Atlassian (U.S. ticker TEAM) is a collaboration and developer software subscription vendor, with core products Jira, Confluence, and Jira Service Management for IT service management; the rating this report gives is Hold.
Revenue is mostly subscription-based, with FY2025 total revenue of $5.215 billion, cloud subscriptions making up about two-thirds and clearly the main channel; the self-managed Data Center product line already has an announced sunset timeline, pushing customers to migrate to the cloud. Revenue in the latest quarter grew 32% year-over-year, impressive on the surface, but management acknowledges that about $50 million of it came from customers buying ahead of the discontinuation, effectively pulling future fiscal-year revenue forward, which makes the FY2027 comparison base harder.
The company has strong cash flow and very light capex, with FY2025 free cash flow of $1.416 billion; the problem is profit quality: stock-based compensation amounts to 25 percentage points of operating margin, and it has yet to turn a profit on a GAAP basis. The moat is mainly the high switching costs from workflows deeply embedded into operations and the third-party app ecosystem; what the report worries about is that AI coding and agent tools could over the long run erode the per-seat expansion logic, which is exactly the risk the software sector's sharp drop early in the year was betting on.
On valuation, the current price is $89.95, the report's ideal buy range is $68 to $80, and the hold range is $86 to $108; the forward price-to-sales is about 3.5x, not expensive relative to peers, but the report cautions that this kind of cheapness corresponds to a risk discount, and the current price's margin of safety is not thick.
The report's final stance: existing holders can keep holding and watch the FY2027 validation pace closely, while new money is better off waiting for a lower price or harder earnings evidence. The above summarizes the report's views and does not constitute investment advice. Markets carry risk; invest with caution.
Meta Information
Ticker: TEAM.US
Full company name: Atlassian Corporation
Current price and market cap: 89.95 USD / 23.28 billion USD (latest Nasdaq quote available as of 2026-06-12 Asia time; the most recently completed trading day was 2026-06-11 U.S. Eastern time)
Currency: USD
Report date: 2026-06-12
Industry classification: Collaboration software
One-line positioning: a collaboration and development software subscription vendor built around Jira, Confluence, and JSM.
This report is written to a comprehensive research standard, covering both the next 12 months and a 3–5 year observation window, with a balanced risk appetite. The research focuses on three more specific questions rather than the broad "is this a good company": whether the Data Center wind-down is pulling future growth forward; whether AI is deepening the moat or rewriting Atlassian's old logic of charging by the seat; and how much of these changes the current share price has already priced in. All prices and valuations use USD throughout.
Research Summary
Atlassian is a very clear business machine, not a loose set of software brands: it enters team collaboration and software development workflows with low-friction, relatively standardized tools like Jira and Confluence, then expands the same customer onto Jira Service Management, Loom, Rovo, Collections, and Marketplace, and finally pulls more and more workflows, knowledge, code, video, and service requests into a single Teamwork Graph. Where it actually makes money is still subscriptions, especially the two main lines of Cloud and Data Center; FY2025 total revenue was 5.215 billion USD, of which Cloud was 3.447 billion and Data Center was 1.467 billion, and the subscription business is already the absolute core. The company's own framing is direct: Cloud is the primary commercial form, Data Center is a transitional self-managed deployment option, and without AI, Rovo, continuous innovation, and platform integration, capabilities only Cloud can fully deliver are absent.
The market is now trading two colliding narratives rather than a single one. The first is "AI beneficiary": Q3 FY2026 total revenue of 1.787 billion USD, up 32% year over year; Cloud revenue of 1.132 billion USD, up 29%; RPO of 3.996 billion USD, up 37%; Service Collection ARR crossing 1 billion USD and up more than 30%, with the company stating that customers adopting Rovo grow ARR at roughly twice the rate of customers who have not. The second is "AI victim": early in the year the software sector broadly hit an AI-disruption scare, and in a Reuters report on January 29 Atlassian fell 12.6% in a single day; ahead of the April 30 earnings the stock was down roughly 60% year to date at one point, as the market worried that AI coding and agent tools would weaken Jira's seat expansion and erode the pricing power of collaboration software. In other words, the market is simultaneously betting that Atlassian becomes the work operating system of the AI era and worrying that AI hollows out its original per-seat economic model.
The wild swings in the share price over the past few years come at their core from the valuation framework and growth credibility being repeatedly rewritten, not from the business quality suddenly becoming two different companies. The last upswing rode cloud migration, platformization, ITSM penetration, and an extremely high SaaS risk appetite; in 2021 the stock reached an all-time high of 458.13 USD. The subsequent downswing stacked three needles: rising rates compressed high-multiple SaaS valuations across the board; GAAP losses and enormous stock-based compensation worsened the accounting quality of "high-quality growth"; and on top of that, the entire software sector hit an AI scare in early 2026, with Atlassian sitting right at the intersection of "developer tools + collaboration software," making it one of the easiest names to use as a short on AI disruption. After the Q3 FY2026 earnings, the market began correcting this extreme pessimism, and the stock rose more than 18% at one point after hours.
The most important bull-bear divide now centers on three finer variables rather than whether Jira can still be sold. First, how much of Q3's high growth came from real demand and how much from purchase pull-forward triggered by the Data Center wind-down. Management acknowledged plainly on the earnings call that Q3 Data Center revenue beat expectations, mainly from higher upfront term license revenue; relative to the company's original expectation for Q3, the quarter recognized about 50 million USD more upfront term license revenue, and Q4 will still see a "lump" of revenue recognition pulled from FY2027 into FY2026. Second, whether AI is incremental or defensive. The company can point to some encouraging signs, such as faster ARR growth among Rovo customers and AI credit usage growing more than 20% month over month, but this is still mainly management's framing and is far from forming an independent business disclosure that can ride through a cycle. Third, profit quality. Q3 GAAP operating margin was still -3%, the full-year GAAP operating margin guidance is still -2%, while non-GAAP operating margin has reached 29%; the biggest gap between the two is stock-based compensation, and in the FY2026 full-year guidance SBC alone is equivalent to 25 points of operating margin.
Looking at fundamentals, valuation, competition, and expectations together, I would rather classify Atlassian as a "platform SaaS in the middle of a valuation reset" than simply label it "high-quality growth" or "AI bubble." On the good side, Cloud is still accelerating, JSM is shifting from a supporting actor in development collaboration to a main ITSM engine, and Service Collection has already proven the company is not just a Jira company; roughly calculated against FY2026 guidance, revenue growth is about 24%, non-GAAP operating margin about 29%, and the Rule of 40 already stands around 53, while the current market cap implies a forward EV/Sales of only mid-single digits. On the bad side, Q3's high growth mixed in clear recognition-timing distortion; the Data Center wind-down can force cloud migration but can also let large customers swap "not moving to the cloud" for "moving to someone else's cloud"; the AI narrative is still in its proving phase, and GAAP profitability has not yet landed. It is not a bad company, nor is it one cheap enough to buy mindlessly. It looks more like an asset whose company quality has not collapsed, but whose valuation framework and long-term revenue logic are undergoing a fresh round of judgment.
