Skip to content

Starbucks SBUX Price / earnings

Price / earnings at other companies

McDonald's logo
McDonald'sMCD
25.5×-1.8×
Chipotle Mexican Grill logo
Chipotle Mexican GrillCMG
28.7×-14.9×
Keurig Dr Pepper logo
Keurig Dr PepperKDP
19.5×-8.6×
Restaurant Brands International logo
Restaurant Brands InternationalQSR
19.7×+3.5×
Casey's General Stores logo
Casey's General StoresCASY
34.6×+5.9×
PepsiCo logo
PepsiCoPEP
24.3×+2.4×

Other financials

Income statement

See full
Revenue$9.5B+8.8%
Operating income$828.1M+37.8%
Net income$510.9M+33.0%
EPS (diluted)$0.45+32.4%

Balance sheet

See full
Cash & equivalents$1.5B-42.7%
Total debt$24.4B-6.2%
Total equity-$8.5B-11.1%
Total assets$30.6B-3.4%

Cash flow

See full
Operating cash flow$364.5M+24.8%
CapEx$272.7M-53.7%
Free cash flow$91.8M

Valuation

See full
Market cap$113.76B-8.4%
Enterprise value$136.62B-7.3%
P/S-0.5×

Profitability

See full
Gross margin72.3%
Operating margin7.6%-4.9pp
Net margin3.9%-4.7pp

Returns & leverage

See full
Return on equity136.5%
Debt / equity7.8×
Current ratio0.9×+0.3×

Where this comes from

Calculated from Starbucks’s reported figures.

Based on the most recent quarter.

The official record: Starbucks’s 10-Q, filed April 28, 2026, on SEC EDGAR. View the filing →

Ask your AI about Starbucks's price / earnings.

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

Connect your AI
Harbor at dusk
Claude

Questions, answered.

What is Starbucks's price / earnings?
Starbucks (SBUX) reported price / earnings of 68.2× in Q1 2026.
How has Starbucks's price / earnings changed year-over-year?
Starbucks's price / earnings increased by 91.6% year-over-year, from 35.6× to 68.2×.
What is the long-term trend for Starbucks's price / earnings?
Over 4 years (2021 to 2025), Starbucks's price / earnings has grown at a -20.7% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from 394.7× to 156.3×.
What does price / earnings mean?
How many dollars investors pay for each dollar of the company's annual profit.
How do you interpret price / earnings?
Lower can mean cheaper — or that the market expects earnings to fall. High multiples embed growth expectations. Meaningless when earnings are negative, so it is suppressed there.
How does price / earnings compare across companies?
Compare against the company's own history and sector peers, not across sectors with different growth and risk profiles.