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CRED post ₹298 cr loss in FY25

In a significant step toward its goal of full profitability, CRED reported its financial results for FY25 on January 29, 2026, highlighting a dramatic reduction in its operating burn.

The Bengaluru-based fintech unicorn saw its operating losses shrink by 51% to ₹298 crore, down from ₹609 crore in the previous fiscal year. While the company remains loss-making on a net basis due to non-cash expenses like ESOPs and depreciation, the sharp decline in operating loss suggests that its high-margin financial services are successfully subsidizing its lifestyle offerings.


1. Financial Highlights: FY25 vs. FY24

CRED’s strategy of “monetizing the affluent” showed clear momentum, with average revenue per user (ARPU) hitting a new high for the Indian fintech sector.

Key MetricFY24 (Actual)FY25 (Reported)Change (YoY)
Operating Revenue₹2,473 Crore₹2,735 Crore↑ 16%
Operating Loss₹609 Crore₹298 Crore↓ 51%
Total Net Loss₹1,644 Crore₹1,457 Crore↓ 11.5%
Gross Margin~70%~70%Stable

2. Key Drivers of Improved Unit Economics

The 51% reduction in operating loss was primarily driven by a shift in how members use the “super-app” and a reduction in customer acquisition costs.

  • The “3-Product” Rule: Approximately 45% of active members now use three or more CRED products (such as Credit Card Payments, CRED Cash, and CRED Garage). This cross-utilization drove ARPU to ₹2,000, the highest in the Indian payments ecosystem.
  • Lending & AUM: Lending remained the primary revenue engine. Managed Assets Under Management (AUM) reached ₹22,000 crore, with a focus on high-credit-score individuals.
  • Operational Leverage: Monthly Transacting Users (MTU) grew 14.5% to 1.26 crore, while transaction frequency increased 34%, allowing the company to generate more revenue from the same fixed infrastructure.
  • Marketing Efficiency: Following the trend from FY24, CRED continued to slash its marketing spend, relying more on organic growth and the “network effect” of its premium user base.

3. New Product Traction: Money & Garage

FY25 saw the scaling of several newer verticals that are expected to drive 2026 growth:

  • CRED Garage: The vehicle management platform now tracks over 6.5 million vehicles, monetizing through insurance renewals, FASTag recharges, and used-car sales via CARS24.
  • CRED Money: Launched in late 2024, this asset-tracking tool has reportedly increased user investment activity by 6% to 14% among early adopters.
  • Insurance Marketplace: The addition of multiple new insurers to the platform provided a high-margin boost to the services revenue.

4. The “Valuation Reset” and IPO Outlook

Despite the improving financials, CRED faced a reality check in the private markets:

  • Series G Funding: In May 2025, CRED raised $72–$75 million led by GIC at a valuation of $3.64 billion. This was a 43% haircut from its 2022 peak of $6.4 billion.
  • IPO Timeline: Founder Kunal Shah remains cautious, stating in late 2025 that the company is still “too young” for public markets. However, with the narrowing burn, analysts expect a domestic listing could be on the horizon for late 2027 or 2028.

Conclusion: Path to a Profitable 2026

CRED ends FY25 in its strongest financial position to date. By cutting its operating burn in half while maintaining a high-spending user base, the company has proven that its “luxury club” business model can scale sustainably. For 2026, the focus will be on achieving full-year net profitability, a milestone that would make CRED one of the few Indian unicorns to successfully navigate the transition from a high-burn startup to a profitable financial institution.

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