includes pharmacy, medical costs, and other benefit payments, as well as employee compensation, information technology, and facilities costs. The company maintains liquidity at both the subsidiary and parent company levels to meet these obligations.

Financial performance

Revenue increased over the prior year. Operating income and net income were reported, and cash from operations was positive. The trend shows revenue growth across recent periods.

Material risks

The filing identifies risk factors in Item 1A, though specific details are not provided in the supplied context. Regulatory restrictions on dividends from insurance and HMO subsidiaries are noted as a potential constraint. Unresolved staff comments and cybersecurity are also mentioned as areas of attention.

Liquidity and capital

Liquidity is managed at two levels: subsidiaries use cash flows from operations and investments, while the parent company relies on dividends from subsidiaries and debt or equity issuance. Regulatory restrictions limit dividend payments from certain insurance and foreign subsidiaries.

What to watch

Monitor any changes in regulatory restrictions on subsidiary dividends, as they affect parent company liquidity.