Good morning and good evening, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by, and welcome to WeRide's Q4 and Full Year 2025 Earnings Conference Call. Please note that today's event is being recorded. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. For today's call, management will use English as the main language. A third-party interpreter will provide simultaneous Chinese interpretation. The company will be hosting a question-and-answer session after management's prepared remarks. If you wish to listen to management's original statements or ask a question during the question-and-answer session, please make sure you are dialed into the English language line. Please note that the Chinese interpretation is for convenience purposes only. In the case of any discrepancy, management statements in their original language will prevail. Joining us today are WeRide's Founder, Chairman and CEO, Dr. Tony Han, and CFO and Head of International, Ms. Jennifer Li.
Before we continue, I'd like to refer you to the safe harbor statement in the company's earnings press release, which also applies to this call, as today's call will include forward-looking statements, including WeRide's strategies and future plans. These forward-looking statements are made under the safe harbor provisions of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements involve inherent risks and uncertainties. The company's actual results could differ materially from those stated or implied by these forward-looking statements as a result of various important factors, and please refer to the Risk Factors section of the company's Form 20-F filed with the SEC and announcements on the website of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange for a full disclosure of these risk factors. The company does not assume any obligation to update any forward-looking statements except as required under applicable law.
Please note that all numbers stated in management's prepared remarks are in RMB terms, and we will discuss non-IFRS measures today, which are more thoroughly explained and reconciled to the most comparable measures reported in the company's earnings release and filings with the SEC and the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. The company's unaudited financial and operating results were released earlier today via Newswire and can be found on the company's IR website. With that, I now turn the call over to the company's Founder, Chairman and CEO, Dr. Tony Han. Please go ahead, sir.
Hi, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. As a global leader in autonomous driving, we delivered strong results over the past year with a record high revenue of RMB 685 million, growing 90% year-over-year, driven by expanding Robotaxi deployments as well as robust demand for Robobus and other autonomous driving products. Robotaxi revenue has increased 210% year-over-year, reflecting the continued commercialization of our technology. By today, our global Robotaxi fleet size has reached a new height of 1,125 vehicles. We are seeing encouraging momentum across both our domestic operations in China and our international markets. As we continue to scale, I'll walk you through the key developments driving our growth. Let's first turn to China, which continues to be one of our most important operating markets.
During the periods, we have advanced toward a more data-driven autonomy stack by incorporating end-to-end learning, leveraging large-scale data training and world model simulation, as well as improving algorithm generalization. We also made solid progress in operating efficiency, fleet expansion, service coverage, and user adoption. On the operation front, total cost of ownership decreased by approximately 38%, driven by reduction of vehicle BOM costs and the improvements of operating efficiency. The BOM costs of our latest Robotaxi, GXR, is cut by 15%, enabled by the adoption of our cost-effective computing platform, HPC 3.0. At the same time, our remote assistance human-to-vehicle ratio improved from one to 10 in 2024 to one to 40, currently making labor costs marginal and further strengthening unit economics. Fleet size and service coverage also continue to improve.
Our commercial and testing fleet in China has grown to more than 800 Robotaxis, covering over 1,000 sq km across key urban areas. As fleet density increased, we also saw meaningful improvements in service performance. Average daily orders per vehicle reached 15 trips over the past six months, rising to 26 during peak periods. Average passenger waiting time declined to under 10 minutes, reflecting stronger demand and improved vehicle utilization. We continued expanding our presence in Beijing and Guangzhou, focusing on populated area, connecting key transportation hubs such as major airports and railway stations, along with further penetration into downtown area. In Guangzhou, for example, our Robotaxi service is now available in Tianhe District, one of the city's most active commercial hubs. On the product side, we launched a flexible pick-up and drop-off feature, allowing riders to select any pickup or drop-off location within the service area.
At the same time, we broadened access through major mobility platforms, including Amap, WeChat, and Tencent Mobility. Encouragingly, we are seeing substantial increase of registered users of WeRide Robotaxi service. Take the fourth quarter as an example. The year-over-year growth of registered users exceeds 900%, reflecting stronger user acceptance and engagement. Overall, we believe WeRide's long-standing leadership in Robotaxi technology, combined with extensive real-world operational experience, forms a durable and hard-to-replicate competitive moat, continues to resonate with users. As our operations scale, we expect further growth in vehicle utilization and user adoption going forward. Let's now turn to our international operations, where we continue to build on our progress expanding our global footprint. Today, we have deployed autonomous vehicles in 12 countries, with official permits already granted in eight of those markets. This progress demonstrates our ability to navigate complex regulatory environments while meeting local requirements.
