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UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
 
FORM 8-K
 
CURRENT REPORT
 
Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
 
Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported): January 30, 2026
 
AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
   
New York   1-7657   13-4922250
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation)   (Commission File Number)   (IRS Employer Identification No.)
200 Vesey Street,
New York, New York 10285
(Address of principal executive offices and zip code)
(212) 640-2000
(Registrant's telephone number, including area code)
Not Applicable
(Former name or former address, if changed since last report)
 

Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions (see General Instruction A.2. below):
 
Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)
Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)
Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))
Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of each class Trading Symbol(s) Name of each exchange on which registered
Common Shares (par value $0.20 per Share)   AXP   New York Stock Exchange
3.433% Fixed-to-Floating Rate Notes due May 20, 2032 AXP32 New York Stock Exchange
 
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an emerging growth company as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act of 1933 (§230.405 of this chapter) or Rule 12b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (§240.12b-2 of this chapter).

Emerging growth company ☐

If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. ☐






Item 2.02 Results of Operations and Financial Condition and Item 7.01 Regulation FD Disclosure
The following information is furnished under Item 2.02 – Results of Operations and Financial Condition and Item 7.01 – Regulation FD Disclosure:
On January 30, 2026, American Express Company (the “Company”) reported financial results for the full year and fourth quarter of 2025. A copy of the Company’s earnings release is attached to this report as Exhibit 99.1 and additional information relating to the Company’s financial results for the full year and fourth quarter of 2025 is attached to this report as Exhibit 99.2.
Item 9.01    Financial Statements and Exhibits

(d) Exhibits
Exhibit Description
99.1
99.2
104 The cover page of this Current Report on Form 8-K, formatted as inline XBRL.



CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
This Current Report on Form 8-K (including the exhibits attached hereto) includes forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, which are subject to risks and uncertainties. The forward-looking statements, which address the Company’s current expectations regarding business and financial performance, including management’s guidance for 2026 and long-term growth aspiration, among other matters, contain words such as “believe,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “plan,” “aim,” “will,” “may,” “should,” “could,” “would,” “likely,” “continue” and similar expressions. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date on which they are made. The Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements, include, but are not limited to, the following:
•the Company’s ability to achieve its 2026 earnings per common share (EPS) guidance and grow EPS in the future consistent with the Company’s growth aspiration, which will depend in part on revenue growth, credit performance, credit reserve and expense levels and the effective tax rate remaining consistent with current expectations and the Company’s ability to continue executing on its investment philosophy, including investing at high levels in areas that can drive sustainable growth (such as its brand, value propositions, coverage, marketing, technology, partnerships and talent), controlling operating expenses, effectively managing risk and executing its share repurchase program, any of which could be impacted by, among other things, the factors identified in the subsequent paragraphs as well as the following: macroeconomic and geopolitical conditions, including a slowdown in U.S. or global economic growth, changes to consumer and business confidence, higher rates of unemployment, global trade relations and the effects of announced or future tariffs, international tensions, hostilities and instability, changes in interest rates, inflation, supply chain issues, market volatility, government shutdowns and fiscal and monetary policies; the impact of any future contingencies, including, but not limited to, legal costs and settlements, the imposition of fines or monetary penalties, increases in Card Member remediation, investment gains or losses, restructurings, impairments and changes in reserves; issues impacting brand perceptions and the Company’s reputation; changes in the competitive environment; impacts related to acquisitions, cobrand relationships and other partners, portfolio sales, joint ventures and other investments; and the impact of regulation and litigation, which could affect the profitability of the Company’s business activities, limit the Company’s ability to pursue business opportunities, require changes to business practices or alter the Company’s relationships with Card Members, partners and merchants;
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•the Company’s ability to achieve its 2026 revenue growth guidance and grow revenues net of interest expense in the future consistent with the Company’s growth aspiration, which could be impacted by, among other things, the factors identified above and in the subsequent paragraphs, as well as the following: spending volumes and the spending environment not being consistent with expectations, including spending by U.S. consumer and small & mid-sized business Card Members, such as due to uncertain business and economic conditions; an inability to address competitive pressures, attract and retain customers, invest in and enhance the Company’s Membership Model of premium products, differentiated services and partnerships, successfully refresh its card products (e.g., the U.S. Consumer and Business Platinum Card refreshes), grow spending and lending with customers across age cohorts (including Millennial and Gen-Z customers) and commercial segments and implement strategies and business initiatives, including within the premium consumer space, commercial payments and the global network; the effects of regulatory initiatives, including pricing regulation, such as potential credit card interest rate caps, and network regulation; merchant coverage growing less than expected or the reduction of merchant acceptance or the perception of coverage; increased surcharging, steering, suppression or other differential acceptance practices with respect to the Company’s products; merchant discount rates changing from the Company’s expectations; and changes in foreign currency exchange rates;
•net card fee revenues not growing consistent with the Company’s expectations for 2026 and beyond, which could be impacted by, among other things, the pace of Card Member acquisition activity and demand for the Company’s fee-based products; higher Card Member attrition rates; the success and timing of the Company’s refreshes of its card products (including U.S. Consumer and Business Platinum Card acquisition and retention levels following the refreshes); a decrease in the ability and desire of Card Members to pay card fees, such as due to a deterioration in macroeconomic conditions or as a result of changes in card fees; the competitive environment and the perception of the value provided by premium cards; regulatory initiatives impacting card fees; and the Company’s inability to deliver and enhance benefits and services, innovate with respect to its products and develop attractive premium value propositions for new and existing customers;
•net interest income, the effects of changes in interest rates and the growth of loans and Card Member receivables outstanding and revolving balances, being higher or lower than expectations, which could be impacted by, among other things, the behavior and financial strength of Card Members and their actual spending, borrowing and paydown patterns; the effectiveness of the Company’s strategies to enhance Card Member value propositions, grow lending with premium customers and capture a greater share of Card Members’ spending and borrowings, and attract new, and retain existing, customers; the Company’s ability to effectively introduce and enhance lending features on its products and manage underwriting risk; governmental actions to cap credit card interest rates; changes in benchmark interest rates, including where such changes affect the Company’s assets or liabilities differently than expected; the Company’s ability to grow deposits, including from Card Members; continued volatility and other changes in capital and credit market conditions and the availability and cost of capital; credit actions, including line size and other adjustments to credit availability; the yield on Card Member loans differing from current expectations; and loss or impacts to cobrand relationships;
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•future credit performance, the level of future delinquency, reserve and write-off rates and the amount and timing of future reserve builds and releases, which will depend in part on macroeconomic factors such as actual and projected unemployment rates and GDP; the ability and willingness of Card Members to pay amounts owed to the Company; changes in loans and receivables outstanding, such as from the implementation of the Company’s strategy to capture spending and borrowings, or from changes in consumer behavior that affect loan and receivable balances (e.g., paydown and revolve rates); changes in the levels of customer acquisitions and the credit profiles of new customers acquired; financial stress and volume of bankruptcies of Card Members and business partners; credit-related fraud levels; card portfolio sales; the magnitude of seasonal fluctuations in credit metrics; the enrollment in, and effectiveness of, financial relief programs and the performance of accounts as they exit from such programs; the effects of the resumption of student loan repayments; collections capabilities and recoveries of previously written-off loans and receivables; and the impact of the usage of debt settlement companies;
•the actual amount to be spent on Card Member rewards and services and business development in 2026 and beyond, and the relationship of these variable customer engagement costs to revenues, which could be impacted by the investments and enhancements that the Company makes with respect to its value propositions, including its rewards programs and product benefits, such as in connection with card refreshes (e.g., recently introduced U.S. Consumer and Business Platinum Card benefits), to make them attractive to Card Members and prospective customers, potentially in a manner that is not cost-effective; changes in the level of Card Member spending and spending patterns (including the level of spend in bonus categories), the redemption of rewards and offers (including travel redemptions) and usage of travel-, lifestyle- and business-related benefits; the costs related to reward point redemptions; levels of Card Member acquisitions on premium card products; changes in the Company’s models or assumptions used to estimate these expenses; new and renegotiated contractual obligations with business partners, which may be affected by business partners with greater scale and leverage; the Company’s ability to identify and negotiate partner-funded value for Card Members; and the pace and cost of the expansion of the Company’s global lounge collection;
•the actual amount the Company spends on marketing in 2026 and beyond and the effectiveness and efficiency of its marketing spending, which will be based in part on continued changes in the macroeconomic and competitive environment and business performance, including the levels of demand for the Company’s products; the Company’s ability to realize marketing efficiencies, including as a result of investments in its product value propositions and the use of technology, such as the personalization of offers, and balance expense control and investments in the business; management’s investment optimization process and its ability to develop premium value propositions and drive customer demand; management’s identification and assessment of attractive investment opportunities and its decisions regarding the timing of investments; and the receptivity of Card Members and prospective customers to advertising and customer acquisition initiatives;
•the Company’s ability to control operating expenses, including relative to revenue growth, and the actual amount spent on operating expenses in 2026 and beyond, which could be impacted by, among other things, salary and benefit expenses to attract and retain talent; the Company’s ability to realize operational efficiencies, including through increased scale and automation and continued adoption of artificial intelligence technologies; management’s ability to balance expense control and investments in the business, and its decisions regarding spending in such areas as technology, business and product development, sales force, premium servicing and digital capabilities; the Company’s ability to innovate efficient channels of customer interactions and the willingness of Card Members to self-service and address issues through digital channels; restructuring activity; fraud costs; inflation and supply chain issues; increased technology costs, including investments in technology innovations and systems upgrades; expenses related to enterprise risk management and compliance and consulting, legal and other professional services fees, including as a result of the Company’s growth, litigation and internal and regulatory reviews; the impact of changes in foreign currency exchange rates on costs; regulatory assessments; the level of M&A activity and related expenses; information security or cybersecurity incidents; the payment of fines, penalties, disgorgement, restitution, non-income tax assessments and litigation-related settlements; the performance of Amex Ventures and other of the Company’s investments; and impairments of goodwill or other assets;
-4-


