After a year of frenzied dealmaking and rumors of an upcoming IPO, the financial scrutiny into OpenAI is intensifying. Leaked documents obtained by tech blogger Ed Zitron provide more of a glimpse into OpenAIโs financials โ specifically its revenue and compute costs over the past couple of years.ย ย
Zitron reported this week that in 2024, Microsoft received $493.8 million in revenue share payments from OpenAI. In the first three quarters of 2025, that number jumped to $865.8 million, according to documents he viewed.
OpenAI reportedly shares 20% of its revenue with Microsoft as part of a previous deal where the software giant invested over $13 billion in the powerful AI startup. (Neither the startup nor the people in Redmond have publicly confirmed this percentage.)
However, this is where things get a little sticky, because Microsoft also shares revenue with OpenAI, kicking back about 20% of the revenues from Bing and Azure OpenAI Service, a source familiar with the matter told TechCrunch. Bing is powered by OpenAI, and the OpenAI Service sells cloud access to OpenAIโs models to developers and businesses.ย ย
The source also told TechCrunch that the leaked payments refer to Microsoftโs net revenue share, not the gross revenue share. In other words, they donโt include whatever Microsoft paid to OpenAI from Bing and Azure OpenAI royalties. Microsoft deducts those figures from its internally reported revenue share numbers, according to this person.
Microsoft doesnโt break out how much it makes from Bing and Azure OpenAI in its financial statements, so itโs difficult to estimate how much the tech giant is kicking back.
Nevertheless, the leaked documents provide a window into the hottest company on the private markets today โ and not just how much it makes in revenue, but also how much itโs spending in comparison to that revenue.ย ย
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So, based on that widely reported 20% revenue-share statistic, we can infer that OpenAIโs revenue was at least $2.5 billion in 2024 and $4.33 billion in the first three quarters of 2025 โ but very likely to be more. Previous reports from The Information put OpenAIโs 2024 revenue at around $4 billion, and its revenue from the first half of 2025 at $4.3 billion.ย ย
Altman also recently said OpenAIโs revenue is โwell moreโ than reports of $13 billion a year, will end the year above $20 billion in annualized revenue run rate (which is a projection, not guidance on actual revenue), and that the company could even hit $100 billion by 2027.ย
Per Zitronโs analysis, OpenAI may have spent roughly $3.8 billion on inference in 2024. That spend increased to roughly $8.65 billion in the first nine months of 2025. Inference is the compute used to run a trained AI model to generate responses.ย ย
OpenAI has historically almost exclusively relied on Microsoft Azure to provide compute access, though it has also struck deals with CoreWeave and Oracle, and more recently with AWS and Google Cloud.ย
Previous reports put OpenAIโs entire compute spend at roughly $5.6 billion for 2024 and its โcost of revenueโ at $2.5 billion for the first half of 2025.ย ย
A source familiar with the matter told TechCrunch that while OpenAIโs training spend is mostly non-cash โ meaning, paid by credits Microsoft awarded OpenAI as part of its investment โ the firmโs inference spend is largely cash. (Training refers to the compute resources needed to initially train a model.)
While not a complete picture, these numbers imply that OpenAI could be spendingย more on inference costs than it is earning in revenue.ย
And those implications promise to add to the incessant AI bubble chatter that has seeped into every conversation from New York City to Silicon Valley. If model giant OpenAI really still is in the red running its models, what might this mean for the massive investments at jaw-dropping valuations for the rest of the AI world?
OpenAI declined to comment. Microsoft did not respond to TechCrunchโs request for comment.
Got a sensitive tip or confidential documents? Weโre reporting on the inner workings of the AI industry โ from the companies shaping its future to the people impacted by their decisions. Reach out to Rebecca Bellan atย rebecca.bellan@techcrunch.comย or Russell Brandom atย russell.brandom@techcrunch.com. For secure communication, you can contact them via Signal atย @rebeccabellan.491ย and russellbrandom.49.


