Key Highlights
- Nvidia’s fiscal 2026 revenue reached $215.9 billion, marking a 65% year-over-year increase
- The Data Center division contributed $193.7 billion to Nvidia’s total revenue
- AMD achieved $34.6 billion in full-year 2025 revenue, including a record $16.6 billion from its Data Center segment
- Nvidia’s Data Center business eclipses AMD’s entire data center revenue by more than 11x
- Export restrictions pose challenges for both chipmakers, with Nvidia removing China data center projections from Q1 2027 guidance
While both Nvidia and AMD manufacture processors that drive artificial intelligence workloads, their current positions in the AI infrastructure market differ dramatically. The latest financial results paint a revealing picture.
Nvidia Delivers Dominant Performance
Nvidia’s fiscal 2026 results were exceptional by any measure. The company generated $215.9 billion in total revenue, representing a 65% surge compared to the previous fiscal year. Net income reached approximately $120.1 billion, while gross margin stood at an impressive 71.1%.
The lion’s share came from Data Center operations, which alone accounted for $193.7 billion. This translates to roughly 90% of Nvidia’s entire revenue stream now originating from AI infrastructure products. The portfolio includes graphics processing units, networking equipment, and integrated software platforms that enable enterprises to construct sophisticated AI computing environments.
That software infrastructure represents a strategic advantage for Nvidia. It creates significant switching costs, making it challenging for clients to migrate to alternative solutions even when competing chips deliver similar technical capabilities.
One caution emerged from Nvidia’s outlook. Management indicated they’re excluding anticipated data center chip sales from China in their fiscal Q1 2027 projections, citing continued export regulation challenges.
AMD Shows Progress Despite Substantial Distance
AMD reported $34.6 billion in consolidated revenue for 2025. The company earned approximately $4.3 billion in net income, with gross margin reaching 50%. These figures represent strong performance in absolute terms.
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., AMD
AMD’s Data Center business emerged as its star performer, posting record revenue of $16.6 billion—a 32% year-over-year improvement. This expansion stemmed from increased adoption of EPYC server chips and Instinct GPU accelerators among cloud and enterprise clients.
Yet the scale difference remains striking. Nvidia’s Data Center operation alone generates more than eleven times what AMD’s entire data center division produces. Bridging that disparity requires sustained execution over multiple quarters.
AMD wasn’t immune to regulatory headwinds either. Export limitations affecting its MI308 data center accelerators impacted 2025 performance, demonstrating that both semiconductor leaders face similar geopolitical obstacles.
Comparing Strategic Positions
AMD maintains greater business diversification compared to Nvidia. The company generated $14.6 billion from Client and Gaming operations, plus $3.5 billion from Embedded products in 2025. This portfolio breadth provides insulation if demand weakens in any single category.
Nvidia has transformed into essentially a pure-play AI infrastructure provider. While this concentration has generated extraordinary profitability, it also creates vulnerability should data center capital expenditures decelerate.
AMD’s competitive strategy centers on capturing incrementally larger portions of the AI accelerator ecosystem over successive quarters. The objective isn’t necessarily overtaking Nvidia outright—consistent share gains would represent significant success.
Nvidia’s recent quarterly outlook explicitly excludes China-based data center revenue, a development that continues drawing investor scrutiny.
Bottom Line
Nvidia maintains undisputed leadership in AI semiconductor technology today, supported by exceptional profitability and a software platform that reinforces customer retention. AMD demonstrates consistent progress and market share expansion, yet the data center revenue differential remains substantial. Both companies confront meaningful uncertainties from trade restrictions and potential shifts in enterprise spending patterns.



