Coca-Cola does not make most of the drinks you buy at a store. Instead, it makes the secret recipe — a concentrated flavoring called a beverage concentrate — and sells that to independent bottlers around the world. Those bottlers add water and sweeteners, fill cans and bottles, and deliver the finished drinks to shops and restaurants. Coca-Cola collects money every time a bottler buys concentrate, and again every time it sells finished beverages through its own bottling operations. With 2.2 billion servings consumed every single day across more than 200 countries, the machine runs constantly. The diagram below traces where the money goes.
Five years of financial data tell a story of steady growth at the top, but pressure building underneath. Revenue climbed from $38.7 billion in 2021 to $47.9 billion in 2025 — a meaningful rise. Gross margins also improved, moving from roughly 60% in 2021 to over 61% in 2025, which means Coca-Cola kept more of each dollar it earned after paying for ingredients and production. Those two numbers suggest the core business is holding its ground.
But cash tells a different story. Operating cash flow — the actual money the business generates from running its operations — dropped sharply from $12.6 billion in 2021 to $6.8 billion in 2024, before recovering slightly to $7.4 billion in 2025. Free cash flow, which is what remains after spending on equipment and factories, fell from $11.3 billion in 2021 to just $4.7 billion in 2024, recovering to $5.3 billion in 2025. Revenue is up. Cash is down. That gap is the central tension in the financial picture.
At the same time, net debt — what the company owes after subtracting its cash — has stayed elevated. It fell from $33.1 billion in 2021 to $27.7 billion in 2022, but has since climbed back to $31.8 billion in 2025. A business that is earning more revenue but generating less cash while carrying more debt is a business where costs and obligations are rising faster than the headline numbers suggest.
Part of that cash pressure has a name: BODYARMOR. Coca-Cola acquired the remaining 85% of BA Sports Nutrition, LLC — the maker of BODYARMOR sports drinks — in November 2021. The brand has since struggled. In early 2024, Coca-Cola wrote down its value by $760 million. Then in late 2025, it took an additional $960 million write-down, citing slower growth, a tougher competitive environment, and weaker future projections. The remaining value of the BODYARMOR trademark sits at $2,440 million, and management has warned that further charges are possible if results don't improve.
Beyond BODYARMOR, there are documented threats that go wider than any single brand. The most financially immediate is a tax dispute with the U.S. Internal Revenue Service. The IRS is challenging how Coca-Cola calculated taxes for the years 2007 to 2009 and claims the company owes approximately $3.3 billion plus interest. A court sided with the IRS in 2020 and again in 2023. The company is still fighting, but if it loses, the financial hit would be significant.
Then there is the bottler dependency risk. One single bottling partner accounts for 10% of Coca-Cola's total revenue. If that partner faces financial trouble, or simply makes decisions that don't align with Coca-Cola's goals, the revenue impact would be immediate and large. Coca-Cola sells through independent bottlers — it does not control them. The bottlers are contractors, not subsidiaries. That distance is efficient in good times and exposed in bad ones.
Supply chain pressure is also documented and ongoing. Coca-Cola's own filings state that international conflicts in 2025 disrupted operations and that cost pressures from ingredients, packaging, and energy are expected to continue hurting profits into 2026. Governments around the world are also pushing sugar taxes, warning labels, and restrictions on certain sweeteners. Those policies make Coca-Cola's products either more expensive for consumers or less attractive — both outcomes reduce volume.
Finally, there is the digital shift. E-commerce is changing how people buy beverages. Coca-Cola's filings acknowledge that smaller brands are increasingly reaching consumers directly through online platforms, bypassing the traditional retail shelf where Coca-Cola's scale and distribution have historically been its greatest advantage. The company is investing in digital capabilities, but the outcome of that shift is not yet clear from the numbers.