Artificial intelligence startup Cohere has delivered strong momentum in the enterprise segment, reporting approximately $240 million in annual recurring revenue (ARR) for 2025 — comfortably surpassing its internal $200 million target — according to a February 2026 investor memo obtained by CNBC.
The company achieved quarter-over-quarter revenue growth of more than 50% throughout the year, demonstrating consistent execution in a highly competitive market where larger rivals are aggressively expanding their enterprise footprints.
“Our thesis is clearly resonating in the market,” Cohere wrote in the memo. “Our sales pipeline continues to grow as global organizations across regulated sectors choose Cohere as their trusted partner for secure AI adoption at scale.”
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Founded in Toronto in 2019 by former Google Brain researchers Aidan Gomez, Ivan Zhang, and Nick Frosst, Cohere has carved out a distinct niche developing large language models and software tools tailored for business use cases. The company is backed by high-profile investors, including Nvidia and Salesforce Ventures, and its valuation has grown to roughly $7 billion in recent private rounds, reflecting sustained confidence from strategic and financial backers.
Cohere’s performance comes at a pivotal moment for the generative AI industry. While consumer-facing chatbots like ChatGPT and Claude have dominated headlines, enterprise adoption is now the primary battleground. OpenAI reported in November 2025 that more than 1 million businesses worldwide were using its technology, while Anthropic disclosed in September that it serves over 300,000 businesses.
These sizable customer bases present significant scale challenges for emerging players like Cohere.
Yet Cohere has differentiated itself through a capital-efficient business model that emphasizes flexibility and security. The company primarily generates revenue from software licenses and services, allowing customers to run its models either through managed cloud services or directly on their own hardware. This approach avoids the massive infrastructure costs incurred by full-stack competitors that build and operate their own data centers, enabling Cohere to invest more aggressively in customer acquisition, product development, and research.
As a result, Cohere’s gross margins averaged around 70% in 2025, expanding by 25 basis points year-over-year.
“By scaling compute resources proportionally to customer demand, we remain insulated from the speculative excesses surrounding the broader AI market, positioning Cohere for more sustainable growth,” the company told investors.
This efficiency has been particularly attractive to regulated industries — financial services, healthcare, government, and legal — where data privacy, auditability, and on-premises deployment are non-negotiable requirements. Cohere has leaned into these sectors, offering models that can be fine-tuned and deployed in secure environments without sending sensitive data to third-party clouds. CEO Aidan Gomez has been vocal about the company’s growth ambitions.
In October 2025, he told Bloomberg that Cohere hopes to make its public market debut “soon,” suggesting investors would welcome a “pure play AI investment opportunity” focused on enterprise use cases. The strong 2025 results and clear 2026 roadmap appear to lay the groundwork for that potential IPO. For 2026, Cohere outlined plans to accelerate European expansion — a region with stringent data protection regulations that favor privacy-first AI providers — and to further develop its AI agent platform, North.
The company told investors it anticipates another year of “rapid growth,” supported by deepening enterprise penetration and continued model improvements. The results stand in contrast to the broader AI funding and valuation environment, where some high-profile startups have faced scrutiny over high burn rates and uncertain paths to profitability. Cohere’s emphasis on capital efficiency and recurring revenue from enterprise software positions it as a more measured player in a market often criticized for speculative excess.
However, OpenAI and Anthropic have continued to expand aggressively in the enterprise space, leveraging their frontier model capabilities and vast resources. Cohere must continue proving that its specialized focus on security, customization, and deployment flexibility can win and retain large accounts against bigger, better-funded rivals.
The strong 2025 performance and clear enterprise momentum suggest Cohere is executing well on its strategy of building a sustainable, high-margin AI business. As the generative AI market matures and shifts from hype to practical deployment, companies that can deliver secure, efficient, and enterprise-ready solutions are likely to garner increasing attention from both customers and public market investors. Cohere’s progress in 2025 puts it in line as a serious contender in that evolving landscape.