•the Company’s tax rate not remaining consistent with expectations, which could be impacted by, among other things, further changes in tax laws and regulation, the implementation by jurisdictions of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development’s global minimum tax guidelines (including safe harbors for U.S. multinational enterprises), the Company’s geographic mix of income, unfavorable tax audits, assessments and tax litigation outcomes, and the occurrence or nonoccurrence of other discrete tax items;
•changes affecting the Company’s plans regarding the return of capital to shareholders, including increasing the level of the dividend, which will depend on factors such as the Company’s capital levels and regulatory capital ratios; results of the stress testing and capital planning process and new rulemakings and guidance from the Federal Reserve and other banking regulators, including changes to regulatory capital requirements, such as from Basel III rulemaking; results of operations and financial condition; credit ratings and rating agency considerations; required Company approvals; and the economic environment and market conditions in any given period;
•changes in the substantial and increasing worldwide competition in the payments industry, including competitive pressure and competitor settlements that may materially impact the prices charged to merchants that accept American Express cards; merchant acceptance, surcharging, steering and other differential acceptance practices; the desirability of competitor premium card products and competition for partnerships and premium experiences, services and benefits; competition for new and existing cobrand relationships; competition from new and non-traditional competitors, such as financial technology companies, and with respect to new products, services and technologies, such as the emergence or increase in popularity of agentic commerce, digital payment platforms and currencies and other alternative payment mechanisms; competitor acquisitions and transactions; and the success of marketing, promotion, rewards programs, offers and travel-, lifestyle- and business-related benefits (e.g., lounges, dining, entertainment and business tools);
•the Company’s ability to sustain its momentum and leadership in the premium consumer space, including with Millennial and Gen-Z consumers, and the success of the refresh of its U.S. Consumer Platinum Card®, which will be impacted in part by competition, levels of consumer demand for premium card products, brand perceptions (including perceptions related to merchant coverage) and reputation, and the Company’s ability to develop and market new benefits, services, experiences and other value propositions, as well as new digital capabilities, that appeal to Card Members and new customers, grow spending with new and younger age cohort Card Members, offer attractive services and rewards programs and build greater customer loyalty, which will depend in part on identifying and funding investment opportunities, addressing changing customer behaviors, new product innovation and development, Card Member acquisition efforts and enrollment processes, including through digital channels, continuing to realize benefits from strategic partnerships, successfully implementing the Company’s dining strategy and evolving the Company’s infrastructure to support new products, services and benefits;
•the Company’s ability to build on its leadership in commercial payments and the success of the refresh of its U.S. Business Platinum Card®, which will depend in part on competition, including from financial technology companies and as a result of competitor acquisitions and transactions; the willingness and ability of companies to use credit and charge cards for procurement and other business expenditures as well as use the Company’s other products and services for financing needs; the acceptance of, and economics related to, B2B payment platforms; the Company’s ability to offer attractive value propositions and new products to current and potential customers; the Company’s ability to enhance and expand its payment, lending, cash flow and expense management solutions, including the release of a suite of offerings for small & mid-sized business customers, increase customer engagement, and build out a multi-product digital ecosystem to integrate its broad product set, which is dependent on the Company’s continued investment in capabilities, features, functionalities, platforms and technologies and the successful integration of, and introduction of capabilities related to, the Company’s Center acquisition; and the success of the Company’s initiatives to support businesses, such as Small Business Saturday and other Shop Small campaigns;
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•the Company’s ability to expand merchant coverage globally and its success, as well as the success of third-party merchant acquirers, processors and payment facilitators, in signing merchants to accept American Express, which will depend on, among other factors, the value propositions offered to merchants and merchant acquirers for card acceptance, the awareness and willingness of Card Members to use American Express cards at merchants, scaling marketing and expanding programs to increase card usage, identifying and growing acceptance in low- and new-to-plastic industries and businesses as they form, working with commercial buyers and suppliers to establish B2B acceptance, executing on the Company’s plans to increase coverage in priority international cities, destinations, countries and industry verticals, merchant point-of-sale practices, and continued network investments, including in capabilities that allow for greater digital integration and modernization of its authorization platform;
•the Company’s ability to successfully invest in, benefit from and expand the use of technological developments, digital payments, servicing, travel & dining solutions, generative artificial intelligence and other technological capabilities and the actual amount the Company spends on technology in 2026, which will depend in part on the Company’s success in evolving its products and processes for the digital environment and agentic commerce; developing new features in its applications and platforms and enhancing its digital channels; effectively utilizing artificial intelligence and machine learning and increasing automation, including to enhance the Company’s products, develop new capabilities and address servicing and other business and customer needs; supporting the use of the Company’s products as a means of payment through online, mobile, agentic and other digital channels; building partnerships and executing programs with other companies; and effectively utilizing data and data & analytics platforms, including successfully migrating to new platforms, all of which will be impacted by investment levels, customer and colleague receptiveness and ability to adopt new technologies, new product innovation and development and the platforms and infrastructure to support new products, services, benefits and partner integrations;
•the Company’s ability to grow internationally, which could be impacted by regulation and business practices, such as those capping interchange or other fees, mandating network access or data localization, imposing greater requirements on payment networks, favoring local competitors or prohibiting or limiting foreign ownership of certain businesses; perceptions of the Company’s brand in international jurisdictions; the Company’s inability to successfully replicate aspects of its business model internationally and tailor products and services to make them attractive to local customers; competitors with more scale, local experience and established relationships with relevant customers, regulators and industry participants; the success of the Company and its network partners in acquiring Card Members and/or merchants; and geopolitical and economic instability, hostilities and tensions (such as involving China and the U.S.), and impacts to cross-border trade and travel;
•a failure in or breach of the Company’s operational or security systems, processes or infrastructure, or those of third parties, including as a result of cyberattacks or outages, which could compromise the confidentiality, integrity, privacy and/or security of data, disrupt the Company’s or its partners’ operations, reduce the use and acceptance of American Express cards or the Company’s digital platforms and lead to regulatory scrutiny, litigation, remediation and response costs and reputational harm;
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•legal and regulatory developments, which could affect the profitability of the Company’s business activities; limit the Company’s ability to pursue business opportunities or conduct business in certain jurisdictions; require changes to business practices or governance, or alter the Company’s relationships with Card Members, partners, merchants and other third parties, including affecting its network operations and practices governing merchant acceptance, as well as its ability to continue certain cobrand relationships in the EU; impact interest income, card fees and rewards programs; exert further pressure on merchant discount rates and the Company’s GNS business, as well as result in an increase in surcharging, steering or other differential acceptance practices; alter the competitive landscape; subject the Company to heightened regulatory scrutiny and result in increased costs related to regulatory oversight and compliance, litigation-related settlements, judgments or expenses, restitution to Card Members or the imposition of fines or monetary penalties; materially affect capital or liquidity requirements, results of operations or ability to pay dividends; or result in harm to the American Express brand; and
•factors beyond the Company’s control such as business, economic and geopolitical conditions, consumer and business confidence and spending generally, unemployment rates, market volatility, energy costs, government shutdowns and other political developments, further escalations or widening of international tensions, regional hostilities and military conflicts (such as in the Middle East and Ukraine), adverse developments affecting third parties, including other financial institutions, merchants, partners or vendors, as well as severe weather conditions and natural disasters (e.g., hurricanes and wildfires), power loss, disruptions in telecommunications, pandemics, terrorism and other catastrophic events, any of which could significantly affect demand for and spending on American Express cards, credit metrics and reserves, loan and receivable balances, deposit levels and other aspects of the Company’s business and results of operations or disrupt its global network systems and ability to process transactions.
A further description of these uncertainties and other risks can be found in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q for the quarters ended March 31, June 30 and September 30, 2025 and the Company’s other reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
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SIGNATURE
 