The qualitative-profile tag I give it is: in the middle of a valuation reset. The reasoning is simple. Much of the premium the market historically granted Atlassian came from the combination of "low-friction distribution + cloud migration + platform expansion"; that premium no longer holds automatically, and the market wants to see two new pieces of evidence before granting a higher multiple again: first, that cloud migration under the Data Center endgame does not cause large-scale customer defection; second, that AI thickens each customer's wallet through Collections, Rovo, Service Collection, and deeper enterprise expansion, rather than flattening the seat model. Until these two points are genuinely and repeatedly validated by earnings, the stock looks more like it is undergoing a valuation reset than returning to the 2021 world of "any growth earns a high multiple."
Vertical Company History
Origins, Path to Listing, and Stage Breakdown
Atlassian's starting point is unusual. It is a developer-tools company founded in Sydney in 2002, bootstrapped on credit card debt, that emphasized low-friction self-service distribution very early, not the typical enterprise software company built on large venture rounds and big-account direct sales. Accel's 60 million USD minority equity investment in 2010 was its first large external financing eight years after founding, by which point the company had been "profitable since year one," and the capital went toward accelerating European and Asian expansion and acquiring complementary products, not firefighting. This origin explains why Atlassian to this day still values "product-driven + flywheel expansion" more than a heavy sales motion.
The real first stage was the developer-tools validation period from 2002 to 2010. Jira first solved the most concrete, most painful problems for software teams: bug tracking, project management, and cross-role collaboration. During this period Atlassian treated "can a team sign up today and start using it today" as a higher priority than replicating the high-ticket, long-implementation enterprise software playbook of Oracle or IBM. Looking back today, this is the company's DNA, not hindsight dressed up as "PLG." The later transparent pricing, low sales cost, and broad small-and-midsize customer coverage all grew from this point.
The second stage was the globalization and capital-markets preparation period from 2010 to 2015. After Accel invested, Atlassian added global expansion and acquisition firepower but did not abandon its original distribution logic. At the 2015 IPO, the story the company told the market was "an already-profitable, extremely sales-efficient oddity that sells enterprise software through internet-style distribution," not "losses in exchange for growth." In December 2015 the company issued 22 million Class A common shares at 21 USD per share, raising about 462 million USD, valued at about 4.4 billion USD by Reuters' framing at the time. The stock closed at 27.78 USD on its first day, with the market awarding it a premium as a successful example of "defying the SaaS playbook," not a discount as a traditional software stock.
The third stage was platformization and the first half of cloud migration from 2016 to 2021. During this period Atlassian did several things that later proved very important: first, it gradually moved Jira and Confluence from developer-team tools into broader business collaboration scenarios; second, it built ITSM into a second growth curve, with Jira Service Management starting to genuinely threaten traditional ITSM vendors; third, it expanded its ecosystem through Marketplace, with total third-party app purchases generated by Marketplace exceeding 1.1 billion USD in FY2024; fourth, it accelerated migration from server and on-premise deployments to Cloud and Data Center. What the market believed in this stage was "the thicker the product matrix, the bigger the customers, the smoother the cloud migration," so the share price and the multiple surged together. On October 29, 2021, TEAM set an all-time closing high of 458.13 USD.
The fourth stage was the accounting-basis switch, rate shock, and shift in organizational focus from 2022 to 2024. On September 30, 2022, the company moved its parent-company domicile from the UK to the US and consequently switched from IFRS to GAAP reporting. This change itself creates no revenue, but it changed how the market compares the company. At the same time, the high-rate environment began punishing high-multiple software stocks long supported by "future growth." In FY2023 revenue still grew 26% to 3.5 billion USD, operating cash flow was 868 million USD, but the GAAP net loss still reached 487 million USD. FY2024 revenue rose further to 4.359 billion USD, free cash flow improved to 1.416 billion USD, and the GAAP loss narrowed to 301 million USD. The business did not break, but the valuation was repriced. By 2024, Scott Farquhar ended his term as co-CEO, Mike Cannon-Brookes took sole command, and the management structure entered a new phase.
The fifth stage is the "systematized AI narrative + Data Center endgame" phase from 2025 to now. The keyword for this stage is the company's attempt to rewrite the product catalog into a system of "Apps + Agents + Collections" rather than individual new features. In the FY2025 annual report it already wrote clearly that the company is shifting from selling stand-alone products toward apps, AI agents, and Collections; Rovo is placed in the middle, and Teamwork Collection, Strategy Collection, and Service Collection become more explicit commercialization vehicles. At the same time, in September 2025 the Data Center EOL timeline was announced: no new-customer sales starting March 30, 2026, March 30, 2028 as the last purchase and expansion point for existing customers, and overall EOL into read-only on March 28, 2029. This is Atlassian actively cutting off the retreat path of self-managed deployment, turning cloud migration from a "direction" into an "endgame," not ordinary product lifecycle management.
Key Milestones and Their Effects Still in Force Today
The 2010 Accel investment, in hindsight, was a validation for Atlassian rather than simple financing: it could become a global software company without abandoning its product-driven distribution model. Its effect still in force today is that the company still believes in the hybrid model of "low-CAC entry + high-value upsell." The FY2025 annual report writes clearly that its go-to-market is still led by land-and-expand, automation, and low-touch customer service, but it has deliberately expanded the sales team to dig deeper into existing large-enterprise customers. In other words, the early "no sales" myth has by now evolved into a dual-engine of "first acquire customers efficiently, then bring sales in for large-account expansion."
The 2022 redomicile from the UK to the US was a hard switch in the capital-markets narrative. The reasons the company gave at the time included broadening investor reach, improving comparability with US peers, entering more indices, and simplifying the capital structure. The long-term effect of this move lands at the comparison-framework level, not the operating level: from then on, investors more naturally compared it against US SaaS names like ServiceNow, GitLab, and Monday.com, rather than treating it as an "Australian tech miracle."
The 2023 acquisition of Loom and the 2025 signings of The Browser Company and DX together form the line that most deserves caution and study today: Atlassian is already buying future workflow entry points, not just apps that "fill Jira gaps." Loom's official acquisition price was about 885.6 million USD in cash; The Browser Company deal was 610 million USD in cash according to Reuters, with an official blog post confirming the target and strategic intent; DX was disclosed in an SEC filing as about 1 billion USD in cash plus restricted equity. Taken together, the company is folding asynchronous video, an AI browser, and engineering intelligence into a single "system of work" map. The upside is deeper entry points and thicker data; the downside is a markedly higher capital-allocation difficulty, and if AI monetization does not keep up, these assets turn from a moat into a pile of goodwill that dilutes returns.
