Intuit stock was down more than 13% in Thursday premarket trading after the company posted Q3 results and announced it would cut 17% of its full-time workforce. The stock was trading around $334.50, down from $383.93.
Intuit Inc., INTU
The results themselves were solid. Adjusted EPS came in at $12.80, topping the $12.57 Wall Street estimate. Revenue of $8.56 billion beat the $8.54 billion consensus and was up 10% year-over-year — though that’s a step down from the 15% growth posted in the same quarter last year.
Full-year guidance was also lifted. Intuit now expects fiscal 2026 revenue of $21.34–$21.37 billion and adjusted EPS of $23.80–$23.85, both above prior guidance and analyst estimates.
Despite the beats, the layoff news hit hard. The company said it expects to incur restructuring charges of $300–$340 million, mostly in Q4.
That pushback carries some weight. Many tech firms have cited AI as a driver of recent headcount reductions. According to Layoffs.fyi, 111,173 tech workers have lost their jobs so far in 2026 — close to the 124,201 total for all of 2025. Meta, Cloudflare, and Snap have all made cuts this year.
Not everything trended up. Intuit trimmed its TurboTax revenue forecast for the full year to $5.277–$5.282 billion, down from a prior range of $5.305–$5.330 billion.
Goodarzi said total IRS tax filings are projected to fall nearly 30 basis points this season — roughly 2 million below broader economic forecasts and the sharpest industry-wide contraction since the post-COVID period.
TurboTax Live returns grew 38% year-over-year, but heavy promotional activity pushed average revenue per unit down 1%. That growth rate also slowed from 47% the prior year.
Aujla described AI as “a clear net tailwind” for the business, pointing to Intuit’s proprietary data built on decades of filer information — something he said generic AI agents can’t replicate.
The Consumer segment, which includes TurboTax and Credit Karma, posted revenue of $5.3 billion, up 8%.
Morgan Stanley analyst Keith Weiss noted the Q3 results “failed to provide the positive catalyst” expected from TurboTax Live but called the stock’s valuation “very undemanding” relative to its long-term earnings growth potential.
Intuit also repurchased $1.6 billion of stock in the quarter and received board approval for a new $8 billion buyback. The board approved a quarterly dividend of $1.20 per share, a 15% year-over-year increase.
INTU stock has fallen roughly 42% in 2026.
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