Global Payments (GPN) 10-K Summaries & Annual Filing History
Review Global Payments Inc. (GPN) 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
Global Payments Inc. filed its annual report describing its payments technology and software services for merchants and financial institutions. The company reported revenue, operating income, net income, and operating cash flow for the latest fiscal year.
Financial snapshot
Selected annual figures reported with the filing, shown separately from the narrative summary.
Annual revenue
$7.7B
Revenue reported for the fiscal year.
Operating income
$1.8B
Income from operations reported for the year.
Net income
$1.4B
Net income reported for the year.
Operating cash flow
$2.7B
Cash generated by operating activities.
Annual revenue trend
Reported annual revenue and its change from the preceding fiscal year.
| Period ended | Revenue | Year-over-year change |
|---|---|---|
| Dec 31, 2022 | $9B | +5.3% |
| Dec 31, 2023 | $7.4B | -17.8% |
| Dec 31, 2024 | $7.7B | +4.8% |
| Dec 31, 2025 | $7.7B | -0.4% |
Business overview
The company provides payment technology and software solutions, serving merchants and financial institutions globally. Its operations include transaction processing, payment gateway services, and value-added software for business management. The filing discusses business strategy, risk factors, and cybersecurity as part of the overall business overview.
Financial performance
Revenue, operating income, net income, and operating cash flow were all reported for the period. The financial direction indicated a stable revenue level compared to the prior year, with no significant growth or decline noted in the supplied metrics. Operating cash flow remained a key source of liquidity.
Material risks
The filing identifies risk factors in Item 1A, which may include operational, regulatory, and competitive risks, but the supplied text does not detail specific risks beyond referencing their location. No unsupported causes or external risks are introduced.
Liquidity and capital
Liquidity is primarily derived from operating cash flows and borrowings, including a revolving credit facility. Capital allocation priorities include dividends, share repurchases, acquisitions, planned investments, and debt service.
What to watch
Readers should monitor any changes in the company's revenue trend or operating cash flow relative to the prior period in the next filing.