The March 2026 layoff of about 1,600 people, roughly 10% of total headcount, added another layer of realism to a company that has long emphasized culture and product. The company's 8-K said the restructuring was to "rebalance" resources and accelerate the future of teamwork in the AI era; Reuters' follow-up noted the company would invest more resources into AI and enterprise sales and expected to incur 225 million to 236 million USD in expenses. The effect of this milestone still in force today is that it raised FY2026 non-GAAP margins and, for the first time, attached a stronger organizational hard constraint to "moving toward GAAP profitability," rather than just a slogan in the financials.
Vertical Financial Review
Over the past three years, Atlassian's financial throughline has been very clear: total revenue keeps growing, the revenue mix keeps tilting toward Cloud, cash flow is strong, but GAAP profitability is consistently pinned down by SBC and acquisition amortization. FY2023, FY2024, and FY2025 total revenue were 3.535 billion, 4.359 billion, and 5.215 billion USD; over the same period Cloud revenue was 2.085 billion, 2.699 billion, and 3.447 billion USD, growing faster than total revenue each year. Data Center revenue also expanded, rising from 819 million in FY2023 to 1.467 billion in FY2025, but this line is now a transitional curve driven jointly by cloud migration and revenue-recognition changes, not a long-term growth curve.
Profit quality over the same period shows the typical SaaS face of "good cash, poor accounting." FY2023 operating cash flow was 868 million USD and free cash flow 843 million USD; FY2024 operating cash flow was 1.448 billion and free cash flow 1.416 billion; FY2025 operating cash flow was 1.460 billion and free cash flow 1.416 billion. But the GAAP net losses from FY2023 to FY2025 were still 487 million, 301 million, and 257 million USD. Put simply, Atlassian is by no means burning cash for growth; it has long been a cash generator. The issue is that between this cash-generating ability and GAAP profitability lies a very wide SBC river. In the first nine months of FY2026 alone, stock-based compensation reached 1.211 billion USD; in the company's full-year FY2026 bridge guidance, SBC alone is equivalent to 25 points of operating margin.
The balance sheet is still sound but much tighter than two years ago. As of March 31, 2026, the company had 1.136 billion USD in cash and cash equivalents and no longer holds available-for-sale marketable securities; long-term debt is about 989 million USD, mainly two senior notes due in 2029 and 2034. Compared with end-June 2025, cash and marketable securities fell clearly, directly related to cash acquisitions such as Loom and The Browser Company. It is not yet at the point of worrying about liquidity, but "using ample cash to buy AI entry points" has already made the financials less light-footed than before.
On return quality, Atlassian's strength lies in "highly deferred subscription cash flow + very light capital expenditure + extremely low customer concentration," not in GAAP ROE. FY2025 capex was only 44.85 million USD, markedly lower than traditional software and infrastructure companies of similar scale; in the same year no single customer contributed more than 5% of total revenue, and the number of Cloud customers with more than 10,000 USD in ARR grew from 38,726 in FY2023 to 51,978 in FY2025. What truly deserves attention here is whether the company can steadily push down SBC as a share of revenue while Cloud expansion and AI investment run in parallel, not whether net profit turns positive in a single quarter. Until that happens, its "high cash flow" will keep coexisting with "low GAAP returns."
Share Price and Valuation History
Atlassian's valuation history since listing can almost serve as a microcosm of the SaaS sector's valuation history. At the IPO the market prized its rare profitability, the efficiency of having no sales force, and the developer ecosystem; in 2020 to 2021, cloud software was treated as a "long-duration asset," and TEAM's price and multiple climbed to extremes together. The all-time high of 458.13 USD on October 29, 2021 actually corresponded to a very aggressive set of assumptions: cloud migration would be smooth all the way, platform expansion would be unconstrained, and the rate environment would stay friendly enough.
Then that assumption was taken apart. First, rising rates compressed the valuation center of the entire software sector, then the AI scare led investors to question the long-term revenue power of "collaboration software + developer tools." On January 29, 2026, Reuters reported Atlassian falling 12.6% in a single day, with the entire software-and-services sector being discounted on the worst-case scenario that "AI may strip SaaS of pricing power." By April 30, 2026, ahead of earnings, Reuters described Atlassian as one of the weakest software stocks of the year, down about 60% year to date. This means today's TEAM is no longer the 2021 TEAM that was "expensive as a matter of course." It has entered a harsher valuation world: it must prove both growth and that AI will not turn on its original model.
Business Model and Industry Cycle
Revenue Structure, Cost Structure, and Moat
Atlassian's revenue layering is quite clear. Cloud is the main channel, accounting for roughly two-thirds of total revenue in FY2025; Data Center is still an important cash source, but the company has officially announced its wind-down timeline; Marketplace and other carries third-party ecosystem revenue sharing, Premier Support, and other add-on value. The company does not disclose segment profit, but the disclosed language makes clear that Cloud is where the company prioritizes investment and where the long-term profit pool sits, while Data Center now looks more like a migration bridge. The FY2025 annual report even states directly that Data Center lacks the continuous-innovation advantages of AI, Rovo, advanced analytics, automation, and the Atlassian Cloud Platform.
The cost structure has two features different from traditional software. First, capex is extremely light; what is truly heavy is R&D and stock-based compensation. By FY2025, more than 50% of employees were in R&D roles, and R&D spending reached 2.669 billion USD, far above sales and marketing's 1.135 billion USD. Second, the logic of margin elasticity is that "revenue growth, sales efficiency, SBC control, and acquisition amortization together determine margins," not simply "margins go up once revenue arrives." That is why Atlassian can simultaneously show free cash flow at the level of 1.4 billion USD and ongoing GAAP losses; this is a result of the business model itself, not a reporting error.
The moats that I think truly hold come in four. The first is the high switching cost from workflow embedding. Jira, Confluence, JSM, Bitbucket, and Loom are the underlying containers for many teams' daily operations, approvals, troubleshooting, releases, and knowledge accumulation, not isolated apps. From code change to incident process to knowledge-base linking, once this kind of cross-product interlock is built, the replacement cost runs higher than a single software license itself. The second is the ecosystem. Atlassian Marketplace generated more than 1.1 billion USD in total third-party app purchases in FY2024, already a platform-spillover network rather than a "plugin store." The third is distribution efficiency. The company still keeps the low-touch, transparently priced, word-of-mouth-driven flywheel while using a sales team for large-account cultivation, which can capture enterprise budgets better than pure PLG. The fourth is the gradually forming data context, namely the Teamwork Graph. This moat has not yet been fully proven, but at least in the AI era it is genuinely Atlassian's best chance to surpass being a "tool set."