Taken together, these milestones position us as the most globally deployed autonomous driving company today. Europe is shaping up to be another major growth area for us. Back in November 2025, we achieved a historic milestone, receiving Europe's first-ever driverless Robotaxi permit for passenger service from Switzerland's Federal Roads Office. That head start gives us a real advantage as we look to expand further across Europe in the coming years. Apart from this, just this month, we added another country to our global map as we announced our entry into Slovakia. We are deploying our full product lineup there, launching the country's first-ever AV program. Slovakia is also the fourth country for our European footprint. The Middle East remains one of the most promising regions. In Abu Dhabi, we secured the world's first city-level, fully driverless Robotaxi commercial permit outside the U.S. in October 2025.
Today, our service covers about 70% of the city's core area, and passengers can book through various categories on Uber app, including Uber Comfort, UberX, or the new autonomous category, Uber's first dedicated autonomous ride option globally. In that quarter, we also launched commercial Robotaxi rides in both Dubai and Riyadh. We've also started pilot operations in Ras Al-Khaimah, giving us a presence in a third UAE Emirate. In Asia Pacific, we are building early momentum with strong local presence. In Singapore, WeRide and Grab began autonomous vehicle testing in the Punggol district back in November 2025. Our Robotaxi GXR, and the Robobus are expected to open to the public by April 2026, making Punggol Singapore's first residential neighborhood with an autonomous shuttle service. A big part of what makes all this possible is our disciplined approach to international expansion.
Our strategy focuses on markets with supportive regulatory environments and favorable economic conditions that are conducive to sustainable operations. Today, our international Robotaxi fleet has surpassed 250 vehicles, and we continue to scale deployments across key international markets, including Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Riyadh, Switzerland, Slovakia, and Singapore. Each new market we enter becomes the regional blueprint for expansion into adjacent markets. Looking ahead, we expect our global Robotaxi fleet to reach 2,600 by the end of 2026, subject to regulatory approvals and market conditions. These milestones represent the early stage of our long-term vision to deploy tens of thousands of Robotaxis worldwide by 2030. While Robotaxi service is at the core of our business, we are actively diversifying to other areas of autonomous mobility to build a broader portfolio and generate additional revenue streams.
Across our diversified applications, WeRide's global AV fleet, spanning Robotaxis, Robobuses, Robovans, and Robosweepers, grew rapidly from 1,089 vehicles at the end of 2024 to 2,113 as of today, strengthening our global presence across 12 countries. Take our Robobus business as an example. It has seen impressive growth in 2025, increasing by 190% year-over-year. We've entered multiple European markets, including Switzerland, France, Belgium, Spain, and Slovakia, where labor shortages in public transit systems are creating real opportunities for autonomous shuttles. By leveraging our technology to meet this demand, we're able to address a pressing need while also expanding our market presence. Additionally, our L2+ advanced driver assistance system, WePilot 3.0, is being adopted by leading OEMs and tier-one suppliers, including Chery, GAC, and Bosch.
This system uses a one-stage end-to-end architecture with vision-based perception, which enables vehicles to operate safely and efficiently across diverse driving conditions. In the second China Urban Intelligent Driving Competition, hosted by D1EV.com, Chery EXEED, a mass-market passenger car model powered by WePilot 3.0, made history by winning first place in three cities competition stops. This business expansion helps us capitalize on the growing demand for L2+ ADAS technologies, even outside of our L4 fleet. Innovation remains at the heart of our strategy. Building on our strength in L2+ end-to-end systems, WeRide is converging its technology stack toward L4 by integrating end-to-end learning with large-scale simulation and real-world data loops to enhance generalization and edge case handling. Our latest development, WeRide GENESIS, is a general-purpose simulation platform that integrates physical AI and generative AI.
WeRide GENESIS generates high-fidelity driving scenarios much more efficiently, reducing simulation time for complex edge cases from days to minutes. This boosts our development efficiency and enables us to quickly test and deploy improvements to our systems while significantly reducing on-road testing costs, reinforcing the technological moat underpinning our L2 to L4 product portfolio. On the hardware side, we've taken our partnership with Geely Farizon to the next level. The latest GXR, as a purpose-built, factory pre-installed autonomous vehicle, is delivering higher safety consistency and lower unit cost. The upgraded model incorporates our proprietary HPC 3.0, a high-performance computing platform, which is a more compute-efficient architecture. Here's the number that really shows the efficiency gain. Per vehicle production time is now under 10 minutes. These advancements will give us a significant edge in terms of both vehicle performance and scalability of our global Robotaxi fleets.
