Oscar Health Inc. reported its best-ever quarterly profit Wednesday, sending OSCR stock up nearly 11% in pre-market trading.
Net income hit $679 million, or $2.07 per diluted share — up from $275 million, or $0.92 per share, in Q1 2025.
That blew past the analyst consensus of $1.06 adjusted EPS by a dollar.
Oscar Health, Inc., OSCR
Revenue came in at $4.65 billion, a 53% jump from $3.05 billion a year ago. That said, it did fall short of the $4.91 billion Wall Street had penciled in.
The company stood by its full-year 2026 guidance across all metrics, signaling confidence in its path ahead.
Oscar’s Individual and Small Group plan membership grew to 3.17 million as of March 31, up from 2.02 million a year earlier — a 57% increase.
That growth came partly from expanding into two new states, Alabama and Mississippi, bringing Oscar’s coverage to 20 U.S. states for the 2026 benefit year.
The company now operates in 573 counties across 93 metro markets.
Oscar’s medical loss ratio — the percentage of premium revenue spent on medical claims — dropped to 70.5% from 75.4% in Q1 2025.
That’s well below the mid-to-high 80s that many other health insurers reported over the same period.
Oscar credited disciplined pricing and favorable prior period reserve development of $68 million for the improvement.
The SG&A expense ratio also tightened, falling to 15.2% from 15.8%.
Adjusted EBITDA reached $727 million, more than double the $329 million posted in Q1 2025.
Earnings from operations also more than doubled, rising to $704 million from $297 million.
Oscar had been unprofitable for most of its existence since launching in 2012. It only turned a full-year profit in 2024 under Bertolini, who joined as CEO in 2023 after leading Aetna.
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