 
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.
 
  AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY
  (REGISTRANT)
     
  By: /s/ James J. Killerlane III
    Name:  James J. Killerlane III
    Title:    Corporate Secretary
 
Date: January 30, 2026
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EX-99.1 2 q425exhibit991.htm EX-99.1 Document



EXHIBIT 99.1


New York | January 30, 2026
axp_blueboxlogoxalternatexa.jpg
AMERICAN EXPRESS

FY & Q4 2025 RESULTS
AMERICAN EXPRESS FY 2025 REVENUES INCREASED 10%
FY 2025 EARNINGS PER SHARE ROSE TO $15.38
Q4 CARD MEMBER SPEND GREW 9%, OR 8% FX-ADJUSTED1
COMPANY EXPECTS FY 2026 REVENUE GROWTH OF 9% TO 10% AND EPS OF $17.30 TO $17.90
(Millions, except per share amounts, and where indicated)

Quarters Ended
December 31,
YoY%
Inc/(Dec)
Years Ended
December 31,
YoY%
Inc/(Dec)

2025 2024

2025 2024

Billed Business (Billions)
FX-adjusted1
$445.1
$408.4
$412.7
9%
8%
$1,669.8
$1,550.9
$1,555.5
8%
7%
Total Revenues Net of Interest Expense
FX-adjusted1
$18,980
$17,179
$17,349
10%
9%
$72,229
$65,949
$66,083
10%
9%
Net Income
$2,462
$2,170
13%
$10,833
$10,129
7%
Diluted Earnings Per Common Share (EPS)2
$3.53
$3.04
16%
$15.38
$14.01
10%
Adjusted EPS Excluding Transaction Gain3
$15.38
$13.35
15%
Average Diluted Common Shares Outstanding
 688
    704
(2)%
    696
    713
(2)%
American Express Company (NYSE: AXP) today reported full-year 2025 net income of $10.8 billion, compared with net income of $10.1 billion a year ago. Earnings per share was $15.38, up 10 percent from $14.01 a year ago, or 15 percent excluding the prior-year Accertify transaction gain.3
Stephen J. Squeri | Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
"2025 was a very strong year for American Express. Full-year revenues grew 10 percent to reach another record, and adjusted EPS increased 15 percent over last year. In the fourth quarter, Card Member spending increased 8 percent FX-adjusted, net card fee revenues grew double digits for the 30th consecutive quarter, and our credit metrics remained best-in-class.
"Importantly, we continued to strategically invest in areas that strengthen our Membership Model and drive our growth, such as our successful U.S. Platinum Card refresh and technology enhancements like new app and Gen AI-powered experiences. As demonstrated in our results, our investments are paying off – driving increased customer demand, engagement and loyalty, while generating efficiencies across the enterprise and supporting our excellent credit performance.
"Looking ahead, we plan to continue to execute our proven investment philosophy in order to deliver sustained revenue and EPS growth and strong shareholder returns over the long term. For the full year 2026, we expect revenue growth of 9 to 10 percent and EPS in the range of $17.30 to $17.90, and we plan to increase our quarterly common stock dividend by approximately 16 percent."
1


AMERICAN EXPRESS FY & Q4 2025 RESULTS
Full-Year 2025 Results
Consolidated total revenues net of interest expense for the full year were $72.2 billion, up 10 percent year-over-year, or 9 percent on an FX-adjusted basis. The increase was primarily driven by higher Card Member spending, increased net interest income supported by growth in revolving loan balances, and strong card fee growth.
Consolidated provisions for credit losses for the full year were $5.3 billion, compared with $5.2 billion a year ago. The increase reflected higher net write-offs driven by growth in total loans and Card Member receivables, partially offset by a lower reserve build year-over-year. The full-year net write-off rate was 2.0 percent, flat year-over-year.4
Consolidated expenses for the full year were $53.2 billion, up 11 percent year-over-year. The increase primarily reflected higher variable customer engagement costs driven by higher Card Member spending and usage of travel- and lifestyle-related benefits, as well as higher operating expenses driven by investments in enterprise risk management capabilities and technology and the prior-year transaction gain.
The full-year consolidated effective tax rate was 21.5 percent for both the current and prior year.
Fourth-Quarter 2025 Results
Q4 Business Highlights
Fourth-quarter consolidated total revenues net of interest expense were $19.0 billion, up 10 percent year-over-year, or 9 percent on an FX-adjusted basis. The increase was primarily driven by higher Card Member spending, increased net interest income supported by growth in revolving loan balances, and strong card fee growth.
Consolidated provisions for credit losses were $1.4 billion, compared with $1.3 billion a year ago. The increase reflected higher net write-offs, partially offset by a lower net reserve build compared to the prior year. The fourth-quarter net write-off rate was 2.1 percent, compared to 1.9 percent a year ago.4
Consolidated expenses were $14.5 billion, up 10 percent year-over-year. The increase was primarily driven by higher variable customer engagement costs due to increased Card Member spending and the U.S. Platinum Card refresh.
The consolidated effective tax rate was 20.3 percent, down from 21.3 percent a year ago, primarily reflecting changes in the geographic mix of income.

