ServiceNow sells software that helps large organisations run their daily operations more smoothly. Companies pay a recurring fee — billed annually — to access the ServiceNow AI Platform through the cloud. That platform connects different departments, automates repetitive tasks, and now layers artificial intelligence on top to speed up work further. Subscription fees make up 97% of total revenue, which means the company collects most of its money before it delivers a single day of service. Here is how that mechanism works in practice.
How ServiceNow Makes Money
flowchart TD
A["ServiceNow AI Platform\nOne Shared Architecture"] --> B["4 Product Areas\nTech, CRM, Core, Creator"]
B -->|"workflow automation"| C["Enterprise Customers\n~8,700 orgs"]
C -->|"$12.9B/yr"| D["Subscription Revenue\n$12.9B, 77.5% gross margin"]
C -->|"setup and config fees"| E["Professional Services\n$0.4B"]
D --> F["Free Cash Flow\n$4.6B"]
E --> F
F -->|"reinvested in"| G["AI and Platform R&D\nNow Assist, Data Fabric"]
G --> A
C -->|"usage feedback\ndrives deeper adoption"| B
Five years of financial data tell a consistent story. Revenue has grown every single year — from $5.9 billion in 2021 to $13.3 billion in 2025. That is more than a doubling in four years. Gross margin has stayed remarkably stable throughout, hovering between 77% and 79% across the entire period. That stability matters. It means that as ServiceNow adds more customers, it is not spending dramatically more to serve them.
ServiceNow Annual Revenue 2021–2025
Revenue in billions of US dollars. Source: XBRL financials.
Cash generation has kept pace with revenue growth. Operating cash flow rose from $2.2 billion in 2021 to $5.4 billion in 2025. Free cash flow — the cash left after buying equipment and property — climbed from $1.8 billion to $4.6 billion over the same period. The company holds more cash than debt in every year on record, meaning it owes no net debt at all. As of 2025, net cash stood at $3.7 billion.
$4.6B
Free cash flow in 2025, up from $1.8B in 2021
One number anchors the future revenue picture. ServiceNow reported $28.2 billion in remaining performance obligations at the end of 2025. That is contracted revenue the company has not yet recognised — money customers have already agreed to pay. Roughly 46% of that is due within the next 12 months. Both figures grew 25–27% compared to the year before.
$28.2B
Contracted revenue not yet recognised, as of December 31 2025
Customers also stay. ServiceNow reported a 98% renewal rate in each of the last three years — 2023, 2024, and 2025. That figure is calculated on the value of contracts, not just the number of customers. Put simply, almost no revenue walks out the door each year. The number of customers paying more than $5 million per year grew from 420 in 2023 to 603 in 2025.
2023
milestone
AI becomes a product, not just a feature
In July 2023, ServiceNow added AI tools to its platform under the Now Assist brand. These tools can summarise information, help write code, and handle service requests automatically. The company later partnered with Nvidia, Anthropic, and OpenAI to deepen these capabilities. AI shifted from a background ingredient to a named product line — and a new reason for customers to expand their subscriptions.
But growth at this scale brings its own complications. Cost of subscription revenues rose 32% in 2025 — faster than subscription revenue itself, which grew 21%. Subscription gross margin dipped from 82% to 80% in that single year. ServiceNow says this is partly driven by the cost of serving customers in regulated markets and by heavier use of third-party cloud services. The company has flagged that this margin will likely dip slightly further in 2026.
What is a remaining performance obligation?
When a customer signs a multi-year contract, the company cannot count all that money as revenue right away. The portion not yet earned is called a remaining performance obligation, or RPO. It sits on the balance sheet as a promise of future revenue. A growing RPO means customers are committing to pay more in the future — it is a forward-looking signal of demand.
