Skip to content

Copart CPRT Net margin

Net margin at other companies

RB Global logo
RB GlobalRBA
9.6%-0.1pp
Carvana logo
CarvanaCVNA
6.4%+3.7pp
O'Reilly Automotive logo
O'Reilly AutomotiveORLY
14.3%+0.2pp
AutoZone logo
AutoZoneAZO
12.4%-1.2pp
Paccar logo
PaccarPCAR
8.9%-1.8pp

Other financials

Income statement

See full
Revenue$1.2B+2.1%
Operating income$464.3M+2.8%
Net income$402.4M-1.0%
EPS (diluted)$0.43+2.4%

Balance sheet

See full
Cash & equivalents$3.4B+41.7%
Total equity$8.8B-0.1%
Total assets$9.6B-0.2%

Cash flow

See full
Operating cash flow$584.2M-16.7%
CapEx$80.9M-36.8%
Free cash flow$503.3M-12.2%

Valuation

See full
Market cap$27.99B-46.7%
P/E18×-17.5×
P/S-5.4×

Profitability

See full
Gross margin88.6%
Operating margin36.6%+0.8pp

Returns & leverage

See full
Return on equity17.7%-0.8pp
Debt / equity0.0×
Current ratio7.6×-0.5×

Where this comes from

Calculated from Copart’s reported figures.

Based on trailing twelve months.

The official record: Copart’s 10-Q, filed May 29, 2026, on SEC EDGAR. View the filing →

Ask your AI about Copart's net margin.

Connect your AI assistant and compare it to peers, right in your chat.

Connect your AI
Harbor at dusk
Claude

Questions, answered.

What is Copart's net margin?
Copart (CPRT) reported net margin of 33.5% in Q1 2026.
How has Copart's net margin changed year-over-year?
Copart's net margin increased by 4.0% year-over-year, from 32.2% to 33.5%.
What is the long-term trend for Copart's net margin?
Over 4 years (2021 to 2025), Copart's net margin has grown at a -0.1% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from 130.3% to 129.8%.
What does net margin mean?
The share of every sales dollar that becomes bottom-line profit.
How do you interpret net margin?
Higher is better, but net margin mixes operating performance with financing and tax effects and one-off items — read it alongside operating margin to separate the operating story from the rest.
How does net margin compare across companies?
Comparable across peers but sensitive to leverage and tax structure; two operationally identical firms can show different net margins purely from financing.