Bumble Inc. (BMBL)
NASDAQ: BMBL · IEX Real-Time Price · USD
9.13
-0.04 (-0.44%)
At close: Jul 26, 2024, 4:00 PM
9.11
-0.02 (-0.22%)
After-hours: Jul 26, 2024, 6:53 PM EDT
Bumble Revenue
Bumble had revenue of $267.78M in the quarter ending March 31, 2024, with 10.22% growth. This brings the company's revenue in the last twelve months to $1.08B, up 14.98% year-over-year. In the year 2023, Bumble had annual revenue of $1.05B with 16.42% growth.
Revenue (ttm)
$1.08B
Revenue Growth
+14.98%
P/S Ratio
1.07
Revenue / Employee
$897,214
Employees
1,200
Market Cap
1.15B
Revenue Chart
Revenue History
Fiscal Year End | Revenue | Change | Growth |
---|---|---|---|
Dec 31, 2023 | 1.05B | 148.33M | 16.42% |
Dec 31, 2022 | 903.50M | 142.59M | 18.74% |
Dec 31, 2021 | 760.91M | 221.36M | 41.03% |
Dec 31, 2020 | 539.55M | - | - |
Sources: Historical revenue is based on company filings submitted to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The most recent revenue numbers may be taken from company press releases.
Revenue Definition
Revenue, also called sales, is the amount of money a company receives from its business activities, such as sales of products or services. Revenue does not take any expenses into account and is therefore different from profits.
Full DefinitionBMBL News
- 9 days ago - Bumble Inc. to Announce Second Quarter 2024 Financial Results on August 7, 2024 - Business Wire
- 5 weeks ago - Bumble Inc. Appoints Elizabeth Monteleone as Chief Legal Officer - Business Wire
- 2 months ago - Very bad news for Bumble and Match Group stocks - Invezz
- 2 months ago - Bumble buys community building app Geneva to expand further into friendships - TechCrunch
- 2 months ago - Bumble Inc. Signs Agreement to Acquire Group and Community App Geneva - Business Wire
- 2 months ago - 'Unbelievably insulting': Bumble apologises for billboard ad campaign - Skynews
- 2 months ago - Bumble stumbles, apologizes for ads sneering at celibacy as an alternative to dating - Market Watch
- 2 months ago - Bumble Is Removing Anti-Celibacy Ads Following Backlash - WSJ