With that overview, I'll now turn the call over to our CFO, who will walk you through our financial performance and outlook in more detail.
Thank you, Tony. Hello, everyone. Before we dive into the financials, I want to highlight that all figures are in RMB and comparisons are year-over-year, unless stated otherwise. Now let's discuss our fourth quarter and full year 2025 financial performance. Looking back, Q4 2025 will be remembered as a defining chapter in WeRide's journey. As we continue to make steady progress in scaling operations, improving unit economics, and advancing our technological leadership. Our fleet and geographic coverage grew significantly, showing strong momentum as a global leader in autonomous driving. Now, let me walk you through the financial performance that reflects these developments. In Q4 2025, total revenue was RMB 314 million, representing an increase of 123%. Product revenue increased 309% to RMB 211 million, mainly driven by increased sales of Robotaxis and Robobuses.
Service revenue increased 15% to RMB 103 million. For the full year 2025, total revenue increased 90% to a record high RMB 685 million. Product revenue and service revenue were RMB 360 million and RMB 325 million, respectively, representing an increase of 310% and 19%, respectively. Robotaxi continues to be one of the most crucial drivers among the business lines. In Q4 2025, WeRide has reached another record-high quarterly Robotaxi revenue since its foundation, as its Robotaxi revenue has increased 66% to RMB 51 million. For the full year 2025, Robotaxi revenue also achieved an annual record high of RMB 148 million, with a 210% growth year-over-year. This growth is powered by our asset-light model.
We provide the autonomous driving brain while mobility and fleet partners handle operations and vehicle ownership. This keeps vehicles off our balance sheet, enables efficient scaling, and aligns incentives to deliver a consistent user experience. Our Robotaxi revenue is also supported by a combination of ongoing service fee and recurring ride-hailing revenue share from platform partners. Our global expansion in Robotaxi operations has firmly established us as a leader in the rapidly evolving autonomous mobility landscape. In particular, our international business is becoming an increasingly important driver of group revenue. For full year 2025, overseas markets contributed approximately 29% of total revenue, spanning a diverse set of geographies, including the Middle East, Europe, and Asia Pacific. At the same time, our focus on operating efficiency has allowed us to sustain healthy margins even as we scale.
In Q4 2025, group level gross profit increased 74% to RMB 89 million, with a group level gross margin of 28%. For the full year 2025, group level gross profit was RMB 207 million, representing an increase of 87% with a group level gross margin of 30%. These results highlight the strength of our business model and reinforce our confidence in our global expansion strategy. In Q4 2025, operating expenses increased slightly by 2% year-over-year to RMB 655 million, with R&D representing 63% of the total. For full year 2025, operating expenses decreased by 11% to RMB 2.04 billion, with R&D representing 67% of the total. The decrease in operating expenses was primarily driven by lower administrative expenses, partially offset by increases in R&D and selling expenses.
As our primary investment area, the rise in R&D spending reflects our focus on long-term technological leadership, while disciplined cost management kept overall operating expenses under control. To break down further, R&D expenses increased by 29% to RMB 411 million in Q4 2025, and increased by 26% to RMB 1.37 billion for the full year 2025, primarily driven by our continued investments in top-tier talent and the expansion of our next generation data center infrastructure, building a high-performance backbone to support our L2+ to L4 autonomous driving capabilities. This continuous R&D commitment is essential to maintaining our competitive edge and driving future growth. Administrative expenses decreased by 29% to RMB 217 million in Q4 2025, and decreased by 48% to RMB 596 million for the full year 2025.
The decrease was mainly driven by lower share-based compensation and partially offset by growing professional service fees, personnel costs, and depreciation and amortization expenses. Selling expenses increased by 76% to RMB 27 million in Q4 2025, and increased by 37% to RMB 74 million for the full year 2025. These increases are in line with the growth of our business. Our net loss narrowed by 6% to RMB 5,565 million in Q4 2025, and narrowed by 34% to RMB 1.65 billion for the full year 2025. Building on our successful Hong Kong IPO in Q4 2025, we ended the year with a strong capital position.
As of 31st December 2025, we had total capital reserves of RMB 7.13 billion, comprising RMB 6.97 billion in cash and cash equivalents and time deposits, RMB 144 million in investments in wealth management products, and RMB 19 million in restricted cash. We maintained short-term bank loans of RMB 324 million to support daily operations. With disciplined cash deployment, this level of capital provides a solid operating buffer and underscores our financial strength to support continued growth. On March 23, 2026, our board of directors authorized a share repurchase program under which we may repurchase up to $100 million of our Class A ordinary shares, including in the form of American depository shares over the next twelve months.
