NVIDIA reported record quarterly revenue of $81.6 billion for Q1 fiscal 2027, driven by surging investment in AI infrastructure and hyperscale data center buildouts. Data Center revenue reached $75.2 billion, up 92% year-over-year, while networking revenue nearly tripled to $14.8 billion as cloud providers and AI infrastructure operators accelerated deployments of large-scale GPU clusters and high-speed interconnect fabrics.
The results underscore NVIDIA’s expanding role beyond GPUs into full-stack AI infrastructure spanning compute, networking, storage, software, and emerging AI factory architectures. CEO Jensen Huang described the ongoing expansion of AI factories as “the largest infrastructure expansion in human history,” pointing to rapid adoption of agentic AI workloads across enterprises and cloud providers. NVIDIA also introduced a new reporting framework centered around two primary platforms: Data Center and Edge Computing. Within Data Center, the company will now separately track Hyperscale deployments and a broader ACIE segment covering AI clouds, industrial deployments, and enterprise AI factories.
Networking and infrastructure announcements during the quarter highlighted NVIDIA’s push deeper into AI data center architecture. The company expanded its collaboration with Google Cloud around Vera Rubin-powered systems and Blackwell GPUs, entered production with Dynamo 1.0 inference software, and strengthened its optical networking ecosystem through partnerships with Marvell Technology, Coherent, Corning, and Lumentum. NVIDIA also continued promoting NVLink Fusion, BlueField-4 accelerated infrastructure, silicon photonics, and AI-RAN initiatives with telecom partners including Nokia and T-Mobile.
Additional Q1 highlights included:
- Data Center compute revenue reached $60.4 billion, up 77% year-over-year
- Data Center networking revenue reached $14.8 billion, up 199% year-over-year
- Q2 FY2027 revenue guidance was set at approximately $91 billion
- NVIDIA said its outlook assumes no Data Center compute revenue from China
- The company authorized an additional $80 billion share repurchase program
- Quarterly cash dividend increased from $0.01 to $0.25 per share
- Edge Computing revenue reached $6.4 billion, up 29% year-over-year
- NVIDIA announced the Vera Rubin platform, BlueField-4 STX, and expanded agentic AI software offerings
- The company expanded automotive, robotics, AI-RAN, and industrial AI partnerships globally
“The buildout of AI factories — the largest infrastructure expansion in human history — is accelerating at extraordinary speed,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “Agentic AI has arrived, doing productive work, generating real value and scaling rapidly across companies and industries.”
🌐 Analysis: NVIDIA’s latest quarter reinforces how AI infrastructure spending has evolved from a GPU procurement cycle into a broad-based data center modernization wave encompassing networking, optics, storage, inference software, and power-efficient systems design. The sharp rise in networking revenue suggests hyperscalers increasingly view high-bandwidth fabrics, NVLink architectures, and optical interconnects as critical bottlenecks in scaling large AI clusters.
🌐 NVIDIA’s partnerships with optics suppliers and silicon ecosystem players also reflect mounting industry focus on co-packaged optics, photonics, AI fabrics, and next-generation scale-out architectures needed to support Blackwell- and Rubin-class deployments. Competitors including AMD, Broadcom, Intel, and hyperscale cloud providers continue investing heavily in custom AI networking and accelerator platforms as AI infrastructure spending accelerates globally.