Now for the risks — and they are specific, not theoretical. First, data privacy rules are tightening globally, particularly in Europe. ServiceNow must spend money to comply with different national laws, and failure to do so could mean large fines or lost customers. Second, the company is working with the US Department of Justice on an investigation into compliance issues related to government contracts. If rules were broken, ServiceNow could lose government business, face financial penalties, or be banned from future government work. Government customers are a growing share of revenue, which makes this risk material.
Why government contracts are different
Selling software to government agencies comes with extra rules — specific security standards, audit rights, and strict procurement laws. Breaking those rules can result not just in fines but in debarment, meaning a company is blocked from selling to government at all. For a company where government is a growing revenue segment, that threat carries real weight.
Third, ServiceNow is embedding AI deeply into its products, which exposes it to the EU AI Act — a set of rules that will require expensive changes to how AI systems are built and disclosed. The company also faces copyright lawsuits related to AI and reputational risk if its AI tools produce unfair or unreliable outputs. Fourth, a real security incident already happened: in 2024, over 1,000 customers had corporate information exposed due to a misconfiguration. A larger breach could trigger customer losses, lawsuits, and regulatory fines simultaneously.
98%
Renewal rate in 2025, 2024, and 2023 — calculated on contract value, not customer count
There is also a quieter risk worth naming. ServiceNow operates in many countries and must follow complex trade laws, including sanctions against Russia and Belarus. Violations could carry criminal penalties. And ongoing global conflicts — which the company itself flags in its annual report — could disrupt business in affected regions, even if management does not currently expect a material impact.
Stock-based compensation — shares given to employees as pay — totalled $1.955 billion in 2025. That is a real cost to shareholders even though it does not appear as a cash outflow. The gap between reported operating income of $1.824 billion and non-GAAP operating income of $4.149 billion is largely explained by this figure.
The Bet
ServiceNow's platform becomes the essential layer that connects AI tools to the actual work that gets done inside large organisations. The company's argument is that AI models can generate insights, but they cannot route approvals, update records, or enforce compliance rules on their own — and that ServiceNow's workflow infrastructure fills that gap. If that is true, every large organisation adopting AI becomes a potential buyer of deeper ServiceNow services. If it turns out that AI tools embed their own workflow logic — or that competitors build equivalent orchestration capabilities — the platform's central role becomes much harder to defend, and the case for sustained revenue growth at current rates weakens.
Open question
ServiceNow has grown revenue consistently, holds a strong cash position, and reports a 98% renewal rate. Its AI platform strategy is a credible response to where enterprise technology is heading. But subscription gross margin slipped in 2025, a DOJ investigation is open, the EU AI Act is coming, and the company is spending heavily to stay ahead. Can ServiceNow keep its platform at the centre of enterprise AI workflows — and maintain its margins while doing it — or will the cost of competing in an AI-defined market gradually erode the economics that make this business model work?
Compiled · 10-K · FY2025
Data Privacy and Regulatory Compliance
Laws about how data can be stored, moved, and used are getting stricter in places like Europe. ServiceNow has to spend a lot of money to follow these rules in different countries, and if they don't follow them correctly, they could face big fines, investigations, or lose customers.
Government Contracts and Investigations
ServiceNow is working with the Department of Justice on an investigation into compliance issues with government contracts. If they broke rules, they could lose government business, pay large penalties, or be banned from selling to government agencies in the future.
AI Technology Risks
ServiceNow is building AI into its products, but new laws like the EU AI Act will require them to make expensive changes. They also face lawsuits over copyright claims and could damage their reputation if AI systems produce unfair or unreliable results.
Cybersecurity and Data Breaches
ServiceNow stores sensitive customer data and has experienced security incidents in the past. A major data breach could cause them to lose customers, face lawsuits, pay fines from regulators, and suffer serious damage to their reputation.
International Business and Trade Restrictions
ServiceNow operates in many countries and must follow complex trade laws, including sanctions against Russia and Belarus. Violations could result in criminal penalties, and wars or trade conflicts could block them from doing business in certain regions.
10-K Item 1A · Risk Factors