This authorization also reflects our commitment to shareholders and our confidence in the long-term value of WeRide. Looking ahead, we are moving forward with clarity and conviction. By end of 2026, we expect to have 2,600 Robotaxis globally, marking the first phase of our path toward tens of thousands of Robotaxis by 2030. As our fleet scales, we see a clear path to extending our proven deployment model to more cities worldwide. Supported by a strong balance sheet, relentless focus on operating efficiency and deepening partnerships, we are well-positioned to lead the next chapter for autonomous driving industry. With that, operator, we're now ready to take some questions.
Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. As a reminder, we only accept questions in the English language line. To ask a question, please dial in to the English line and then press star one one on your telephone's touch tone keypad. If you have any follow-up question, please re-enter the queue. Thank you. A moment for our first question. We will now take our first question from the line of Kai Xiao of CICC. Please ask your question. Kai, your line is now open.
Thank you, Tony and Jennifer. This is Ben from CICC. I have two questions. First one is, quite a few OEM and tier one peers are also working on L4 Robotaxi, such as Horizon Robotics and Momenta. What's your view on this matter? The second one is on the L2 clouds. Recently, WePilot AiDrive showed an industry-leading capability in a highly challenging real-world computation. Could you share the key differentiation between WePilot AiDrive's capability versus the peers? Thank you.
Thank you very much, Kai, for these two important questions, and I truly appreciate you ask these two questions. First of all, the first question is about like quite a few OEM and tier ones you just mentioned, like a few names like Horizon and Momenta. They claim they are working on robot taxi, and what's my view. First of all, I think, as a first mover and the industrial leader, as the CEO of first mover and industrial leader of autonomous driving company like WeRide, I have to say, we welcome all the players to join this competition. That means like the whole ecosystem and the whole industry is really attractive and there's a great market or potential.
Only in a very interesting and juicy and profitable market you can see, you can experience competition. Having that said, I just want to remind like some competitors or new players the difference between ADAS system, which they are very familiar, and the L4 driverless robot taxi system, which they are not familiar. Lots of time people have to do some conjecture of extrapolation from what they have with what they are familiar, like L2 ++ system, and then they want to think, "Okay, we just increase the reliability, increase a little bit of speed of our system, and we can achieve driverless operation." My answer to that kind of extrapolation or extrapolative thinking is like, you haven't seen the difficulty, what you have, you haven't seen.
The thing is like, why am I in a position to say that? Because WeRide is the only company currently, to my best knowledge, in this world, good at ADAS system, at the same time, good at driverless operation or Robot axi. For example, in China Urban Intelligent Driving Competition just finished, like last month. Actually, two days ago, we won the championship once again. WeRide is the only company won this championship three times in a row. We made a history. Which means, like, in, you know, in that competition, the companies you mentioned, like Momenta and Horizon, they all entered the competition, but WeRide just won three times over them.
We know pretty much the ADAS, and we are very familiar now in the ADAS area that they are familiar. On the other hand side, you know, I would say if you want to claim yourself to be a L4 level autonomous driving company or robot taxi company, you have to have a substantial operation. What do I mean? You should have at least 50 driverless cars running in a city with a population of at least 1 million people. If you just have 10 cars and with a safety driver behind the steering wheel, you cannot claim yourself as a robot taxi company.
Of course, lots of people can claim, like, you are working on something that's great, but to make sure you are real player of the field, you have to demonstrate you have the real driverless operation. Therefore, I want to emphasize the technology barrier between L2++ and L4 is huge, and to really make yourself like a significant or serious player in the Robotaxi field, you really need to demonstrate your capability in driverless operation. Besides, you know, there's the other factors like hardware maturity, software integration, full redundancy architecture, regulatory approvals, operational stability. All of these factors are traditional ADAS companies haven't experienced. My view is like, WeRide and also with some other leading autonomous driving L4-level Robotaxi company has really a strong advantage.
We welcome this kind of competition, but we are very confident with our current leading position, our current footprint in the international market. That is huge gap. I don't foresee any newcomers can catch up soon. This is my answer to the first question. Okay, the second question, Kai's question, is about our recent extraordinary results in China Urban Intelligent Driving Competition. What differentiates us between our peers? I think the ranking and scores tells all, right? Back in, this kind of autonomous China Urban Intelligent Driving Competition hold once every month or once every two months, depends on period. Okay? In the history, there's only one company won this kind of championship twice in a row. That was Huawei.