Conversely, the moat most likely to be overrated in the market's pitch is the idea that "development teams naturally cannot do without Jira." It largely held over the past decade or so, but in an era where AI agents and generative coding tools genuinely change workflows, this moat is becoming a variable to be re-validated. What the market worries about is precisely this: if a developer's work no longer centers on "one seat per person, many people jointly managing a backlog," then Jira's seat expansion is no longer a foregone result. In other words, Atlassian's moat has not disappeared, but its most valuable part is shifting from "standardizing project management" to "integrating cross-workflow context." Whether this migration succeeds determines its valuation center over the next 3–5 years.
Management, Governance, and Industry-Cycle Attributes
On governance, Atlassian still carries a distinct founder-control character. The company keeps a dual-class structure, and Class B shares still exist at large scale; as of January 24, 2025, Class A was 164 million shares and Class B was 98.01 million shares; as of April 24, 2026, Class A was 160 million shares and Class B was 94.13 million shares. Mike Cannon-Brookes is still CEO, and Scott Farquhar ended his co-CEO term in August 2024. In February 2026, the company appointed James Chuong, formerly LinkedIn's CFO, as the new CFO. For ordinary shareholders, the meaning of this governance arrangement is clear: execution is usually faster and long-term strategy is less disrupted by quarterly volatility, but the governance discount will not disappear, especially when acquisitions keep getting bigger and SBC remains high.
On industry-cycle attributes, Atlassian is not a macro cycle stock in the traditional sense, but it is by no means purely defensive either. It is exposed to three cycles at once. The first is the enterprise software budget cycle, where a macro slowdown drags on seat expansion and large-deal signings. The second is the rate cycle, since software valuations are very sensitive to discount rates, a point the past few years have amply proven. The third is the technology-iteration cycle, and this is the most important one right now. If AI merely raises team efficiency and pulls more workflows onto the same platform, Atlassian benefits; if AI re-abstracts development, collaboration, and service processes into a new agent layer, it will be forced to rebuild its revenue logic. Precisely because this third cycle is so strong, Atlassian's 2026 share-price volatility looks like that of a high-beta tech company rather than a mature collaboration-software company.
Regulation and geopolitics are not the core conflict for Atlassian, but they cannot be ignored either. The company explicitly flags in its annual report that customer data security, the quality of third-party Marketplace apps, new security risks introduced by AI, and nation-state attacks could all harm the business; the company also acknowledges that breaches of security measures and unauthorized access have occurred in the past. The good news is that these are not yet the main driver overwhelming the valuation; the bad news is that once a major security incident happens, it strikes the most valuable enterprise-expansion logic, not some peripheral product line.
Horizontal Competitors and Current Fundamentals
Competitor Landscape and Niche
Atlassian is best viewed in a "well-supplied competitor" context, but one should not force a single perfect comparable. It spans three profit pools: team collaboration and work management, ITSM, and DevOps. Monday.com and Asana are boundary comparables on collaboration management; ServiceNow is the high-end rival in ITSM and enterprise workflow; GitLab is the direct counterpart in development processes and DevSecOps. Even as software platforms, these companies have "grown into" different shapes.
Monday.com's advantage lies in front-stage experience, cross-team work management, and a work-OS narrative more readily accepted by non-technical teams. Its Q1 2026 revenue was 351.3 million USD, up 24% year over year, and it continued to guide full-year revenue of 1.466 billion to 1.474 billion USD, reflecting a lighter, more general, more enterprise-collaboration-interface-oriented high-growth story. It is expensive, and the reason is simple: fast growth, smooth margin improvement, and a more intuitive AI work-platform narrative.
ServiceNow is a different kind of rival. It goes deeper, heavier, and higher-priced, cutting into cross-department process automation and enterprise-grade workflows like IT, customer service, HR, and legal. In Q1 2026, ServiceNow's total revenue was about 3.77 billion USD, up 22% year over year, and subscription revenue about 3.67 billion USD, up 22%; the company also raised full-year subscription revenue guidance to about 15.74 billion to 15.78 billion USD. Atlassian keeps emphasizing in Service Collection that it is winning displacement deals from "a major ITSM provider," which all but points the spear at a legacy winner like ServiceNow. The difference between the two is that ServiceNow is more like a high-end workflow operating system, while Atlassian is more like a platform that grew out of development and team collaboration and then extended into service and enterprise management.
GitLab and Atlassian overlap in the software development lifecycle. GitLab's Q1 FY2027 revenue was 264.2 million USD, up 23% year over year, with non-GAAP operating margin of 14%, customers with more than 100,000 USD in ARR reaching 1,519, and a dollar-based net retention rate of 117%. Its selling point is an "integrated DevSecOps orchestration platform," while Atlassian has traditionally been stronger on the chain of "planning, collaboration, knowledge, service." In the AI era this boundary is starting to blur: if development teams are willing to do more work inside a more native DevSecOps platform, part of Atlassian's value pool gets compressed; if enterprises put more weight on cross-team collaboration and system context, Atlassian has the edge instead.
Asana is worth a mention but not worth elevating to the position of core rival. Its product is light and its collaboration expression is clear, but it is small in scale, slow in growth, and weak in its capital-markets standing. At its current market cap, the price the market puts on Asana looks more like "can it survive as a stable niche collaboration platform" than "who represents the future of work management." What Atlassian truly needs to contend with is ServiceNow's depth in high-end processes, Monday's experience in general collaboration, and the nativeness of tools like GitLab and GitHub in the AI development era, never a peripheral substitute like Asana.
By niche, Atlassian is a "hub platform spanning collaboration, service, and development," not a single-lane leader. What it most directly erodes is the profit pool from traditional ITSM and point-tool assembly, especially in mid-to-large enterprises, where JSM is shifting from a value-for-money substitute to a more complete AI-native workflow solution. Conversely, what is most likely to take its profit pool is a new agent layer and a more native AI development platform, not a single collaboration tool. If the industry enters a stage of "agents before people, context before interface," Atlassian's position could end up either stronger or weaker, with little middle ground.
