Oracle drops its fiscal Q4 2026 earnings after the bell today, and investors have one thing circled in red: the cloud numbers. After a Q3 that saw cloud revenue surge 44% year-over-year to $8.9 billion, the question isn’t whether the cloud business is growing. It’s whether the growth is accelerating fast enough to justify what’s become one of the more aggressive AI infrastructure buildouts in enterprise tech.
Analysts are projecting Q4 revenue of approximately $19.1 billion, which would mark yet another step up from the $17.2 billion Oracle posted in Q3, a figure that itself represented 22% growth over the prior year. Oracle’s own full-year revenue guidance sits at $67 billion, meaning a Q4 near analyst estimates would land the company right on target.
The cloud numbers that matter
Oracle has guided for Q4 cloud revenue growth of 44-48% in constant currency. Hit the top end of that range, and you’re looking at a company that’s successfully pivoted from legacy enterprise software into a genuine cloud infrastructure contender, competing with the likes of Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud.
But the single most eye-popping number from last quarter wasn’t revenue at all. It was remaining performance obligations, which essentially represent the total value of contracts Oracle has locked in but hasn’t yet recognized as revenue. That figure hit $553 billion, a 325% increase year-over-year.