At that time, they have a very big advantage. There's never been a company that has won this kind of championship 3x in a row. Since last year November and then December and this year March, we won three times in a row. You know, the competition has been entered by all the companies, famous autonomous driving company or car apps in China. You can name it, XPeng, Li Auto, NIO, Xiaomi, Momenta, Horizon, Huawei, Zeekr. They all entered the competition, but WeRide won this kind of competition three times in a row. That demonstrate our capability. What is the secret sauce behind this? We have several.
First, one of our one-stage end-to-end system training based on both synthetic and real data from our L4 level autonomous driving Robotaxi, from our L2++ level data. That helps a lot. Our unique one-stage end-to-end architecture, which is different from LLM, from VLA, and that one give us a big advantage. Thirdly, the data generated from our GENESIS model, and this GENESIS model is superior, and it can generate data according to our needs, and also reduce our data collection cost by 75%. With all this technology combined give us a kind of leading position in the ADAS field. That's all my answers to these two questions. Again, thanks for the question, Kai.
Thank you. We will now take our next question from the line of Ming- Hsun Lee of Bank of America. Please ask your question, Ming-Hsun. Your line is open.
Hi, Tony and Jennifer. Thank you for taking my question. I also have two questions for you. So first, could you please elaborate the Robotaxi expansion plan of both China and international markets? And what is the delivery schedule for the 2,000 vehicles signed with Geely Farizon? Thank you. Second question. Could you also share your forward-looking plan for the Middle East, given peers market entry, geopolitical conflict, and also the involvement of the partnership with Uber? Specifically, what is the timeline of the deployment of 1,200 vehicles with Uber? Thank you, Tony.
Okay, I'll take the first question. I guess, you can take the second question. Thank you, Ming. Both China and international markets are core to WeRide's growth strategy. As you just mentioned, we recently signed a deal that it's actually an extended agreement with Geely Farizon for additional 2,000 upgraded Robotaxi we call GXR in 2026. By end of last year, our fleet has surpassed over 1,000 Robotaxis. Take into consideration of the phased delivery of the newly, like it's pre-installed GXR, then also the retirement of some of the older vehicles we have. We expect to reach around 2,600 Robotaxi globally by end of this year.
China definitely is gonna be the cornerstone of our business, where we focus on cities with very supportive policies for autonomous driving and high population densities. Those tier one cities in China, like say Guangzhou and Beijing, they both fit this profile very well. In Guangzhou, for example, we plan to gradually scale towards city-level operation, like what we already have in Abu Dhabi. We are also expanding into another major tier one city in China, and we look forward to share more of that details soon with everyone. On the international side, Middle East continue to be a very strong base for us.
We run the largest Robotaxi fleet at city level in Abu Dhabi, and we are the first to start Robotaxi public operation in Dubai and in Riyadh as well. So we'll continue to our strong, like, momentum in the Middle East. Also, Europe is a key focus. Our Robotaxi obtained the first and only driverless operation permit in Europe from the Swiss government last year. Building on this momentum, we are really looking to further expand it in markets like, say, Madrid and potentially one more core city in Europe this year. Of course, we'll continue to expand our Robotaxi operation in Zurich as well. Tony, you wanna take the next question?
Sure. Just a kind of a general reminder to everybody, the second question is really about our future plan for the Middle East. You know, what is the timeline of deployment claimed 1,200 vehicles with Uber. Right now we have around 200 vehicles in Middle East. Together with Uber, we plan to add at least 1,000 more by 2027. We expect to be the first to reach 1,000-vehicle scale in this region. Okay. It's really not easy, and we have spent ton of efforts and planned a lot and sometimes retrofit and redesign our vehicles and do lots of technology efforts to meet this number. Operationally, we are carrying out business as usual.
you know, we are already running city-level full driverless Robotaxi service in Abu Dhabi, and we aim to do the same in Dubai this year. We are currently the only company offering Robotaxi service to the public in both cities, and that first-mover advantage is meaningful. Our scale, regulatory progress, strong partnerships, and safety record all support this position. On the geopolitical tensions we are currently experiencing, we are monitoring developments very closely with a continued focus on the safety of our local teams and maintaining a reliable operation. So far, we have not seen any material impact on our business. Our global footprint and diversified presence also give us confidence in navigating potential uncertainties. Regarding our partnership with Uber, our five-year, 15-city rollout plan remains on track, and we expect to announce new city launches in due course this year.
Okay, that's the answer to this question. Any other questions?
Thank you. We will take our next question from Tim Hsiao of Morgan Stanley. Please ask your question, Tim. Your line is now open.
