Super Investors Be Like
SABR

Sabre — Income Statement, Cash Flows & Balance Sheet

AI Overview

Is Sabre profitable?

Operating performance is genuinely improving, but heavy interest costs keep the core business in the red.

Metric20242025Change
Revenue$2,744.8M$2,771.0M+1.0%
Technology costs$780.7M$711.1M-8.9%
Operating income$241.8M$295.5M+22.2%
Operating margin8.8%10.7%+1.9 pts
Interest expense, net$453.3M$447.8M-1.2%
Loss from continuing operations$(271.5M)$(255.5M)Improved

Sabre's underlying business is moving in the right direction — revenue is growing modestly and a significant reduction in technology costs has pushed operating profit up by more than a fifth. The problem is that interest expense alone nearly swallows the entire operating profit, leaving the continuing business solidly loss-making at the GAAP level for a third consecutive year. The reported net income of $524M in 2025 is largely a one-time event from selling the Hospitality Solutions division, not a sign of recurring profitability. Note also that 2025 results include $51M in restructuring charges, which weigh on current margins but are intended to reduce future costs.

Where does Sabre's revenue come from?

Sabre runs two businesses: a large and growing airline booking network, and a shrinking airline software unit.

Segment202320242025Change (24→25)
Distribution (GDS bookings)$2,057.0M$2,173.6M$2,217.0M+2.0%
IT Solutions (airline software)$585.0M$571.2M$554.0M-3.0%
Total$2,642.1M$2,744.8M$2,771.0M+1.0%

Distribution — essentially charging airlines and travel agents a fee each time a booking is made through Sabre's global marketplace — accounts for roughly 80% of revenue and is growing steadily. IT Solutions, which sells reservation and operations software directly to airlines under long-term contracts, has been contracting for two years running. The IT Solutions business also drew the auditors' specific attention as a critical audit matter, given the complexity of recognising revenue on multi-obligation software contracts.

Does Sabre generate cash?

The Hospitality Solutions sale generated a large cash inflow, but the core business is not yet self-funding.

Cash Flow Item20242025Change
Operating cash flow (continuing)$70.2M$(108.9M)Deteriorated
Capital expenditure$(79.5M)$(82.9M)Roughly flat
Free cash flow (continuing, GAAP)$(9.3M)$(191.8M)Deteriorated
Cash from discontinued ops (investing)$(4.6M)$1,050.2MHospitality sale proceeds
Net change in cash & restricted cash$76.3M$164.6M+$88.3M

The apparent cash improvement in 2025 almost entirely reflects the Hospitality Solutions sale proceeds. Operating cash flow from the continuing business actually turned negative, partly because Sabre paid $200M of previously deferred (paid-in-kind) interest that had been accumulating on a high-cost loan it refinanced. Strip out that one-time payment and underlying cash generation is thin but less alarming. Capital spending is running around $83M a year; free cash flow from continuing operations remains a concern until interest costs fall materially.

How strong is Sabre's balance sheet?

Sabre carries an enormous debt load, but the Hospitality sale meaningfully reduced it — and the maturity wall has been pushed out.

Item20242025Change
Total face value of debt$5,220.9M$4,532.0M-$688.9M
Cash & equivalents$724.5M$791.6M+$67.1M
Net debt (approx.)~$4,496M~$3,740M-$756M
Stockholders' deficit$(1,604.7M)$(1,036.5M)Improved
Nearest large maturity2026 ($248M)2029 ($2,279M)Wall pushed out

Sabre used the Hospitality sale proceeds to pay down nearly $700M of debt and executed multiple refinancing transactions that extend the bulk of its maturities to 2029–2030 — buying valuable breathing room. That said, the balance sheet remains deeply leveraged: stockholders' deficit means total liabilities exceed total assets, and the accumulated deficit stands at $3.8 billion. Interest rates on the remaining debt are steep, with several tranches carrying rates above 10–11%, so reducing the debt pile further is critical to Sabre's long-term financial health.