Google’s Historic $100 Billion Quarter
Alphabet Inc., Google’s parent company, has reported its first-ever $100 billion quarterly revenue, a landmark achievement driven by robust growth across all its primary business segments. CEO Sundar Pichai announced the results on social media platform X, describing it as a “milestone quarter” fueled by the company’s accelerating artificial intelligence (AI) strategy.
Key Takeaways
- Google’s quarterly revenue hit $100 billion, doubling from $50 billion five years ago.
- Strong double-digit growth was seen in Search, YouTube, and Google Cloud.
- AI is a core driver, with over 13 million developers using Google’s generative AI models.
- YouTube Shorts now generates more revenue per watch hour than traditional videos.
AI Drives Unprecedented Growth
Pichai highlighted that the company’s “full-stack approach to AI” is creating significant momentum. Advanced models like Gemini 2.5 Pro, Veo, Genie 3, and Nano are at the forefront of this innovation. More than 13 million developers have already built applications using Google’s generative AI, with the Gemini 3 model scheduled for launch later this year.
Search and Cloud See Major Gains
Google Search is experiencing an “expansionary moment,” with consistent year-on-year growth in queries. The rapid rollout of AI Overviews and AI Mode has been a success; AI Mode is now available in 40 languages and boasts 75 million daily users. In the US, AI Mode queries doubled in the third quarter.
Google Cloud reported another quarter of accelerating growth, largely powered by AI-related revenue. New customer acquisitions grew by approximately 34 per cent year-on-year, and over 70 per cent of existing customers now use Google’s AI products. Impressively, thirteen Cloud product lines have each achieved an annual run rate exceeding $1 billion.
YouTube Dominates Streaming
YouTube maintained its position as the number one platform for streaming watch time in the US for over two years. A key shift is occurring with YouTube Shorts, its short-form video feature, which now earns more revenue per watch hour than traditional in-stream videos.
Waymo Expansion on the Horizon
Pichai also noted progress at Waymo, Alphabet’s self-driving unit. The company is preparing to expand its operations, with launches planned for London next year and expansions into Dallas, Nashville, Denver, and Seattle.
Pichai concluded by thanking Google’s global employees and partners for their contributions. The announcement even drew a positive response from Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla and X, who replied, “Nice work!”