Hi, Tony and Jennifer. This is Tim from Morgan Stanley. Thanks for taking my questions. I have two questions. I think the first one is, basically, I want to follow up on the L4 competition, because, at the NVIDIA GTC earlier this month, we noticed that, WeRide again showcased the Robotaxi GXR . I think, the model is powered by NVIDIA Hyperion platform and the Thor SoC. Although we noticed the collaboration with NVIDIA has helped, WeRide to effectively reduce the cost, accelerate global expansion. These days, I think NVIDIA also supplies similar ready solution to many of WeRide's competitors and also automaker, for the long-term L4 development. So my question is, how does WeRide address the challenge of Robotaxi homogenization in the long term and can keep successfully differentiating? That's my first question.
Thank you.
Thank you, Tim. You know, this is a great question. First of all, I think, you know, currently, like many players, they define their autonomous driving system based on NVIDIA's Thor platform. I want to emphasize, you know, just to make announcement like we are going to adopt NVIDIA Thor is easy, but to really make a reliable and workable autonomous driving system based on NVIDIA Thor is very challenging. WeRide team up with Lenovo and NVIDIA, spend two years to design our HPC 3.0 auto-grade. You know, we actually produced the first of its kind of computational auto-grade computational platform for robotaxi with a computational power of 2000 TOPS.
You can look around and see whether any other people have this kind of computational platform of 2,000 TOPS and with redundancy. Not easy. Okay? We have lots of build-up on top of this auto-grade computational platform. Besides, we build up our simulation simulator and data collection integrated platform GENESIS. This one can generate lots of data and can be integrated into in a training and then can be evaluated with HPC 3.0. So that one is actually a very, very advanced system. In the long run, I don't think like just a general, very generic universal platform can help like the inexperienced or not that strong technological player so that everybody can become a significant player in Robotaxi or i.e., democratize the whole industry. No, it's not like that.
People actually have tried that before. I just want people remember, like four or five years ago, Baidu roll out this Apollo platform. The goal is very close to what NVIDIA want to do with roll out open-source, some code, and everybody can work on it. Today, to our best knowledge, no driverless Robotaxi fleet developed using Apollo. Even Baidu uses its own closed-source platform to work on it. You know, whether that open-source can be used by some third party and then deploy reliable driverless operation is an unproven concept, and actually I'm quite skeptical on that. We are very confident for our competitive edge in the next five years and in the next ten years. We have a leading position.
I think we have maybe a larger and larger leading advance. In that part, we are quite advanced. That's my answer to your question, Tim.
Thank you. Thank you, Tony, for sharing all the details. My second question is also a quick follow-up regarding our global partnership with Uber, because I think most of us noticed that WeRide has formed a close strategic tie-up with Uber for global expansion. Yet in the meantime, I think Uber has a ride-hailing platform. The company continues to onboard more Robotaxi service provider, like in the U.S., Rivian, Zoox, Motional, and in the rest of the world, like Wayve, etc. So facing this kind of dynamic of both cooperation and competitions, how does WeRide ensure its long-term share of ride-hailing orders in overseas market can keep growing and to stay as a major supplier to Uber? And lastly, how does WeRide plan to enhance its 2C capability globally?
That's my second question. Thank you.
Okay.
Tony, you wanna take this?
No, Jen , if you want, you can go ahead to take. Yeah, please go ahead.
Yeah, I'll take this question. So, Tim, first of all, Uber is an important shareholder and partner for WeRide. We believe their incentive is to maximize our WeRide's like, Robotaxi utilization. As a matter of fact, with all the like, partnerships they have signed till today, you can only get Robotaxi from Uber on the Uber platform from WeRide and from Waymo. That's it. We do have a very concrete plan to scale together. In the key market, like say Middle East, we have the first and foremost operational ride that we're gonna launch 1,200 Robotaxis, which will be fully delivered by 2027. This is gonna be a very large and definitely the largest Robotaxi fleet outside China and U.S.
On top of that, we operate Robotaxi, Robobus, Robovan, and other products globally. We act like more like an infrastructure partner directly to the local government. Like say, in Bratislava, we are bringing our Robotaxi, bus, Robobus, Robovan, Robosweeper all together in one go. We are the infrastructure partner to those local governments. We're not just like an Uber supplier, and we own most of the autonomous driving license. The government directly issue the license to us. Also in the presentation we just did, in the video, you can see that our Robotaxi partners worldwide, including, besides Uber, and we also have like Grab, FBB, FTL, ILK, like TXAI, and a number of local partners. We have different local partners in different local markets.