•American Express signed a multi-year extension of its British Airways Cobrand Card partnership.
•The company advanced Gen AI and agentic commerce initiatives, launching Dining Companion and developing standards with partners to enable agent-driven commerce.
•The company opened its 31st Centurion Lounge at the Salt Lake City International Airport.
•The company ranked #1 in U.S. Small Business Credit Card Customer Satisfaction by J.D. Power for the fifth consecutive year.5
•American Express was named #10 on Fortune's 2026 World’s Most Admired Companies™ list.
Planned Dividend Increase
The company plans to increase the regular quarterly dividend on its common shares outstanding by approximately 16 percent, from $0.82 to $0.95 per share, beginning with the first-quarter 2026 dividend declaration.
# # #
2


AMERICAN EXPRESS FY & Q4 2025 RESULTS
This earnings release should be read in conjunction with the supplemental financial data for the full year and fourth quarter 2025 (the statistical tables), which include information regarding our reportable operating segments and certain defined terms used in this release, available on the American Express Investor Relations website at http://ir.americanexpress.com and in a Form 8-K furnished today with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
An investor conference call will be held at 8:30 a.m. (ET) today to discuss full-year and fourth-quarter 2025 results. Live audio and presentation slides for the investor conference call will be available to the general public on the above-mentioned American Express Investor Relations website. A replay of the conference call will be available at the same website address following the call.
1

As used in this release, FX-adjusted information assumes a constant exchange rate between the periods being compared for purposes of currency translations into U.S. dollars (i.e., assumes the foreign exchange rates used to determine results for current period apply to the corresponding prior-year period against which such results are being compared). FX-adjusted revenues is a non-GAAP measure. The company believes the presentation of information on an FX-adjusted basis is helpful to investors by making it easier to compare the company’s performance in one period to that of another period without the variability caused by fluctuations in currency exchange rates.
2

Attributable to common shareholders. Represents net income less earnings allocated to participating share awards and dividends on preferred shares. Refer to the statistical tables for more information.
3
Adjusted diluted earnings per common share, a non-GAAP measure, excludes the $0.66 per share impact of the gain from the sale of Accertify, Inc. recognized in the second quarter of 2024. See Appendix I for a reconciliation to EPS on a GAAP basis. Management believes adjusted EPS is useful in evaluating the ongoing operating performance of the company.
4

Net write-off rates are based on principal losses only (i.e., excluding interest and/or fees) and represent consumer and small business Card Member loans and receivables (net write-off rates based on principal losses only are unavailable for corporate). Refer to the statistical tables for more information and net write-off rates including interest and fees.
5

American Express received the highest score in the J.D. Power 2021-2025 Small Business Credit Card Satisfaction Studies, which measure small business owners’ and decision makers’ satisfaction with their primary credit card they use for their business. Visit jdpower.com/awards for more details.
# # #
Media Contacts:
Amanda Miller, Amanda.C.Miller@aexp.com, +1.408.219.0563
Deniz Yigin, Deniz.Yigin@aexp.com, +1.332.999.0836
Investors/Analysts Contacts:
Kartik Ramachandran, Kartik.Ramachandran@aexp.com, +1.212.640.5574
Amanda Blumstein, Amanda.Blumstein@aexp.com, +1.212.640.5574

3


AMERICAN EXPRESS FY & Q4 2025 RESULTS

ABOUT AMERICAN EXPRESS
American Express (NYSE: AXP) is a global payments and premium lifestyle brand powered by technology. Our colleagues around the world back our customers with differentiated products, services and experiences that enrich lives and build business success.
Founded in 1850 and headquartered in New York, American Express’ brand is built on trust, security, and service, and a rich history of delivering innovation and Membership value for our customers. With over a hundred million merchant locations across our global network, we seek to provide the world’s best customer experience every day to a broad range of consumers, small and medium-sized businesses, and large corporations.
For more information about American Express, visit americanexpress.com, americanexpress.com/en-us/newsroom/, and ir.americanexpress.com.
CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

This release includes forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, which are subject to risks and uncertainties. The forward-looking statements, which address American Express Company’s current expectations regarding business and financial performance, including management’s guidance for 2026 and long-term growth aspiration, among other matters, contain words such as “believe,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “plan,” “aim,” “will,” “may,” “should,” “could,” “would,” “likely,” “continue” and similar expressions. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date on which they are made. The company undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements, include, but are not limited to, those that are set forth under the caption “Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements” in the company’s current report on Form 8-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on January 30, 2026 (the Form 8-K Cautionary Note), which are incorporated by reference into this release. Those factors include, but are not limited to, the following:

•the company’s ability to achieve its 2026 earnings per common share (EPS) guidance and grow EPS in the future consistent with the company’s growth aspiration, which will depend in part on revenue growth, credit performance, credit reserve and expense levels and the effective tax rate remaining consistent with current expectations and the company’s ability to continue executing on its investment philosophy, including investing at high levels in areas that can drive sustainable growth (such as its brand, value propositions, coverage, marketing, technology, partnerships and talent), controlling operating expenses, effectively managing risk and executing its share repurchase program, any of which could be impacted by, among other things, the factors identified in the subsequent paragraph and the Form 8-K Cautionary Note, as well as the following: macroeconomic and geopolitical conditions, including a slowdown in U.S. or global economic growth, changes to consumer and business confidence, higher rates of unemployment, global trade relations and the effects of announced or future tariffs, international tensions, hostilities and instability, changes in interest rates, inflation, supply chain issues, market volatility, government shutdowns and fiscal and monetary policies; the impact of any future contingencies, including, but not limited to, legal costs and settlements, the imposition of fines or monetary penalties, increases in Card Member remediation, investment gains or losses, restructurings, impairments and changes in reserves; issues impacting brand perceptions and the company’s reputation; changes in the competitive environment; impacts related to acquisitions, cobrand relationships and other partners, portfolio sales, joint ventures and other investments; and the impact of regulation and litigation, which could affect the profitability of the company’s business activities, limit the company’s ability to pursue business opportunities, require changes to business practices or alter the company’s relationships with Card Members, partners and merchants; and

•the company’s ability to achieve its 2026 revenue growth guidance and grow revenues net of interest expense in the future consistent with the company’s growth aspiration, which could be impacted by, among other things, the factors identified above and in the Form 8-K Cautionary Note, as well as the following:
4


AMERICAN EXPRESS FY & Q4 2025 RESULTS
spending volumes and the spending environment not being consistent with expectations, including spending by U.S. consumer and small & mid-sized business Card Members, such as due to uncertain business and economic conditions; an inability to address competitive pressures, attract and retain customers, invest in and enhance the company’s Membership Model of premium products, differentiated services and partnerships, successfully refresh its card products (e.g., the U.S. Consumer and Business Platinum Card refreshes), grow spending and lending with customers across age cohorts (including Millennial and Gen-Z customers) and commercial segments and implement strategies and business initiatives, including within the premium consumer space, commercial payments and the global network; the effects of regulatory initiatives, including pricing regulation, such as potential credit card interest rate caps, and network regulation; merchant coverage growing less than expected or the reduction of merchant acceptance or the perception of coverage; increased surcharging, steering, suppression or other differential acceptance practices with respect to the company’s products; merchant discount rates changing from the company’s expectations; and changes in foreign currency exchange rates.

