Palo Alto Networks reports 31% revenue growth to $3B in Q3 2026
The cybersecurity giant's AI-fueled expansion and acquisition spree are driving a 62% stock surge this year, with implications for the broader digital security landscape
Palo Alto Networks just posted fiscal Q3 2026 results that make most tech earnings look quaint by comparison. The cybersecurity heavyweight pulled in $3.0 billion in total revenue for the quarter, a 31% jump from the $2.289 billion it reported in the same period last year.
The company’s stock has climbed roughly 62% year-to-date, outpacing broader cybersecurity benchmarks by a comfortable margin.
The numbers behind the growth
A significant chunk of the quarter’s performance came from Palo Alto’s acquisition strategy, with CyberArk and Chronosphere together contributing $388 million to the top line.
Next-Generation Security annual recurring revenue surged 60% year-over-year to $8.13 billion. Remaining performance obligations climbed 36% to $18.4 billion.
CEO Nikesh Arora pointed to AI-driven innovations and the company’s platformization strategy as the primary engines behind the expansion.
Palo Alto raised its full-year guidance on the back of these results, citing AI adoption as a significant factor driving cybersecurity spending across its customer base.
What investors should be watching
The post-earnings trading session was a mixed bag, with some after-hours declines despite the strong headline numbers. The updated guidance helped stabilize sentiment, projecting continued strong performance through the rest of the fiscal year.
Strip out the $388 million from CyberArk and Chronosphere, and you’re looking at roughly $2.6 billion in organic revenue. Investors who aren’t parsing the acquisition math may find themselves surprised when those contributions stop being additive to growth comparisons.
The 60% surge in Next-Generation Security ARR is the metric to watch going forward. Recurring revenue is the lifeblood of any subscription-based business model, and $8.13 billion in ARR provides meaningful revenue visibility well into the future.
One risk worth flagging: Palo Alto’s growth story is increasingly tied to the AI narrative. If enterprise AI adoption slows, the $18.4 billion in remaining performance obligations provides a buffer, but it’s not infinite.
The competitive landscape is also heating up. CrowdStrike, Fortinet, and a growing crop of AI-native security startups are all chasing the same enterprise budgets.