Horizontal Data Snapshot
| Metric | Atlassian | monday.com | ServiceNow | GitLab |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Current market cap | 23.28 billion | 11.44 billion | 182.72 billion | 8.74 billion |
| Latest disclosed revenue | Q3 FY26: 1.787 billion, +32% YoY | Q1 2026: 351.3 million, +24% YoY | Q1 2026: about 3.77 billion, +22% YoY | Q1 FY27: 264.2 million, +23% YoY |
| Latest disclosed margin | non-GAAP operating margin 34% | record GAAP / non-GAAP operating income | non-GAAP operating margin about 32% | non-GAAP operating margin 14% |
| Rough price-to-sales | about 3.5x FY26 guided revenue | about 7.8x 2026 guided revenue | about 12x annualized Q1 revenue | about 8.3x annualized Q1 revenue |
The market caps in the table are quoted from the latest US equity prices available as of 2026-06-12, and revenue and margins are quoted from each company's latest official earnings or press release; the price-to-sales figures are rough calculations using market cap against the latest annual guidance or annualized revenue, and are not equivalent to strict EV/Sales.
What this table implies matters. Atlassian is not absurdly expensive right now. Compared with names the market still grants a platform premium, like Monday, GitLab, and ServiceNow, it has instead dropped to a lower valuation tier; only compared with weaker-quality, slower-growing collaboration tools like Asana does it look not cheap. The market has in fact already priced Atlassian as a company that "needs to prove AI and cloud migration have not damaged the roots," rather than treating it as a SaaS name that automatically enjoys a platform premium. In other words, the cheapness in valuation is a discounting of risk, not a free lunch.
Current Fundamentals and Bull-Bear Divide
The core change over the last four quarters is that the growth center is moving up, but the quality is more complicated. Q1 FY2026 total revenue exceeded 1.4 billion USD, up 21% year over year, Cloud revenue was 998 million USD, up 26%, and AI monthly actives exceeded 3.5 million. By Q3 FY2026, total revenue rose to 1.787 billion USD, up 32% year over year, Cloud revenue rose to 1.132 billion USD, up 29%, and RPO rose to 3.996 billion USD, up 37%. Management raised the FY2026 total revenue growth guidance to about 24%, Cloud to about 26.5%, Data Center to about 21.5%, and non-GAAP operating margin to about 29%. On the numbers alone, this is a very strong set of data.
But what the market is truly trading now is "how much of this Q3 beat is sustainable," not just "results beat expectations." Management gave a key answer on the call: the Q3 Data Center revenue beat came mainly from higher-than-expected upfront term license revenue; relative to the company's prior expectation, Q3 recognized about 50 million USD more of this kind of revenue, and purchase and expansion behavior was indeed pulled from future periods into Q3, with Q4 set to continue seeing revenue pulled from FY2027 into FY2026. At the same time, Data Center customers planning to migrate to the cloud have already begun expanding seats more modestly than the historical trend. In other words, Q3 did have real demand and did have accounting-timing and purchase-behavior pull-forward. Once you strip out this layer, the fundamentals are still solid, but not as perfect as the headline.
The bulls' core evidence comes in four. First, Cloud growth is accelerating on its own rather than being masked by Data Center, and management also said Data Center-to-Cloud migration can still contribute mid-to-high single-digit percentage points of cloud growth. Second, the JSM business has clearly passed the "ancillary product" stage, with Service Collection ARR above 1 billion USD, more than 65,000 customers using it, more than half of the Fortune 500 adopting it, and the company saying this was the largest quarter of competitive displacement from a major ITSM vendor in its history. Third, AI at the current stage looks more like an upsell catalyst than a headwind that immediately compresses seats, with Rovo customers growing ARR at roughly twice the rate of non-adopters and AI credit usage growing more than 20% month over month. Fourth, the current valuation is not high relative to comparable platform software.
The bears' core evidence also comes in four. First, Q3 clearly has Data Center pull-forward, and this pull-forward is a burden on the FY2027 comparison base, not a gift. Second, AI's deepest cut at Atlassian may not land on revenue right away; it may first land on seat expansion, the most important long-term variable, and the market's big sell-off early in the year was betting precisely on this risk. Third, profit quality has still not cleared; under full-year guidance GAAP is still in the red, the gap between non-GAAP and GAAP is mainly held open by SBC, and that is a 25-point chasm, not a small seam. Fourth, continuous acquisitions and cash consumption mean the market will demand a higher return hurdle on every future AI-related capital allocation by management.
Valuation Analysis and Risk
Valuation History, Cash-Flow Pass-Through, and Absolute Valuation
Using a traditional GAAP P/E on Atlassian is meaningless. GAAP is still in a loss position, and the negative P/E on a financial terminal only creates noise. More useful measures are forward EV/Sales, the Rule of 40, and Owner Earnings / FCF. Roughly calculated against a current market cap of about 23.28 billion USD and net cash of about 147 million USD at end-March 2026, enterprise value is about 23.1 billion USD; and roughly against revenue of about 6.47 billion USD implied by the FY2026 total revenue growth guidance of about 24%, forward EV/Sales is about 3.5x. At the same time, FY2025 free cash flow was 1.416 billion USD, corresponding to a current equity free-cash-flow yield of about 6%. For a software platform still guiding to 20%-plus revenue growth, this valuation is not extreme.
But here one cannot fall into another trap: equating strong cash flow directly with high-quality profit. Atlassian's capex is very low, Owner Earnings and FCF are close, so using an FCF basis for valuation is reasonable; the issue is SBC, not cash conversion. In the first nine months of FY2026, stock-based compensation reached 1.211 billion USD, and in the full-year bridge SBC accounts for 25 points of operating margin. So you see a model that is very abnormal yet very real: the company is not short of cash, yet still short of GAAP profit; the crux is that SBC and acquisition amortization keep distorting accounting profit over the long run, not that operations are failing. Therefore, in the scenario valuation that follows, I default to both EV/Sales and Owner Earnings rather than accounting P/E.
Three-Tier Valuation Scenarios
| Dimension | Conservative | Neutral | Optimistic |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue/margin assumption | FY2027 revenue growth falls to high single digits to low double digits; Cloud slows, Data Center begins a clear decline; Owner Earnings margin about 20%–21% | FY2027 revenue still grows low to mid double digits; Cloud continues around 20%, JSM offsets Data Center wind-down distortion; Owner Earnings margin about 22%–23% | FY2027 revenue recovers to high double digits; Cloud and Service Collection drive jointly, AI brings higher wallet share; Owner Earnings margin about 24%–25% |
| Cash-flow assumption | FCF holds but does not expand, SBC declines very slowly | FCF continues steady growth, SBC as a share of revenue slowly declines | FCF and ARR accelerate together, AI monetization begins to form a clearer increment |
| Valuation-multiple assumption | 2.7x-3.0x EV/Sales, or 14x-16x Owner Earnings | 3.5x-4.0x EV/Sales, or 18x-21x Owner Earnings | 4.5x-5.2x EV/Sales, or 23x-26x Owner Earnings |
| Key catalyst | FY2027 comparison base lands smoothly with no cloud-migration churn | Continued validation that Cloud acceleration does not rely on pull-forward, finer JSM and Rovo disclosure | AI-related products begin forming a quantifiable paid curve, the market re-grants a platform premium |
| Key risk | AI compresses seat expansion, Data Center declines faster than cloud migration can absorb | Q3 strength is shown to be mainly a pull-forward effect, the valuation repair stalls | Competitors seize entry points at the AI agent layer, the premium cannot hold |
| Implied return range | Downside about 11% to 24% | Upside about 0% to 20% | Upside about 31% to 61% |
| Permanent-loss risk | Trigger: FY2027 Cloud growth falls below mid double digits and Data Center turns clearly negative | Trigger: JSM slows, Rovo cannot convert into wallet expansion, SBC declines less than expected | Trigger: AI is only defensive spending, neither revenue nor margins are delivered |
The scenarios above are not investment advice, only a way to split the current price into three possible worlds. Mapping these assumptions to per-share prices, the conservative range is about 68–80 USD, the neutral range about 86–108 USD, and the optimistic range about 118–145 USD. The reason the ranges are made into bands rather than single points is that Atlassian's biggest variable right now is "whether the market would rather look at it on several times sales or several times owner earnings," not arithmetic.