A further description of these uncertainties and other risks can be found in American Express Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q for the quarters ended March 31, June 30 and September 30, 2025 and the company’s other reports filed with the SEC, including in the Form 8-K Cautionary Note.
American Express Company
Appendix I
Reconciliation of Adjusted EPS Excluding Transaction Gain
Years Ended
December 31,
YoY%
Inc/(Dec)
2025 2024
GAAP Diluted EPS
$15.38

$14.01
10%
Accertify Gain on Sale (pretax)

0.74

Tax Impact of Accertify Gain on Sale
(0.08)

Accertify Gain on Sale (after tax)
$0.66

Adjusted Diluted EPS Excluding the Impact of Accertify Gain
$15.38

$13.35 15%
5
EX-99.2 3 q425exhibit992.htm EX-99.2 Q4'25 Exhibit 99.2
See Appendix II for footnote references and definitions of certain key terms
1
EXHIBIT 99.2
American Express Company
(Preliminary)
Consolidated Statements of Income
(Millions, except percentages and per share amounts)
Q4'25
Q3'25
Q2'25
Q1'25
Q4'24
YOY %
change
FY'25
FY'24
YOY %
change
Non-interest revenues
Discount revenue
$9,884
$9,413
$9,361
$8,743
$9,177
8
$37,401
$35,192
6
Net card fees
2,629
2,551
2,480
2,333
2,245
17
9,993
8,449
18
Service fees and other revenue
1,945
1,976
1,828
1,722
1,719
13
7,471
6,765
10
Total non-interest revenues
14,458
13,940
13,669
12,798
13,141
10
54,865
50,406
9
Interest income
Interest on loans
6,064
5,970
5,648
5,552
5,503
10
23,234
21,095
10
Interest and dividends on investment securities
17
15
17
14
18
(6)
63
86
(27)
Deposits with banks and other
501
632
599
569
556
(10)
2,301
2,614
(12)
Total interest income
6,582
6,617
6,264
6,135
6,077
8
25,598
23,795
8
Interest expense
Deposits
1,343
1,371
1,374
1,337
1,397
(4)
5,425
5,695
(5)
Long-term debt and other
717
760
703
629
642
12
2,809
2,557
10
Total interest expense
2,060
2,131
2,077
1,966
2,039
1
8,234
8,252
Net interest income
4,522
4,486
4,187
4,169
4,038
12
17,364
15,543
12
Total revenues net of interest expense
18,980
18,426
17,856
16,967
17,179
10
72,229
65,949
10
Provisions for credit losses
Card Member receivables
189
190
226
146
182
4
751
774
(3)
Card Member loans
1,042
1,030
1,094
901
1,011
3
4,067
4,109
(1)
Other
183
67
85
103
99
85
438
302
45
Total provisions for credit losses
1,414
1,287
1,405
1,150
1,292
9
5,256
5,185
1
Total revenues net of interest expense after
provisions for credit losses
17,566
17,139
16,451
15,817
15,887
11
66,973
60,764
10
Expenses
Card Member rewards
4,805
4,608
4,618
4,378
4,430
8
18,409
16,599
11
Business development
1,728
1,611
1,589
1,529
1,637
6
6,457
5,886
10
Card Member services
1,951
1,477
1,301
1,328
1,278
53
6,057
4,782
27
Marketing
1,612
1,599
1,555
1,486
1,614
6,252
6,040
4
Salaries and employee benefits
2,505
2,239
2,152
2,120
2,102
19
9,016
8,198
10
Professional services
669
623
591
541
698
(4)
2,424
2,274
7
Data processing and equipment
810
751
720
705
805
1
2,986
2,888
3
Other, net
396
406
375
400
567
(30)
1,577
1,202
31
Total expenses
14,476
13,314
12,901
12,487
13,131
10
53,178
47,869
11
Pretax income
3,090
3,825
3,550
3,330
2,756
12
13,795
12,895
7
Income tax provision
628
923
665
746
586
7
2,962
2,766
7
Net income
$2,462
$2,902
$2,885
$2,584
$2,170
13
$10,833
$10,129
7
Net income attributable to common shareholders (A)
$2,429
$2,868
$2,852
$2,552
$2,139
14
$10,701
$9,995
7
Effective tax rate
20.3%
24.1%
18.7%
22.4%
21.3%
21.5%
21.5%
Earnings Per Common Share
Basic
Net income attributable to common shareholders
$3.53
$4.14
$4.08
$3.64
$3.04
16
$15.41
$14.04
10
Average common shares outstanding
687
692
698
701
703
(2)
695
712
(2)
Diluted
Net income attributable to common shareholders
$3.53
$4.14
$4.08
$3.64
$3.04
16
$15.38
$14.01
10
Average common shares outstanding
688
693
699
702
704
(2)
696
713
(2)
Cash dividends declared per common share
$0.82
$0.82
$0.82
$0.82
$0.70
17
$3.28
$2.80
17
See Appendix II for footnote references and definitions of certain key terms
2
American Express Company
(Preliminary)
Consolidated Balance Sheets and Related Statistical Information
(Millions, except percentages, per share amounts and where indicated)
 
Q4'25
Q3'25
Q2'25
Q1'25
Q4'24
YOY %
change
Consolidated Balance Sheets
Assets
 
 
 
 
 
 
Cash & cash equivalents
$47,792
$54,706
$57,937
$52,508
$40,640
18
Card Member receivables, less reserves
61,851
60,823
59,405
58,355
59,240
4
Card Member loans, less reserves
145,923
138,946
136,508
133,611
133,995
9
Card Member loans held for sale
2,457
2,424
2,405
776
758
#
Investment securities
1,043
1,374
1,258
1,110
1,240
(16)
Other (B)
40,986
39,277
38,043
35,884
35,588
15
Total assets
$300,052
$297,550
$295,556
$282,244
$271,461
11
Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity
Customer deposits
$152,488
$149,883
$149,386
$146,396
$139,413
9
Short-term borrowings
1,371
1,446
1,493
1,559
1,374
Long-term debt
56,387
57,787
58,202
51,236
49,715
13
Other (B)
56,332
56,017
54,164
51,851
50,695
11
Total liabilities
266,578
265,133
263,245
251,042
241,197
11
Shareholders' Equity
33,474
32,417
32,311
31,202
30,264
11
Total liabilities and shareholders' equity
$300,052
$297,550
$295,556
$282,244
$271,461
11
Q4'25
Q3'25
Q2'25
Q1'25
Q4'24
YOY %
change
FY'25
FY'24
YOY %
change
Related Statistical Information
Total loans and Card Member receivables
(C)
$224,791
$216,355
$211,976
$207,384
$208,317
8
$224,791
$208,317
8
Average Total loans and Card Member
receivables (C)
$221,187
$214,470
$211,102
$204,760
$205,135
8
$213,105
$197,080
8
Net interest yield (D)
8.0%
8.2%
7.9%
8.2%
7.8%
8.1%
7.9%
Return on average equity (E)
33.9%
35.9%
36.3%
33.6%
34.6%
33.9%
34.6%
Return on average common equity (E)
35.3%
37.3%
37.8%
35.0%
36.1%
Book value per common share (dollars)
$46.45
$44.76
$44.16
$42.28
$40.88
14
# - Denotes a variance of 100 percent or more.
See Appendix II for footnote references and definitions of certain key terms
3
American Express Company
(Preliminary)
Consolidated Capital
(Millions, except percentages)
 
 
Q4'25
Q3'25
Q2'25
Q1'25
Q4'24
Shares Outstanding
 
Beginning of period
689
696
701
702
704
Repurchase of common shares
(2)
(7)
(5)
(2)
(3)
Net impact of employee benefit plans and others
1
1
End of period
686
689
696
701
702
Risk-Based Capital Ratios - Basel III
 
Common Equity Tier 1/Risk Weighted Assets (RWA)
10.5%
10.5%
10.6%
10.7%
10.5%
Tier 1
11.1%
11.1%
11.3%
11.4%
11.2%
Total
13.1%
13.1%
13.2%
13.4%
13.2%
Common Equity Tier 1
$27,268
$26,222
$26,121
$25,624
$24,860
Tier 1 Capital
$28,888
$27,848
$27,752
$27,260
$26,405
Tier 2 Capital
$5,025
$4,915
$4,858
$4,774
$4,722
Total Capital
$33,913
$32,763
$32,610
$32,034
$31,127
RWA
$259,448
$250,642
$246,140
$239,562
$235,775
Tier 1 Leverage
9.8%
9.5%
9.7%
10.0%
9.8%
Supplementary Leverage Ratio (SLR)
8.3%
8.1%
8.3%
8.5%
8.3%
Average Total Assets to calculate the Tier 1 Leverage Ratio
$294,275
$292,875
$285,174
$273,090
$268,785
Total Leverage Exposure to calculate SLR
$346,685
$344,532
$335,706
$322,414
$316,995
See Appendix II for footnote references and definitions of certain key terms
4
American Express Company
(Preliminary)
Selected Card Related Statistical Information
 
