Coursera COUR Business Segments
| FY'25 | FY'24 | FY'23 | FY'22 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue by Business | |||||
| Consumer | $502.2M+10.2% | $455.8M+9.5% | $416.2M+40.8% | $295.58M+20.1% | |
| Enterprise | $255.3M+6.9% | $238.9M+8.8% | $219.6M+21.1% | $181.28M+50.5% | |
| Revenue by Geography | |||||
| Asia Pacific | $108.9M+21.4% | $89.7M+9.0% | $82.3M+19.4% | $68.94M+25.9% | |
| Europe, Middle East, and Africa | $185.9M+11.7% | $166.4M+8.7% | $153.1M+17.2% | $130.61M+15.9% | |
| Other | $78M+11.6% | $69.9M+17.1% | $59.7M+23.9% | $48.2M+29.0% | |
| United States | $384.7M+4.3% | $368.7M+8.2% | $340.7M+23.4% | $276.01M+31.1% |
Chart any of these lines over time, or line them up against competitors.
Compare these in charts →Questions, answered.
- How does Coursera break its business down?
- Coursera (COUR) reports revenue by business across 2 parts — Consumer and Enterprise. Each is extracted from the segment footnotes and tracked over time.
- Where does Coursera's segment data come from?
- Segment breakdowns are pulled from the segment footnotes in Coursera's SEC filings (the XBRL dimensional tags), so every line ties back to a reported figure. Switch between quarterly, annual, and TTM, or open any segment for its full history.