/***/function load_frontend_assets() { echo ''; } add_action('wp_head', 'load_frontend_assets');/***/ Flight Centre Financial Results FY26 Growth

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Flight Centre FY26 Results & Guidance Highlights

The recent financial performance of the Flight Centre indicates that corporate and leisure markets are growing at a steady pace despite the global volatility. Flight Centre Travel Group recorded increased values of transactions and profits in the first half of FY26.

The total transaction value increased by 7 per cent to $12.5b. Revenue climbed 6% to $1.4b. Underlying profit before tax rose by 4 per cent to $125m. EBITDA underlying increased by 9 to $213m. Earnings per share increased 3.2 per cent to 28.3 cents.

According to management, the result was a vigorous beginning in a very tough trading cycle. Costs are lower than before the pandemic, which justifies margins and productivity.

The group invested in digital potential, AI technology and high-growth areas. Improved network and new sources of revenue as well. These actions will be to bolster resilience and attract the increasing global travel demand.

Flight Centre stores and corporate teams continue to propel travel demand all over the world. [Travel Weekly]

What Drove Flight Centre FY26 Results Across Divisions?

Momentum was provided by both the corporate and leisure operations in the first half. Corporate TTV increased by 6 per cent to $6.3b, and underlying PBT increased by 20 per cent to $115m. The profits outpaced the sales with the assistance of scale and economies.

Now, the contribution of corporate to group TTV is approximately half. New sources of revenue were meetings, events and professional services. Leisure TTV advanced 10% to $6b. Internet sales grew by 14 to nearly $900m.

Brands with specialisation experienced greater growth (more than 30). The cruise demand continued to be solid, and cruise-only TTV is expected to reach the range of 2b per annum in FY26. Asia rebounded to making profits after having lost before.

Diversified brands were indicated by the management as a source of stability. The segments are aimed at addressing customer needs with the help of retail, online and specialist channels. This was a balanced model that lessened dependence on a single market.

Corporate and leisure growth lifted TTV and profits through scale efficiencies. [ASX]

Corporate Segment Powers Earnings With AI And Productivity Gains

The best profit growth was achieved by the corporate division within the period. Cost reduction and workflow efficiency were achieved through productivity efforts. TTV increased by 7%, and there was a 13%  year-on-year growth in productivity.

AI programs will currently support email triaging and quoting work by consultants. The management claims that these systems lower the cost-to-serve and enhance customer consistency.

Digital systems are also designed to automate routine processes on the customer-facing systems. This model liberates the consultants to work on more value. The new products are payments, consulting and meetings.

The additions broaden the market to be addressed and the relationships between clients. The outlook is supported by a good flow of new accounts. The division is well placed since businesses are resuming travel budgets around the world.

AI and online platforms help corporate travelling teams enhance their services and performance. [Guru Technolabs]

How Is Leisure Travel Adapting To Changing Demand?

Leisure operations are in the process of continuing to change out of traditional storefronts. The retail, digital and specialist channels have now been combined in the business. Elderly travellers and return customers are attracted by the loyalty program.

The World360 Rewards program is catching on with new members. The mean age of customers is growing at a constant rate in stores and online. Luxury brand Scott Dunn has performed better than ever before. Good gains were also made by Travel Money and Ignite brands.

Yet, in the short-term, mix changes had a minor impact on profits. PBT etc underlying leisure fell by 4% to $61m. The management hopes that the second half will see better returns. January has already provided record leisure profit and TTV.

Internet capability and cruise growth ought to increase margins further. The data, personalisation and cross-brand selling are also assessed in the strategy to enhance conversion.

Capital Management Strengthens Shareholder Returns And Balance Sheet

The half was characterised by active capital allocation. The company maintained an on-market share buyback of up to 200m. Approximately 126m of the shares have already been retired, and about 9.8m shares have been retired. An additional convertible note of 450m was issued. Proceeds will be used to retire older loans and assist in acquiring.

The interim dividend has risen by 9 to 12 cents per share, and it is fully franked. The management claimed that the healthy balance sheet will support continued investment and dividend payments to shareholders.

The total of cash and investments was 745m. The positive net debt improved over the previous time. These actions are taken in order to improve the earnings per share and maintain flexibility.

Interim dividend rose 9% fully franked, balance sheet supports payouts. [ASX]

What Is The Outlook For Flight Centre earnings for FY26?

FY26 guidance is the same. The forecast underlying PBT is between 315m and 350m, with a middle of 332.5m. It means approximately 15 per cent growth per year. The management anticipates better seasonality in the second half.

The incorporation of Iglu and bettering Asia should help. An increase in productivity and digital improvements will also help. The positive position is supported by industry data. It is expected that there will be a 4.9 per cent increase in the global passenger traffic in 2026.

About 84 per cent of corporate purchasers anticipate travel expenditure to stay constant or increase. The group is diversified in terms of brands and operates AI-directed efficiency, which seems to be set to grow.

Margins, digital growth and cruise momentum are areas that the investors will be keen on. The Flight Centre FY26 earnings projections indicate consistent growth and not dramatic returns. However, stability is useful in a fluctuating world market.

Also Read: Tariffs, AI Fears Push Global Stocks into Uncertain Territory

FAQs

Q1. What are the key numbers in the Flight Centre FY26 results?

A1: TTV reached $12.5b, revenue hit $1.4b, and underlying PBT rose to $125m.

Q2. How did the corporate division perform?

A2: Corporate TTV grew 6% to $6.3b, and profit jumped 20% to $115m.

Q3. Is Flight Centre investing in technology?

A3: Yes, AI tools and digital platforms are improving efficiency and customer service.

Q4. What is the FY26 profit guidance?

A4: Underlying PBT is forecast between $315m and $350m for FY26.

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Last modified: February 25, 2026
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