(Millions, except percentages and where indicated)
 
 
Q4'25
Q3'25
Q2'25
Q1'25
Q4'24
YOY %
change
FY'25
FY'24
YOY %
change
Network volumes (billions)
$506.2
$479.2
$472.0
$439.6
$464.0
9
$1,897.0
$1,764.8
7
Billed business
$445.1
$421.0
$416.3
$387.4
$408.4
9
$1,669.8
$1,550.9
8
Cards-in-force
152.8
151.2
149.4
147.5
146.5
4
152.8
146.5
4
Proprietary cards-in-force
86.6
86.0
85.2
84.6
83.6
4
86.6
83.6
4
Basic cards-in-force
128.9
127.6
126.0
124.2
123.3
5
128.9
123.3
5
Proprietary basic cards-in-force
66.7
66.2
65.6
65.1
64.3
4
66.7
64.3
4
Average proprietary basic Card
Member spending (dollars)
$6,696
$6,387
$6,370
$5,987
$6,378
5
$25,453
$24,608
3
Average fee per card (dollars) (F)
$122
$119
$117
$111
$108
13
$117
$103
14
Proprietary new cards acquired
2.9
3.2
3.1
3.4
3.0
12.5
13.0
See Appendix II for footnote references and definitions of certain key terms
5
American Express Company
(Preliminary)
Network Volumes Related Growth
 
 
YOY % change
 
Reported
FX-Adjusted (G)
Reported
FX-
Adjusted
(G)
 
Q4'25
Q3'25
Q2'25
Q1'25
Q4'24
Q4'25
Q3'25
Q2'25
Q1'25
Q4'24
FY'25
FY'25
Network volumes
9%
9%
7%
5%
7%
8%
8%
6%
6%
8%
7%
7%
Billed business
9
9
7
6
8
8
8
7
6
8
8
7
U.S. Consumer Services
9
9
7
7
9
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
8
n/a
Commercial Services
4
4
2
2
4
3
4
2
2
4
3
3
International Card Services
17
14
15
9
11
12
13
12
13
15
14
13
Merchant industry billed business
Goods & Services (G&S) spend
(74% of Q4'25 billed business)
9
9
8
6
7
8
9
7
7
8
8
8
T&E spend (26% of Q4'25 billed
business)
9
8
6
5
9
8
8
5
6
10
8
7
See Appendix II for footnote references and definitions of certain key terms
6
American Express Company
(Preliminary)
Selected Credit Related Statistical Information
Card Member Loans and Card Member Receivables
(Millions, except percentages)
 
Q4'25
Q3'25
Q2'25
Q1'25
Q4'24
YOY %
change
FY'25
FY'24
YOY %
change
Card Member loans and receivables
Card Member loans and receivables
$213,863
$205,837
$201,873
$197,706
$199,085
7
$213,863
$199,085
7
Average Card Member loans and receivables
$210,440
$204,145
$201,175
$195,262
$196,254
7
$202,975
$188,971
7
Net write-off rate (principal, interest and fees) (H)
2.3%
2.2%
2.2%
2.4%
2.2%
2.3%
2.3%
Net write-off rate (principal only) (H)(I)
2.1%
1.9%
2.0%
2.1%
1.9%
2.0%
2.0%
30+ days past due as a % of total (I)
1.3%
1.3%
1.3%
1.3%
1.3%
1.3%
1.3%
Card Member loans
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Total Card Member loans
$151,832
$144,814
$142,275
$139,203
$139,674
9
$151,832
$139,674
9
Credit loss reserves
Beginning balance
$5,868
$5,767
$5,592
$5,679
$5,588
5
$5,679
$5,118
11
Provisions - principal, interest and fees
1,042
1,030
1,094
901
1,011
3
4,067
4,109
(1)
Net write-offs - principal less recoveries
(828)
(760)
(771)
(818)
(735)
13
(3,176)
(2,894)
10
Net write-offs - interest and fees
(180)
(168)
(167)
(178)
(159)
13
(692)
(621)
11
Other (J)
7
(1)
19
8
(26)
#
31
(33)
#
Ending balance
$5,909
$5,868
$5,767
$5,592
$5,679
4
$5,909
$5,679
4
Reserve as a % of Card Member loans
3.9%
4.1%
4.1%
4.0%
4.1%
3.9%
4.1%
% of past due
279%
286%
295%
284%
288%
279%
288%
Net write-off rate (principal, interest and fees) (H)
2.7%
2.6%
2.7%
2.9%
2.6%
2.7%
2.7%
Net write-off rate (principal only) (H)(I)
2.2%
2.1%
2.2%
2.4%
2.1%
2.2%
2.2%
30+ days past due as a % of total (I)
1.4%
1.4%
1.4%
1.4%
1.4%
1.4%
1.4%
Card Member receivables
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Total Card Member receivables
$62,031
$61,023
$59,598
$58,503
$59,411
4
$62,031
$59,411
4
Credit loss reserves
Beginning balance
$200
$193
$148
$171
$156
28
$171
$174
(2)
Provisions - principal and fees
189
190
226
146
182
4
751
774
(3)
Net write-offs - principal and fees less
recoveries
(208)
(183)
(184)
(169)
(164)
27
(745)
(773)
(4)
Other (J)
(1)
3
(3)
(67)
3
(4)
#
Ending balance
$180
$200
$193
$148
$171
5
$180
$171
5
Reserve as a % of Card Member receivables
0.3%
0.3%
0.3%
0.3%
0.3%
0.3%
0.3%
Net write-off rate (principal and fees) (H)
1.3%
1.2%
1.2%
1.2%
1.1%
1.2%
1.3%
Net write-off rate (principal only) (H)(I)
1.5%
1.3%
1.4%
1.3%
1.2%
1.4%
1.5%
 
30+ days past due as a % of total (I)
0.9%
1.0%
0.9%
1.0%
0.9%
0.9%
0.9%
 
# - Denotes a variance of 100 percent or more.
See Appendix II for footnote references and definitions of certain key terms
7
American Express Company
(Preliminary)
Selected Credit Related Statistical Information
Other Loans and Other Receivables
(Millions, except percentages)
 
Q4'25
Q3'25
Q2'25
Q1'25
Q4'24
YOY %
change
FY'25
FY'24
YOY %
change
Other loans
Total other loans
$10,928
$10,518
$10,103
$9,678
$9,232
18
$10,928
$9,232
18
Credit loss reserves
Beginning balance
$287
$272
$244
$194
$154
86
$194
$126
54
Provisions
90
62
78
105
94
(4)
335
256
31
Net write-offs (principal only)
(52)
(45)
(48)
(53)
(51)
2
(198)
(180)
10
Net write-offs (interest and fees only)
(2)
(2)
(3)
(2)
(2)
(9)
(7)
29
Other (J)
1
(1)
#
1
(1)
#
Ending balance
$323
$287
$272
$244
$194
66
$323
$194
66
Reserve as a % of other loans
3.0%
2.7%
2.7%
2.5%
2.1%
3.0%
2.1%
Other receivables
Total other receivables
$4,596
$4,019
$4,056
$3,752
$3,587
28
$4,596
$3,587
28
Credit loss reserves
Beginning balance
$20
$19
$23
$27
$49
(59)
$27
$27
Provisions
69
5
7
(2)
5
#
79
46
72
Net write-offs
(3)
(3)
(10)
(3)
(28)
(89)
(20)
(44)
(55)
Other (J)
(1)
(1)
1
1
#
(2)
#
Ending balance
$86
$20
$19
$23
$27
#
$86
$27
#
Reserve as a % of other receivables
1.9%
0.5%
0.5%
0.6%
0.8%
1.9%
0.8%
# - Denotes a variance of 100 percent or more.
See Appendix II for footnote references and definitions of certain key terms
8
American Express Company
(Preliminary)
Selected Income Statement Information by Segment
 
