There’s a version of Palantir (PLTR) that investors have been debating for years — overvalued, government-dependent, a good story at a bad price. That version is starting to look seriously outdated.
Q1 2026 changed the narrative in a way that’s hard to dismiss.
What the Tape Is Telling You
On May 4th, Palantir dropped a quarter that didn’t just beat estimates — it redrew the growth curve entirely. Revenue came in at $1.63 billion, up 85% year-over-year — the fastest top-line expansion since the company’s 2020 direct listing. Analysts were looking for $1.54 billion. The miss, in their favor, was nearly $90 million. That’s not noise.
U.S. revenue surged 104% to $1.28 billion, now representing 79% of the total business. Net income hit $871 million — a 53% margin — while adjusted free cash flow reached $925 million at a 57% margin. These aren’t the metrics of a speculative AI play. They’re the metrics of a machine that’s found its gear.
Management raised full-year 2026 revenue guidance to $7.65–$7.66 billion, implying 71% growth — 10 full percentage points above what they guided in February. CEO Alex Karp told investors he expects the U.S. business to double again in 2027.
Slight tangent worth noting: Palantir’s Rule of 40 score — a composite metric of revenue growth plus profit margin — clocked in at 145%. For context, most enterprise software companies struggle to crack 40. The company itself pointed out that only NVIDIA, Micron, and SK hynix have matched that level among AI infrastructure peers.
The Structural Shift Nobody’s Pricing In
Here’s where it gets interesting. For a long time, Palantir’s growth story was anchored to government contracts — defense, intelligence, federal agencies. That base is still there and still expanding; U.S. government revenue grew 84% in Q1. But the commercial side is now accelerating at a pace that changes the risk profile of the whole company.
U.S. commercial revenue is now guided to at least $3.22 billion for 2026, with management projecting 120% year-over-year growth in that segment alone. This isn’t a pivot — it’s a multiplication. The company’s AI Platform (AIP) is being adopted by enterprises across industries who need to operationalize AI at scale, not just experiment with it in a lab environment.
Palantir’s two core platforms — Gotham for government and Foundry for commercial customers — are increasingly positioned as critical infrastructure for turning massive datasets into real decisions. That’s a different moat than most software companies carry.
The Risk You Shouldn’t Ignore
Valuation is the elephant in the room. Trading at roughly 200x trailing earnings and 80x forward estimates, PLTR sits in a different stratosphere than most enterprise software peers, which typically trade at 25–40x. The stock pulled back modestly after the Q1 print — not because the quarter was bad, but because the bar is now so high that even a perfect quarter can spark profit-taking.
Government concentration — while shrinking as a percentage — is still real. Budget cycles, policy shifts, and contract timing can introduce quarterly noise. And at a $300+ billion market cap, the margin for error is thin.
Still, the bull case here isn’t about hype. It’s about a company that has spent years building the infrastructure for the AI era and is now collecting on that bet at a scale that few expected this quickly. The next earnings catalyst lands August 3rd.
Worth a closer look.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Past performance is not indicative of future results. All investing involves risk, including the possible loss of principal.
