MicroVision delivered a transition quarter in QQ4 2025 characterized by a pronounced revenue gap and meaningful non-cash impairment charges, underscoring the company’s reshaping under LiDAR 2.0. Revenue for the quarter was $0.223 million, a sharp 86% YoY decline from $1.65 million in Q4 2024, with a gross loss of $16.1 million and an EBITDA of negative $26.5 million. The full-year 2025 revenue was only $1.2 million, down from $4.7 million in 2024, reflecting a year of portfolio realignment, capacity reallocation, and the ramp of new product lines after the Luminar and Scantinel acquisitions. Management stressed that the core objective is to achieve scalable deployments across diversified end markets, supported by a broader LiDAR portfolio and an emphasis on software (MOSAIK and SENTINEL) to reduce hardware costs and enable faster deployments.
Looking ahead, management provided calendar year 2026 revenue guidance of $10–$15 million, with cash use in operations plus capex of $65–$70 million, reflecting an intentional, disciplined burn as Luminar/Scantinel revenue streams are integrated and scaled. The遠-term revenue trajectory remains anchored in three verticals: industrial (MOVIA S launch and deployments), security/defense (MOVIA L, MOVIA Air, IRIS/HALO), and automotive (longer-duration ramp anticipated toward 2028–2030 as OEMs re-evaluate Level 2+/Level 3 requirements and cost targets). The notes issued post-year-end (two senior secured convertible notes totaling $43 million) bolster liquidity and facilitate debt refinancing, but do not eliminate substantial execution risk tied to introducing a broad LiDAR software-enabled portfolio in a highly competitive market. The company also announced ongoing consolidation of Redmond into Orlando, with expected 2026 asset impairment and restructuring charges. The combination of a broader technology portfolio, a refocused operating model, and improving access to customers provides an asymmetric upside if autonomous and defense applications translate into meaningful orders, but the near-term profitability and cash-flow dynamics remain challenging. Investor takeaway: MicroVision is transitioning from a hardware-centric, early-stage LiDAR supplier into a software-enabled, multi-market LiDAR platform provider. The success of 2026 guidance hinges on converting Luminar-based pipeline into committed production and achieving meaningful MOVIA S and defense orders in 2026 and beyond.