Peer Valuation, Expectation Gap, and Margin-of-Safety Re-Check
From a peer view, Atlassian now sits in a very particular spot: it has neither ServiceNow's stable high-end enterprise-workflow premium nor the distinct single-lane high-growth premium of Monday and GitLab, yet it is higher-quality than a second-tier collaboration tool like Asana. So the price the market gives it is "a compromise of distrust": it acknowledges that cash flow and platform capability are solid, but waits for more evidence before discounting the future of AI and cloud migration back in. This kind of pricing often makes a stock look "not expensive," yet does not automatically constitute a margin of safety.
The current price has essentially no margin of safety against the conservative-scenario implied value; against the neutral scenario, there is some but not thick upside. The most fragile assumption is that "within Q3's strong growth, the truly sustainable Cloud / JSM / AI momentum is enough to cover the FY2027 Data Center normalization." If you take a 30% haircut to this assumption, the neutral scenario easily shrinks from the low-90s to over-100 USD down to the low-80s to low-90s USD. Looking again at the simplified test of "zero earnings growth over the next 3 years," at a current free-cash-flow yield of about 6%, holding long term is not entirely without return, but relative to the roughly 4.48% yield on the 10-year US Treasury as of June 11, 2026, this excess compensation is not wide. So the conclusion is clear: this is a textbook case where the probability of it being a good company is not low, but the margin of safety at the current price is not thick.
Conclusion on margin-of-safety sufficiency: not obvious. It is not a price that must be avoided immediately, but it is far from the position of "a shame to miss." For new capital, the more reasonable action is to wait for a lower price or more evidence, rather than treating a high growth rate flattered by a single quarter's pull-forward as a repeatable center.
Risk Analysis
The first risk that most needs to be taken seriously is the structural erosion of seat expansion by AI, with medium probability and high impact. It will not first appear as a "revenue cliff"; it is more likely to first show up as slower seat expansion among development and knowledge-work teams, then drag on Cloud ARR. The market's early-year sell-off in the software sector unfolded around exactly this logic; Atlassian itself acknowledged on the call that Data Center customers actively migrating to the cloud have already expanded seats more modestly than the historical trend. If, over the next 2–4 quarters, Jira's seat expansion, the growth in the number of Cloud ARR customers, and Rovo paid conversion weaken simultaneously, this risk turns from narrative into numbers.
The second risk is the "short-term boom, long-term void" brought by the Data Center wind-down, with high probability and high impact. The company stated clearly in September 2025 that the EOL arrangement would allocate more contract value to the upfront-recognized term license portion, mechanically lifting FY2026 revenue and margins; by the Q3 call, management again acknowledged recognizing about 50 million USD more upfront term license revenue, and that Q4 would still pull revenue originally belonging to FY2027 into FY2026. The transmission path is clear: first the FY2026 headline looks very good, then the FY2027 comparison base gets harder; if cloud migration cannot absorb it fast enough, the market will switch from "EOL is an accelerator" back to "EOL is a depletor."
The third risk is profit quality and the governance discount existing at the same time, with high probability and medium-to-high impact. Atlassian is already moving toward higher non-GAAP margins, but GAAP profitability has still not truly materialized, and the FY2026 full-year bridge shows SBC still equivalent to 25 points of operating margin. As long as this seam does not close, investors will keep questioning "whether the profit is operating leverage or a reporting treatment." Layer on the dual-class structure and founder control, plus AI acquisitions getting bigger, and the governance discount will not disappear just because the business improves. It is more of a valuation-ceiling risk than a blow-up-type governance risk.
The fourth risk is capital-allocation missteps, with medium probability and medium-to-high impact. The three steps of Loom, The Browser Company, and DX all make logical sense: video, the browser entry point, and engineering intelligence can all feed the Teamwork Graph. But logical sense does not guarantee high financial returns. If, over the next two or three years, Rovo, Collections, and AI-native features do not form clearer standalone monetization while cash keeps being consumed by large acquisitions, the market will rewrite today's narrative of "betting on future entry points" into "buying a pile of hard-to-integrate assets." This risk will first show up in declining cash reserves, rising goodwill, more complex disclosure, and vague synergy realization.
The fifth risk is a security and trust event, with medium-to-low probability and high impact. The company acknowledges in its annual report that breaches of security measures and unauthorized access have occurred in the past, and explicitly notes that third-party Marketplace apps and AI capabilities increase risk exposure. For a company like Atlassian that is pulling more customer workflows onto the same platform, a major security incident damages the foundation of enterprise upsell and multi-product bundling, not a single quarter's revenue.
Catalysts and Tracking Metrics
Positive catalysts come mainly in three kinds. The first is earnings-level validation: Cloud growth does not collapse in FY2027 due to Data Center normalization, and RPO / CRPO stay solid. The second is product-level validation: Rovo, Service Collection, and Teamwork Collection begin giving clearer paid and ARR breakdowns rather than only adoption figures. The third is profit-level validation: SBC as a share of revenue begins a sustained decline, and GAAP operating margin approaches positive territory. Negative catalysts are equally concentrated: FY2027 guidance markedly below the current market imagination; a Data Center revenue cliff with insufficient Cloud absorption; AI-related investment rising but monetization slow to show; or acquisitions continuing to expand while the cash buffer keeps shrinking.
| Tracking metric | Current or latest value | Normal range I set | Warning threshold |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cloud revenue YoY growth | Q3 FY26: 29% | 24%–30% | Below 22% for two consecutive quarters |
| Total revenue YoY growth | Q3 FY26: 32% | Above the full-year guidance midpoint | Markedly below 20% |
| RPO YoY growth | Q3 FY26: 37% | Around 30% or above | Below 20% |
| FY26 non-GAAP operating margin guidance | 29% | 27%–30% | Below 25% |
| FY26 GAAP operating margin guidance | -2% | Continuous improvement | Re-deteriorates below -5% |
| Cloud customers with more than 10,000 USD ARR | FY25: 51,978 | Maintains double-digit growth | Growth falls to low single digits |
| Service Collection ARR | Above 1 billion USD | Maintains 25%+ growth | Growth falls below 20% |
| FCF yield | Rough estimate about 6% | Above 5% | Falls near 4% with no improvement in growth |
These thresholds are a tracking framework I built based on the company's recent history, current guidance, and current valuation, not official KPIs given by the company. For Atlassian, whether a single number is high or low is secondary; what matters most is whether these metrics point together at the same thing: whether Cloud and AI monetization are enough to cover the timing distortion from the Data Center wind-down. The moment Cloud growth, RPO, JSM expansion, and margin improvement begin to diverge, the market will return to skeptic mode.