To emphasize on the licensing mode, we are the only one that holds autonomous driving permits in eight countries. Based on our knowledge, this is definitely the broadest in our industry. This create a very high barrier to entry. And also, even on Uber and through like other product categories, like, whenever we have like the public service deployment, we are building the WeRide brand recognition directly with end consumers, as well. If you talk in, like, say in Singapore, like in Abu Dhabi, in Middle East, in Dubai, in those cities, people know that WeRide brand quite well, I would say.
The bottom line is like, we're not just one of Uber's vendor, we're their equity linked key operator and key Robotaxi providers in key markets with a proven unit economics. We think our multi-scenario, multi-country footprint will makes us a very essential part of the urban mobility infrastructure, not just a replaceable supplier to anyone. Yeah. That's my answer to your question.
Thank you so much for the details, and congratulations again on the strong results. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you, Jen.
Thank you. We will now take our next question from Jiajie Shen of JP Morgan. Please ask your question, Jiajie. Your line is open.
Yes, thank you for taking my question, and congratulations on the very strong results. My first question is regarding fleet utilization. How do you expect it to grow in China, and what are the implications to unit economics? My second question is regarding overseas business. Your global business is showing great progress, and this is truly impressive. Could you please share more about key figures of the overseas business in 2025, and what are the 2026 guidance of key operational and financial metrics? Thank you.
Okay. I will take the first question. The first question is about the fleet utilization growth in China. It's about like the implications to unit economics. First of all, we are taking a number of steps to improve utilization. Raising fleet density in existing service areas, rolling out free pickup, drop off, i.e. P2P, and extending operation hours. We are seeing that translating to results. User adoption rate has been strong. Our Robotaxi use cases in China grow over 900% year-over-year in Q4. You know, this is an extraordinary number, and I don't expect we can keep this kind of number every year, but still, it's kind of extraordinary number. Our vehicle utilization is also trending up.
Today, each vehicle averages about 15 trips per day, with peak days reaching around 26 trips, you know, some peak day like festival or some very special, the Valentine's Day. The average trip distance is about 5 km, and pricing is roughly 2 RMB per km, which represents 30%-50% discount to traditional ride hailing. This is a deliberate promotional strategy as we scale region by region and drive our user adoption. As we expand to citywide coverage, like what we are working on toward Guangzhou, and the deepening integrations with platforms such as Amap from Alibaba, WeChat from Tencent, and Tencent Mobility, to match convenience of traditional ride hailing. We expect pricing to move closer to the standard rate around 3 RMB per km.
At this point, we see a clear and achievable path to improve unit economics in China. Over years, as our fleet size and coverage expand, we are targeting 25 trips per vehicle per day because, you know, autonomous driving, they are autonomous driving vehicles, Robotaxi, they don't need a driver. And the van, you know, you don't have an exhausted driver. Therefore, we can keep on going as long as we can take orders. At steady state, we expect contribution margins in China to be over 40%. Okay. That's my answer to your first question. I think, yeah, that's my answer to your second question. Yes.
The second question is about the overseas business and some of the forecast, right? Our international business is growing at a really like pleasant rate. For the Q4 of 2025, the overseas revenue was up 140% year-over-year, and it's contributing 31% of the total revenue. With the growth margin at like 40-ish, almost 50%. For the full year 2025, our overseas revenue grow about 305% year-over-year, and accounting for roughly 29% of the total revenue. The growth margin was around almost 50% as well. Overseas market offers a significantly stronger like growth and profitability potential.
For example, our Middle East subsidiary is already profitable on a standalone basis. Looking ahead to 2026, we expect the revenue continue to grow at a healthy pace. We are also on track to reach our goal for the global Robotaxi fleet as well as for different region. We believe we can still reach the goal by end of the year. On the growth margin side, we expect the growth margin to remain relatively stable for the international business. On the cash side, the operating cash flow may increase modestly on the group level, since we're continue to invest for talent and our R&D to support the long-term, like, core growth of the company. We'll provide more detailed guidance in the upcoming earnings release.
Directionally, this reflects how we are thinking about how we build up the business and the financial forecast. Yeah. Thank you.
We will now take our next question from Leo You of CLSA. Please ask your question, Leo. Your line is open.
Hi. Good evening, Tony and Jennifer. It's Leo from CLSA. Also two questions from me. First is could you please walk us through the key cost reductions and technology innovations behind the upgraded GXR? How would that drive further unit economics improvement going forward? Secondly, we are also very glad to see that you announced the share buyback plan. Could you please elaborate more on the thought process and how you're going to execute the share buyback plan going forward? Thanks very much.
