Twilio stock has had a strong 2026. TWLO is up more than 32% year-to-date, trading around $184–$188, while much of the broader software sector has struggled with declines of around 30%.
Twilio Inc., TWLO
The turnaround story centers on one thing: AI.
For years, Twilio was criticized for weak execution, bloated costs, and a messaging business seen as increasingly commoditized. That narrative is starting to change.
At its recent Signal conference, Twilio unveiled a set of new AI tools — Conversation Memory, Conversation Orchestrator, Conversation Intelligence, and Agent Connect. These are designed to help businesses manage customer context, route conversations between humans and AI agents, and analyze interactions across channels in real time.
Management was upfront that these products are not yet contributing meaningfully to guidance. That means the AI upside, if it comes, is still ahead.
The more immediate catalyst has been VoiceAI. Twilio’s Voice business accelerated for a sixth consecutive quarter in Q1 2026. Products like Branded Calling and Conversational Intelligence reportedly grew more than 20%.
Multi-product adoption is also picking up. The number of customers using more than one Twilio product grew 29% year-over-year, up from 26% the prior quarter.
That matters because roughly 60% of Twilio’s customers still use only a single product. There is a large cross-sell opportunity sitting within the existing customer base.
AI-native customers who started with voice are now expanding into SMS, RCS, and email. That kind of horizontal growth is what investors have wanted to see from Twilio for years.
Q1 2026 revenue came in at $1.41 billion, up 20% year-over-year. Gross profit hit a record $697.5 million, up 16%. Organic net retention improved to 110%.
Management raised full-year revenue growth guidance to 14.5% at the midpoint.
Carrier fee increases are expected to compress gross margins by around 200 basis points this year, but that pressure has not materially dented customer demand or gross profit growth so far.
Headcount has stayed relatively flat at around 5,500 employees despite heavy AI R&D investment. Stock-based compensation dropped to 9.7% of revenue in Q1 2026, a level the company hadn’t seen in some time.
The stock is not cheap. TWLO trades at roughly 35x non-GAAP trailing earnings, above the sector median of around 26x. Price-to-free-cash-flow sits near 25x, also above the sector.
GuruFocus puts its GF Value at $116.62 — implying the stock is trading at a 61% premium to its estimated intrinsic value.
Insider activity adds another cautious note. Executives and insiders sold $137.8 million in stock over the past three months.
Wall Street is more constructive. Of 22 analysts covering TWLO, 17 rate it a Buy. The average 12-month price target is $199.52, implying roughly 8% upside from current levels.
The post Twilio (TWLO) Stock Is Up 32% This Year — Can the AI Pivot Keep It Going? appeared first on CoinCentral.


