Verizon Communications delivered the first major upside surprise of New York’s earnings week. The Manhattan-headquartered telecom giant reported first-quarter 2026 results before the bell on Monday, April 27, beating analyst expectations on adjusted earnings, posting its first positive Q1 postpaid phone net additions since 2013, and raising its full-year guidance on the strength of the quarter. Shares climbed roughly 3.5% after the print, with the stock trading near $47.13 in early action and outperforming the broader market on a session where the S&P 500 inched to a fresh record close.
The release lands during one of the heaviest earnings weeks of the year, with Magnificent Seven megacaps including Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, and Meta Platforms also reporting. For Verizon, the print marks the strongest quarterly validation yet of CEO Dan Schulman’s transformation strategy, which centers on customer experience, cost discipline, and the integration of the recently closed Frontier Communications acquisition.
The Headline Numbers
Verizon reported adjusted earnings per share of $1.28 for the first quarter ended March 31, 2026, a 7.6% year-over-year increase that the company called its strongest quarterly growth rate since 2021. Wall Street had been looking for $1.21, putting the beat at roughly 5.79%. Diluted EPS came in at $1.20, up 4.3% year-over-year.
Total operating revenue reached $34.4 billion, up 2.9% from the prior-year period, with growth supported by both the Consumer and Business segments despite network outage impacts during the quarter. Consolidated net income climbed 3.3% to $5.1 billion, and consolidated adjusted EBITDA grew 6.7% year-over-year to $13.4 billion.
Cash generation was a particular bright spot. The company produced $8.0 billion in operating cash flow during the quarter, up 2.6% year-over-year, and $3.8 billion in free cash flow, up 4%. That output funded $5.4 billion in capital returns to shareholders, split between $2.9 billion in dividends and $2.5 billion in share repurchases.
The Subscriber Story
The most closely watched figure on the print was postpaid phone net additions, where Verizon delivered 55,000 net adds in the quarter. Compared with the same period in 2025, when the company lost 289,000 postpaid phone subscribers, that represents a year-over-year improvement of roughly 344,000 customers. It is also Verizon’s first positive first-quarter postpaid phone net add figure since 2013, ending a 13-year streak that had become a recurring concern for analysts and investors alike.
Just as importantly, the additions came with lower churn. Consumer postpaid phone churn exited the quarter below 85 basis points, and management said acquisition and retention costs both moved meaningfully lower during the period. The combination, according to Schulman, points to healthier customer economics underneath the headline subscriber number.
Updated Full-Year Guidance
The strong quarter prompted Verizon to raise two key components of its 2026 outlook.
The company lifted its adjusted EPS growth guidance to a range of 5.0% to 6.0% year-over-year, up from a prior range of 4% to 5%. That translates to a full-year adjusted EPS range of $4.95 to $4.99, with the midpoint of $4.97 sitting just above the analyst consensus of $4.91.
Verizon also raised its postpaid phone net additions guidance, now anticipating full-year results in the upper half of its previously stated 750,000 to 1 million range. Mobility and broadband service revenue growth guidance of 2% to 3% was reaffirmed, with the company noting that Q1 represented the low point of the year. Free cash flow growth guidance of approximately 7% or more versus 2025 was also reiterated.
Schulman framed the guidance update as a confidence call backed by data. He said the changes were being made early in the year because the underlying performance, the transformation work already underway, and the leading indicators in the business all support a higher level of conviction.
The Frontier Acquisition Factor
Verizon’s first-quarter results include Frontier Communications financials beginning January 20, 2026, the date the acquisition closed. The deal added meaningful scale to Verizon’s fiber footprint but also pushed total debt to $172.5 billion from $143.6 billion in the prior-year period.
The integration is one of the larger telecom transactions of the past several years, and management’s ability to deliver Q1 EPS growth while absorbing the incremental depreciation and interest expense from Frontier is part of why analysts received the print favorably. The acquisition also underpins Verizon’s longer-term broadband strategy, which is increasingly central to the company’s growth narrative as the wireless market matures.
How the Print Fits Into the New York Earnings Week
Verizon was one of the first New York–headquartered megacaps to report this earnings cycle, and the upside print set a constructive tone for a week dominated by tech-heavy Magnificent Seven results. Within Monday’s tape, the stock’s gain stood out against modest broader-market movement: the S&P 500 added about 0.1%, the Nasdaq Composite gained roughly 0.2%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped about 62 points.
Verizon’s move also contrasted with notable single-stock declines elsewhere in the session. Domino’s Pizza fell 10.5% after missing first-quarter expectations, and Poet Technologies dropped nearly 50% after canceling all purchase orders from Marvell-owned Celestial AI. Qualcomm, on the other end of the spectrum, surged about 9% on a separate AI hardware story tied to OpenAI.
What to Watch Next
Three threads will determine whether the rally has staying power. The first is execution on the Frontier integration, where investors will want to see continued progress on synergy capture and free cash flow performance over the next several quarters. The second is whether the postpaid subscriber momentum extends into Q2 and beyond, validating the 13-year reversal as a structural shift rather than a one-quarter outlier. The third is the broader competitive picture, including how Verizon’s pricing and bundling strategies hold up against AT&T and T-Mobile in a market where customer acquisition costs have been a persistent drag on margins across the sector.
For now, the New York Stock Exchange has its first major earnings winner of the week, Verizon has its strongest quarterly growth rate in five years, and Schulman’s transformation thesis has a data point that backs up the messaging.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Stock prices and financial figures referenced reflect publicly reported data as of April 27, 2026, and are subject to change. Forward-looking guidance issued by Verizon Communications is a projection, not a guarantee, and may be revised. Readers should conduct their own research and consult a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.