Vertical-Horizontal Synthesis
Vertically, what Atlassian has truly proven is the ability to turn a tool company that started with development teams into a platform spanning collaboration, knowledge, service, and development processes, not just "being able to make a few good products." Its success along the way of course fed on the era's tailwinds of SaaS cloud adoption, agile development, and expanding global software spending, but more important are two capabilities: first, it understands better than most enterprise software companies how to use low-friction products to win a broad user base; second, it understands better than most developer-tools companies how to climb up the enterprise customer's wallet. Both capabilities are still present today. The question is that AI is pushing them into a new exam hall: whether the advantages previously accumulated through seats, workflow, and product adjacency can still hold in the era of agents, context, and multi-app orchestration.
Horizontally, Atlassian's real advantage is no longer just Jira itself. Against Monday, it is deeper; against ServiceNow, it is cheaper and lighter; against GitLab, its cross-team context is more complete. Its weaknesses are equally concrete: in high-end enterprise processes it lacks ServiceNow's deep "boardroom budget legitimacy," in the AI-native development narrative it is not as native as GitLab or GitHub, and in general collaboration experience it is not as front-stage-friendly as Monday. Precisely because both strengths and weaknesses are so clear, the current valuation looks more like the market's cautious discounting of the future than a blind reward for past success. At today's price, the market is not pretending Atlassian is still the 2021 SaaS leader that deserved a high multiple as a matter of course; what it gives is a "prove it first, then add points" price.
I think the two things the market is now most likely to misjudge are these. The first is treating Atlassian as a pure AI victim. This conclusion is too linear. The Q3 data at least show that AI is not directly cutting off wallet expansion at this stage; instead it is strengthening JSM, Collections, and large-account contract length. The second is treating Q3 as a quarter that "has already proven everything." This conclusion is also too optimistic. Management itself has acknowledged that the Q3 Data Center beat has clear revenue-recognition pull-forward, and Q4 will continue. The truly important earnings are the first two or three quarters of FY2027, not the Q3 just past. By then, as the pull-forward effect is gradually digested, Cloud's real center, JSM's durability, and the quality of AI monetization will all be harder to hide.
The single most critical variable over the next 1 year is whether the FY2027 guidance can still keep Cloud at a convincing mid-double-digit growth after digesting the Data Center pull-forward. The most critical variable over the next 3 years is whether Rovo, Service Collection, and the broader Collections can turn AI from an adoption metric into genuine wallet-expansion logic. The most critical variable over the next 5 years is whether Atlassian can upgrade itself from a "collaboration tool set" into an "enterprise context hub." If it does, today's valuation may not look expensive in hindsight; if it does not, it will stay long-term at the valuation tier of "decent cash flow but a deeply discounted narrative."
Bull and Bear Reasons
Bull reasons:
Cloud revenue accelerated to 29% year over year in Q3 FY2026, not simply relying on Data Center, with real seat expansion and AI adoption still underpinning it beyond the accounting distortion.
Service Collection has crossed 1 billion USD in ARR with more than 65,000 customers using it, and management said it won the largest round of competitive displacement from a major ITSM vendor within the quarter.
Customers adopting Rovo grow ARR at roughly twice the rate of non-adopters, indicating AI is at least strengthening wallet share rather than immediately damaging it.
The current rough forward EV/Sales is only about 3.5x and FCF yield about 6%, not aggressive relative to Monday, ServiceNow, and GitLab.
The switching cost from data distribution, the Marketplace ecosystem, and cross-product workflow embedding is still stronger than the level priced in at the market's most pessimistic.
Bear reasons:
Management has explicitly acknowledged that Q3 has about 50 million USD of better-than-expected upfront term license revenue recognition, making the FY2027 comparison base harder.
Data Center customers migrating to the cloud have already expanded seats more modestly than the historical trend, meaning both AI and the migration itself may depress the long-term expansion rate.
In the FY2026 full-year bridge, SBC still equals 25 points of operating margin, and GAAP profitability has not truly arrived.
Acquisitions like The Browser Company and DX push the company toward higher capital-allocation difficulty, and if AI monetization falls short of expectations, both cash and goodwill become burdens.
Atlassian sits at the very center of the software sector's AI-disruption debate, and the market's doubt about the seat model is a variable that could change the long-term valuation framework, not short-term sentiment.
Pre-mortem
If this investment loses 50% three years from now, the first scenario I worry about most is: by the second half of 2027, FY2026's Data Center pull-forward effect has largely cleared, but cloud migration did not keep enough money inside the Atlassian system. Cloud growth falls back to 10%–15%, JSM also fails to sustain high growth, and the market confirms that Q3 FY2026 was a high point flattered by pull-forward revenue. At the same time, AI development stacks like GitLab, GitHub Copilot Enterprise, and Cursor keep front-running developer workflows, and Jira's seat expansion slows over the long run. By then the market may only be willing to give 2.5x-3.0x sales, with the stock falling back to the 45–60 USD range.
The second scenario is: by 2028, Atlassian has spent money on Loom, Browser, DX, and broader AI capabilities, but Rovo has been slow to form a sufficiently clear standalone monetization curve and can only ride defensively inside Collections. Revenue is still growing, but non-GAAP margin improvement slows, GAAP is still pinned down by large SBC, and the market no longer believes "GAAP profitability will come soon." At that point it becomes a software stock with decent cash flow but a very thin narrative premium, where returns come mainly from slowly working off the valuation rather than a commercial victory.