Okay. I'll answer both questions. Thank you, Leo. The first one is on the cost reduction on GXR. Maybe I try to answer the question in a different way from the total cost of ownership perspective. As we mentioned earlier, the TCO for the China fleet has declined by as much as 38% in 2025. The two main drivers are below. First of all, which is now what Tony has already shared, there's a significant improvement in the remote assistant ratio from one to 10 in 2024 to one to 40 by end of 2025. We also have similar efficiency gains for the grid operator.
On both ends, we, there's an efficiency improvement on the operation level. Second, we have seen an overall 30% reduction in the BOM cost. That including the upgraded HPC as well as for the pre-installed new GXR Robotaxi. Meanwhile, now we are starting to have like larger volume, scale is starting to deliver the real benefits. As our fleet expands, we see a meaningful cost reduction through the volume of procurement. Also on the software side, I still want to remind everyone, the game changer here is really our WeRide GENESIS. With GENESIS allows us to handle the edge case much more efficiently and accelerates the iteration cycles.
It's easier for us to deploy and in a much larger ODD and with less remote assistance needed. Together, these are delivering very meaningful improvement in our cost structure. Yeah. The other one is regarding the share buyback. Today, our board of directors authorized a share repurchase program, effectively as of March 20, 2026, which is today as well. We may repurchase up to $100 million worth of our Class A ordinary shares from both Hong Kong Stock Exchange and NASDAQ over the next 12 months.
It's actually subject to the scope and limit of the repurchase mandate granted by the shareholder of the company on March 13, 2026, and approval of a similar repurchase mandate to be put forward to shareholders at upcoming 2026 Annual General Meeting for the company. Our proposed repurchase may be made from time to time on open market at a prevailing market price and in the privately negotiated transaction in block trades, depending on the market condition and in accordance with the applicable rule and regulation. That's my answer to your question, Leo. Thank you.
Thank you. We will now take our next question from Xinyu Fang of UBS. Please ask your question. Xinyu, your line is open.
Hi. Thank you for taking my question, and congratulations on delivering solid revenue growth and operation expansion. My first question is about revenue structure. We noticed that there has been quarterly fluctuations in the contribution of product and services revenue. How should we think about the revenue structure of the company going forward, both in the near term and medium term? As for my second question, apart from the RMB 100 million share buyback program, could you please share a little bit more on the future cash deployment plan of WeRide? Thank you.
Okay. I will take the first question. In 2025, our Robotaxi contributed 22% of the total revenue, and the Robobus contribute 34%. Our L2++ ADAS and data service contribute 29%. Together, these three pillars accounted for around 85% of our business, with Robovan and Robosweeper making up the remaining 15%. Those are the detailed numbers. If you do a forward-looking ahead, Robotaxi, Robobus, L2, and L2++ will remain our core growth engines, supported by strong synergies across our integrated autonomous driving ecosystem. You know, we have a platform strategy. Robotaxi is the fastest growing segment with significant scalability and improving unit economics, especially overseas. We expect its revenue share to increase over time. Just want to emphasize, WeRide inherently is a Robotaxi technology company, okay?
We have many products, but Robotaxi is the core. Robobus is currently our most geographically deployed business and benefits from clear synergies with Robotaxi in both regulation and commercialization. L2++ continues to gain traction with the partners like Chery, GAC, and Bosch, serving both as a revenue stream and a platform to validate our technology. Meanwhile, Robovans and Robosweepers provide complementary value with lower cost fixed route operation that also help us enter and educate new markets. Overall, this diversified portfolio give us both scale and balance, which we see a key strength. I think if you look at all autonomous driving company in this world, WeRide is unique, and only WeRide adopt this technology.
Okay, I'll answer Xinyu's last question. For the cash deployment side, we end 2025 with a little bit over RMB 1 billion in the cash reserve, which is a strong foundation to support our expansion. Our net cash burn rate is less than RMB 200 million, based on the past pattern. At the same time, our revenue growth is really accelerating, we can see from today's results. Our operating cash flow is becoming increasingly a more important funding source for us. At the scale, we are not just like investing and like raising capital from the capital markets and then spending all just on R&D, that's it.
We are generating cash ourselves and at a relatively fast speed as well. Overall, we are in a very solid liquidity position, and we'll continue to invest with discipline while we still maintain an ample runway to execute our growth strategy. Yeah. Thank you.
All right. Thank you. Due to time constraints, I'll conclude the call today. Thank you for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.