(Millions, except percentages)
 
 
 
U.S. Consumer
Services
(USCS)
Commercial
Services
(CS)
International
Card
Services
(ICS)
Global
Merchant and
Network
Services
(GMNS)
Corporate
and Other
Consolidated
Q4'25
 
 
 
 
 
Non-interest revenues
$5,904
$3,526
$3,192
$1,858
$(22)
$14,458
Interest income
4,072
1,333
666
9
502
6,582
Interest expense
820
461
362
(172)
589
2,060
Total revenues net of interest expense
9,156
4,398
3,496
2,039
(109)
18,980
Total provisions for credit losses
773
359
211
70
1
1,414
Total revenues net of interest expense after
provisions for credit losses
8,383
4,039
3,285
1,969
(110)
17,566
Card Member rewards, business
development and Card Member services
4,563
1,900
1,674
341
6
8,484
Marketing
797
350
347
116
2
1,612
Salaries and employee benefits and other
operating expenses
1,473
952
948
628
379
4,380
Total expenses
6,833
3,202
2,969
1,085
387
14,476
Pretax income (loss)
$1,550
$837
$316
$884
$(497)
$3,090
Q4'24
Non-interest revenues
$5,314
$3,388
$2,725
$1,723
$(9)
$13,141
Interest income
3,753
1,176
583
11
554
6,077
Interest expense
815
442
318
(160)
624
2,039
Total revenues net of interest expense
8,252
4,122
2,990
1,894
(79)
17,179
Total provisions for credit losses
784
311
194
6
(3)
1,292
Total revenues net of interest expense after
provisions for credit losses
7,468
3,811
2,796
1,888
(76)
15,887
Card Member rewards, business
development and Card Member services
3,816
1,751
1,442
322
14
7,345
Marketing
813
360
306
130
5
1,614
Salaries and employee benefits and other
operating expenses
1,294
886
1,014
583
395
4,172
Total expenses
5,923
2,997
2,762
1,035
414
13,131
Pretax income (loss)
$1,545
$814
$34
$853
$(490)
$2,756
YOY % change
Non-interest revenues
11
4
17
8
#
10
Interest income
8
13
14
(18)
(9)
8
Interest expense
1
4
14
(8)
(6)
1
Total revenues net of interest expense
11
7
17
8
(38)
10
Total provisions for credit losses
(1)
15
9
#
#
9
Total revenues net of interest expense after
provisions for credit losses
12
6
17
4
(45)
11
Card Member rewards, business
development and Card Member services
20
9
16
6
(57)
16
Marketing
(2)
(3)
13
(11)
(60)
Salaries and employee benefits and other
operating expenses
14
7
(7)
8
(4)
5
Total expenses
15
7
7
5
(7)
10
Pretax income (loss)
3
#
4
(1)
12
# - Denotes a variance of 100 percent or more.
See Appendix II for footnote references and definitions of certain key terms
9
U.S. Consumer Services
(Preliminary)
Selected Income Statement and Statistical Information
(Millions, except percentages and where indicated)
 
Q4'25
Q3'25
Q2'25
Q1'25
Q4'24
YOY %
change
FY'25
FY'24
YOY %
change
Non-interest revenues
$5,904
$5,620
$5,540
$5,243
$5,314
11
$22,307
$20,137
11
Interest income
4,072
4,025
3,795
3,763
3,753
8
15,655
14,430
8
Interest expense
820
789
782
757
815
1
3,148
3,140
Net interest income
3,252
3,236
3,013
3,006
2,938
11
12,507
11,290
11
Total revenues net of interest expense
9,156
8,856
8,553
8,249
8,252
11
34,814
31,427
11
Total provisions for credit losses
773
734
829
631
784
(1)
2,967
3,029
(2)
Total revenues net of interest expense after
provisions for credit losses
8,383
8,122
7,724
7,618
7,468
12
31,847
28,398
12
Card Member rewards, business
development and Card Member services
4,563
4,145
3,967
3,882
3,816
20
16,557
14,329
16
Marketing
797
825
800
765
813
(2)
3,187
3,051
4
Salaries and employee benefits and other
operating expenses
1,473
1,300
1,281
1,239
1,294
14
5,293
4,641
14
Total expenses
6,833
6,270
6,048
5,886
5,923
15
25,037
22,021
14
Pretax segment income
$1,550
$1,852
$1,676
$1,732
$1,545
$6,810
$6,377
7
Billed business (billions)
$189.2
$177.5
$176.5
$164.3
$174.0
9
$707.5
$654.8
8
Proprietary cards-in-force
48.3
47.8
47.3
46.8
46.3
4
48.3
46.3
4
Proprietary basic cards-in-force
34.1
33.7
33.4
33.0
32.5
5
34.1
32.5
5
Average proprietary basic Card Member
spending (dollars)
$5,574
$5,291
$5,322
$5,014
$5,387
3
$21,215
$20,707
2
Segment assets
$122,968
$115,330
$113,876
$110,886
$114,228
8
$122,968
$114,228
8
Card Member loans and receivables
Card Member loans and receivables
$114,368
$106,969
$105,784
$102,896
$107,051
7
$114,368
$107,051
7
Average Card Member loans and
receivables
$110,161
$106,753
$104,488
$103,237
$102,752
7
$106,377
$98,928
8
Net write-off rate (principal, interest and
fees) (H)
2.6%
2.3%
2.4%
2.7%
2.4%
2.5%
2.5%
Net write-off rate (principal only) (H)
2.1%
1.8%
1.9%
2.2%
2.0%
2.0%
2.1%
30+ days past due as a % of total
1.3%
1.3%
1.2%
1.3%
1.3%
1.3%
1.3%
Card Member loans
Total loans
$100,171
$94,142
$92,620
$90,072
$92,632
8
$100,171
$92,632
8
Net write-off rate (principal, interest and
fees) (H)
2.7%
2.4%
2.6%
3.0%
2.6%
2.7%
2.7%
 
Net write-off rate (principal only) (H)
2.1%
2.0%
2.1%
2.4%
2.1%
2.1%
2.2%
 
30+ days past due as a % of total
1.3%
1.4%
1.3%
1.4%
1.4%
1.3%
1.4%
 
Card Member receivables
Total receivables
$14,197
$12,827
$13,164
$12,824
$14,419
(2)
$14,197
$14,419
(2)
Net write-off rate (principal and fees) (H)
1.8%
0.9%
0.8%
0.8%
0.9%
1.1%
1.2%
 