Final Research Conclusion
Atlassian's investment proposition now is no longer "are Jira and Confluence good to use." That is a question answered over the past decade. The real question today is: can this company upgrade itself from a product-centered collaboration software portfolio into an enterprise-context-centered work platform, without having its revenue logic rewritten by AI in the process. The answer Q3 FY2026 gives leans positive, but it is not yet the endgame. You can see plenty in it worth continuing to track: Cloud is accelerating, JSM is becoming more like a second main business, Rovo at least has not stayed in the demo layer, and management has finally begun to talk more seriously about GAAP profitability. You also have to see at the same time the hard problems that a single dazzling earnings report cannot cover: part of Q3's high growth came from Data Center revenue pull-forward; SBC is still too high; and no one can fully prove they are right about AI's long-term impact on seats from just one or two quarters.
So my conclusion is not extreme. Atlassian is a software platform whose high-quality base is still intact, but its current valuation is not cheap enough to ignore the controversy, nor expensive enough that it must be avoided. For those already holding, it looks more like a name that can keep being held but must be watched closely on FY2027 guidance and the pace of Cloud / Rovo / JSM validation. For new capital, rather than chasing in on a strong Q3, the more rational approach is to wait for one of two things: a better price, or harder evidence. If Q3 is merely an FY2026 revenue-recognition high, then buying now will not carry enough margin of safety; if FY2027 proves most of the high growth is sustainable, then paying a slightly higher price will not necessarily leave you worse off.
【Company Profile Scores】
Fundamental quality: High
Growth: Medium-high
Moat: Medium
Financial soundness: Medium-strong
Management credibility: Medium
Valuation appeal: Medium
Risk level: High
Suitable investor type: Long-term growth
【Investment Rating】
Rating: Hold
One-line investment thesis: Cloud and ITSM momentum remain strong, but Data Center pull-forward and AI's long-term test of the per-seat model have not yet cleared.
Three-tier price signals: Ideal buy price: 68–80 USD
Hold-acceptable price: 86–108 USD
Clearly overvalued price: 118 USD and above
Current price classification: hold-acceptable
Whether worth waiting for a better price: yes
Target holding period: 1–3 years
Expected annualized return: conservative about -11% to -24%; neutral about 0% to +20%; optimistic about +31% to +61%
Maximum loss risk: about 35%–50%; the trigger is Cloud slowing markedly starting in FY2027, Data Center normalization dragging on revenue, while AI fails to thicken wallet share
Signals that trigger reassessment: Cloud revenue below 22% year over year for two consecutive quarters
RPO falling below 20% year over year
FY2027 guidance unable to cover FY2026's Data Center pull-forward distortion
SBC as a share of revenue not declining markedly, GAAP profitability continuing to be delayed
Service Collection growth falling below 20% and Rovo no longer bringing faster ARR expansion
【Ideal Buy Price】68–80 USD
Rationale: this range corresponds to the per-share value band of the conservative scenario, having already discounted in jointly the FY2026 Data Center revenue pull-forward, AI's structural distortion of the per-seat model, and persistently high SBC; only on a return to this range does new capital obtain a relatively clear margin of safety.
【Valuation Range】
current: 89.95 (latest available Nasdaq quote as of 2026-06-12)
bear (conservative · ideal buy range): [68, 80]
base (fair · acceptable-hold range): [86, 108]
bull (optimistic · above the clearly-overvalued line): [118, 145]
Key Data Table
| Fiscal year / point | Total revenue | Cloud revenue | Data Center revenue | FCF / operating cash flow | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FY2023 | 3.535 billion | 2.085 billion | 819 million | FCF 843 million / OCF 868 million | Rate-shock period, but cloud migration continued |
| FY2024 | 4.359 billion | 2.699 billion | 1.208 billion | FCF 1.416 billion / OCF 1.448 billion | FCF rose markedly |
| FY2025 | 5.215 billion | 3.447 billion | 1.467 billion | FCF 1.416 billion / OCF 1.460 billion | Server largely exited, Cloud became the main axis |
| First nine months of FY2026 | 4.806 billion | 3.197 billion | 1.369 billion | End-Q3 cash 1.136 billion, long-term debt 989 million | Q3 showed a clear pull-forward revenue effect |
| Q3 FY2026 | 1.787 billion | 1.132 billion | Not disclosed separately | GAAP operating margin -3%, non-GAAP 34% | Guidance raised |
The FY2023-FY2025 revenue mix in the table is quoted from official annual reports, and the first nine months of FY2026 and Q3 are quoted from the latest 10-Q and earnings disclosures. Together they make one point: Atlassian's operating base is still getting bigger, but the FY2026 growth read must separate out the Data Center accounting-timing change on its own.
Research Uncertainties
The research reference date is 2026-06-12 Asia time; regular US trading that day was not yet complete, so the meta information uses the latest available Nasdaq quote rather than the June 12 US regular close.
The company has not yet disclosed a long-enough Data Center / Cloud ARR series to fully smooth the revenue-recognition distortion from EOL, and the true FY2027 center still needs validation over the coming quarters.
The effects of Rovo and AI currently come more from management adoption and usage framing, while standalone P&L or finer-grained monetization disclosure is still insufficient.
The Browser Company deal amount does not appear directly in the official company blog summary available to me; I use the Reuters report for the amount portion and treat it as a high-credibility secondary source.
Atlassian spans the three lanes of collaboration, ITSM, and DevOps, with no single perfect comparable, so horizontal valuation can only be read by range and relative position, not mechanically by a single multiple.
Reference Sources
This report mainly references the following public materials: Atlassian's FY2025 10-K, the 10-Q through 2026-03-31, the Q1/Q3 FY2026 shareholder letters and earnings press releases, the Data Center EOL official page and "Upcoming Data Center changes" notes, Atlassian's official announcements and investor relations pages, Reuters reporting on the FY2026 earnings, AI-sector sentiment, layoffs, the CFO change, and the Browser Company / DX deals, as well as the latest official quarterly reports or investor relations disclosures of Monday.com, ServiceNow, GitLab, and Asana.
Other Tickers Mentioned
MNDY.US — a horizontally compared collaboration and work-management platform, high growth and high valuation, a representative reference for Atlassian on the general work-OS narrative.
NOW.US — the core comparable for ITSM and enterprise workflow, representing Atlassian's main valuation and product reference in high-end enterprise service processes.
GTLB.US — the key comparable for DevSecOps and AI development processes, used to gauge Atlassian's relative position in developer workflows.
ASAN.US — a weaker collaboration-software comparable, used to show that although Atlassian carries a discount, it is not priced by the market as a structurally peripheral platform.
MSFT.US — through the LinkedIn CFO appointment and the GitHub / Copilot ecosystem, it constitutes important peripheral pressure on Atlassian at the AI development-tools layer.
CRM.US — a reference for enterprise software and accelerating AI acquisitions, also reflecting the sector-wide commonality of software filling AI capability gaps through M&A.
This report is based on public information and does not constitute investment advice. Markets carry risk; invest with caution.
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