Peloton delivered a modest but symbolically important quarter on Thursday as the connected fitness company returned to profitability, beat Wall Street revenue expectations, and signaled that its long-running turnaround effort may finally be gaining traction after years of declining demand and financial pressure.
The company reported fiscal third-quarter revenue of $630.9 million for the period ended March 31, ahead of analysts’ expectations of $617.6 million, according to LSEG data. Earnings per share came in at 6 cents, slightly below forecasts of 7 cents.
Peloton posted net income of $26.4 million, or 6 cents per share, a sharp reversal from the $47.7 million loss recorded during the same period a year earlier.
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The results underscored a gradual stabilization at a company that became one of the biggest corporate winners of the pandemic-era stay-at-home boom before suffering a painful collapse as gyms reopened, demand weakened, and consumers pulled back discretionary spending amid inflation and higher interest rates.
“The first order of business in earnings is reporting how you did financially, and we feel like that was a pretty good quarter in terms of where we are strategically,” CEO Peter Stern told CNBC.
The latest quarter suggests Peloton’s strategy is increasingly shifting away from relying solely on hardware sales toward building a broader recurring-revenue ecosystem centered on subscriptions, partnerships, and digital fitness services.
While equipment demand remains under pressure compared to the company’s pandemic peak, Peloton said growth in equipment sales and subscription revenue helped improve profitability and cash generation.
Free cash flow jumped nearly 60%, an important metric for investors closely monitoring whether Peloton can sustain its recovery without returning to aggressive borrowing or restructuring. For the full fiscal year, Peloton raised the lower end of its revenue forecast, projecting annual sales between $2.42 billion and $2.44 billion.
The company’s subscription business once again emerged as the financial backbone of the business. Subscription revenue rose 2% year over year to $428 million and exceeded analyst estimates, while connected fitness subscription revenue reached $202.9 million, also ahead of expectations.
However, beneath the stronger financial performance, Peloton continues to face structural challenges. Its paid connected fitness subscriber base fell to 2.66 million from the prior year, signaling that while existing members remain engaged, the company is still struggling to meaningfully expand its core user base in a more competitive and economically pressured environment.
That decline highlights a central issue facing Peloton’s long-term growth ambitions: how to evolve from a pandemic phenomenon into a sustainable global fitness platform. The company has spent the past two years attempting to reinvent itself through cost reductions, leadership changes, pricing adjustments, and strategic partnerships aimed at broadening its reach beyond high-end home exercise equipment.
One of the most notable moves came last month when Peloton partnered with Spotify to make more than 1,400 fitness classes available to Spotify Premium subscribers. The agreement gives Peloton access to significantly wider international audiences while potentially introducing its fitness content to users who may never purchase Peloton hardware.
Stern indicated the partnership had already been incorporated into the company’s guidance because negotiations had been underway for an extended period.
“We’re really excited about our deal with Spotify, that allows us to reach Peloton members in a lot more countries and is also a high margin revenue for us,” Stern said.
Importantly, Spotify users accessing Peloton content are not counted as Peloton subscribers, meaning the partnership could eventually become an additional monetization layer without artificially inflating subscriber metrics.
The strategy is seen as part of a broader shift underway across the fitness industry, where companies increasingly view digital content distribution and subscription ecosystems as more stable revenue streams than hardware sales alone.
Peloton is also attempting to diversify its customer base beyond home users. In March, the company launched new Bike and Tread products designed specifically for commercial gyms and high-traffic fitness centers, marking an effort to expand deeper into institutional fitness markets.
That push could help Peloton capture additional recurring revenue from hotels, corporate wellness programs, and fitness chains at a time when consumer spending remains uneven. The company has simultaneously leaned on pricing changes to improve margins, even as consumers face mounting economic pressure.
Peloton recently raised prices on both its equipment and subscription plans, a move Stern defended as necessary after years of keeping pricing largely unchanged while expanding the platform’s content offerings.
“We’re really sensitive to the fact that people feel stress in this economic environment, and it’s impacting different people in really different ways,” Stern said.
“That being said, we feel like the price changes that we made in Q2 – it was time. We had added a tremendous amount of value over the succeeding three or four years since we previously made any change in our subscription prices.”
The company’s ability to raise prices without triggering a sharper subscriber decline may indicate Peloton still retains strong brand loyalty among its core users, even after years of operational turbulence.
Still, the road ahead remains complicated.
Peloton continues operating in a consumer environment shaped by elevated borrowing costs, inflationary pressure, and shifting exercise habits as more people return to gyms and outdoor activities. The company also faces growing competition from traditional fitness brands, streaming platforms, and technology companies entering the digital wellness space.
At the same time, investors increasingly want evidence that Peloton can evolve into a scalable subscription-driven business rather than remain dependent on cyclical hardware demand. The company’s latest results suggest progress toward that transformation, but the decline in connected fitness subscribers shows the turnaround is still incomplete.
Peloton’s recovery effort is now being closely watched across corporate America because it represents a broader test of whether pandemic-era digital consumer brands can reinvent themselves after the extraordinary conditions that fueled their initial growth disappeared.
For now, Wall Street appears cautiously encouraged that Peloton is at least moving back toward financial stability after several turbulent years marked by layoffs, executive shakeups, inventory problems, and collapsing demand. The challenge ahead will be proving that the company’s improving profitability can translate into durable long-term growth.