Net write-off rate (principal only) (H)
1.6%
0.8%
0.7%
0.7%
0.8%
0.9%
1.1%
 
30+ days past due as a % of total
0.7%
1.0%
0.7%
0.7%
0.6%
0.7%
0.6%
 
See Appendix II for footnote references and definitions of certain key terms
10
Commercial Services
(Preliminary)
Selected Income Statement and Statistical Information
(Millions, except percentages and where indicated)
Q4'25
Q3'25
Q2'25
Q1'25
Q4'24
YOY %
change
FY'25
FY'24
YOY %
change
Non-interest revenues
$3,526
$3,441
$3,422
$3,265
$3,388
4
$13,654
$13,219
3
Interest income
1,333
1,302
1,240
1,202
1,176
13
5,077
4,374
16
Interest expense
461
462
450
432
442
4
1,805
1,734
4
Net interest income
872
840
790
770
734
19
3,272
2,640
24
Total revenues net of interest expense
4,398
4,281
4,212
4,035
4,122
7
16,926
15,859
7
Total provisions for credit losses
359
332
360
329
311
15
1,380
1,389
(1)
Total revenues net of interest expense after
provisions for credit losses
4,039
3,949
3,852
3,706
3,811
6
15,546
14,470
7
Card Member rewards, business
development and Card Member services
1,900
1,730
1,790
1,746
1,751
9
7,166
6,504
10
Marketing
350
313
331
337
360
(3)
1,331
1,319
1
Salaries and employee benefits and other
operating expenses
952
816
826
787
886
7
3,381
3,142
8
Total expenses
3,202
2,859
2,947
2,870
2,997
7
11,878
10,965
8
Pretax segment income
$837
$1,090
$905
$836
$814
3
$3,668
$3,505
5
Billed business (billions)
$140.9
$136.3
$135.5
$129.2
$136.0
4
$541.9
$526.5
3
Proprietary cards-in-force
15.3
15.4
15.4
15.5
15.4
-
15.3
15.4
-
Average proprietary basic Card Member
spending (dollars)
$9,151
$8,833
$8,782
$8,380
$8,804
4
$35,153
$34,130
3
Segment assets
$63,168
$64,305
$62,152
$62,012
$58,969
7
$63,168
$58,969
7
Card Member loans and receivables
Card Member loans and receivables
$56,086
$57,379
$55,098
$57,412
$54,592
3
$56,086
$54,592
3
Average Card Member loans and
receivables
$57,689
$56,444
$57,113
$55,538
$56,269
3
$56,711
$54,362
4
Net write-off rate (principal, interest and
fees) (H)
2.2%
2.2%
2.2%
2.2%
2.0%
2.2%
2.0%
Net write-off rate (principal only) (H)(I)
2.3%
2.3%
2.3%
2.4%
2.1%
2.3%
2.2%
30+ days past due as a % of total (I)
1.5%
1.5%
1.5%
1.5%
1.5%
1.5%
1.5%
Card Member loans
Total loans
$30,833
$30,691
$30,143
$31,240
$29,647
4
$30,833
$29,647
4
Net write-off rate (principal, interest and
fees) (H)
3.1%
3.1%
2.9%
3.0%
2.7%
3.0%
2.7%
Net write-off rate (principal only) (H)
2.7%
2.6%
2.5%
2.6%
2.3%
2.6%
2.3%
30+ days past due as a % of total
1.7%
1.6%
1.6%
1.6%
1.5%
1.7%
1.5%
Card Member receivables
Total receivables
$25,253
$26,688
$24,955
$26,172
$24,945
1
$25,253
$24,945
1
Net write-off rate (principal and fees) (H)
1.1%
1.1%
1.2%
1.3%
1.1%
1.2%
1.3%
Net write-off rate (principal only) - small
business (H)
1.6%
1.5%
1.9%
1.9%
1.6%
1.7%
1.9%
30+ days past due as a % of total - small
business
1.2%
1.1%
1.2%
1.3%
1.3%
1.2%
1.3%
90+ days past billing as a % of total -
corporate
0.5%
0.4%
0.4%
0.4%
0.4%
0.5%
0.4%
See Appendix II for footnote references and definitions of certain key terms
11
International Card Services
(Preliminary)
Selected Income Statement and Statistical Information
(Millions, except percentages and where indicated)
 
Q4'25
Q3'25
Q2'25
Q1'25
Q4'24
YOY %
change
FY'25
FY'24
YOY %
change
Non-interest revenues
$3,192
$3,034
$2,947
$2,646
$2,725
17
$11,819
$10,369
14
Interest income
666
652
620
596
583
14
2,534
2,331
9
Interest expense
362
350
335
306
318
14
1,353
1,239
9
Net interest income
304
302
285
290
265
15
1,181
1,092
8
Total revenues net of interest expense
3,496
3,336
3,232
2,936
2,990
17
13,000
11,461
13
Total provisions for credit losses
211
218
210
192
194
9
831
726
14
Total revenues net of interest expense after
provisions for credit losses
3,285
3,118
3,022
2,744
2,796
17
12,169
10,735
13
Card Member rewards, business
development and Card Member services
1,674
1,512
1,452
1,312
1,442
16
5,950
5,243
13
Marketing
347
350
322
300
306
13
1,319
1,235
7
Salaries and employee benefits and other
operating expenses
948
815
783
751
1,014
(7)
3,297
3,226
2
Total expenses
2,969
2,677
2,557
2,363
2,762
7
10,566
9,704
9
Pretax segment income
$316
$441
$465
$381
$34
#
$1,603
$1,031
55
Billed business (billions)
$114.3
$106.9
$103.9
$92.9
$97.7
17
$418.0
$366.9
14
Proprietary cards-in-force
23.0
22.8
22.5
22.3
21.9
5
23.0
21.9
5
Proprietary basic cards-in-force
17.2
17.0
16.9
16.7
16.4
5
17.2
16.4
5
Average proprietary basic Card Member
spending (dollars)
$6,675
$6,307
$6,197
$5,619
$6,003
11
$24,822
$22,965
8
Segment assets
$50,089
$47,253
$46,500
$42,620
$42,879
17
$50,089
$42,879
17
Card Member loans and receivables
Card Member loans and receivables
$43,409
$41,488
$40,991
$37,398
$37,442
16
$43,409
$37,442
16
Average Card Member loans and receivables
$42,590
$40,948
$39,573
$36,487
$37,233
14
$39,886
$35,681
12
Net write-off rate (principal, interest and
fees) (H)
1.9%
2.0%
2.0%
1.8%
1.7%
1.9%
1.9%
Net write-off rate (principal only) (H)(I)
1.7%
1.8%
1.8%
1.7%
1.6%
1.8%
1.8%
30+ days past due as a % of total (I)
1.1%
1.1%
1.1%
1.1%
1.0%
1.1%
1.0%
Card Member loans - consumer and small
business
Total loans
$20,828
$19,981
$19,512
$17,891
$17,395
20
$20,828
$17,395
20
Net write-off rate (principal, interest and
fees) (H)
2.4%
2.5%
2.5%
2.3%
2.3%
2.4%
2.5%
Net write-off rate (principal only) (H)
2.0%
2.1%
2.1%
2.0%
1.9%
2.0%
2.1%
30+ days past due as a % of total
1.2%
1.2%
1.2%
1.2%
1.2%
1.2%
1.2%
Card Member receivables
Total receivables
$22,581
$21,508
$21,479
$19,507
$20,047
13
$22,581
$20,047
13
Net write-off rate (principal and fees) (H)
1.4%
1.5%
1.5%
1.3%
1.3%
1.4%
1.4%
Net write-off rate (principal only) - consumer
and small business (H)
1.4%
1.6%
1.5%
1.3%
1.3%
1.5%
1.5%
30+ days past due as a % of total - consumer
and small business
0.9%
1.0%
1.0%
1.0%
0.8%
0.9%
0.8%
90+ days past billing as a % of total -
corporate
0.5%
0.3%
0.4%
0.4%
0.4%
0.5%
0.4%
# - Denotes a variance of 100 percent or more.
See Appendix II for footnote references and definitions of certain key terms
12
Global Merchant and Network Services
(Preliminary)
Selected Income Statement and Statistical Information
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(Millions, except percentages and where indicated)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Q4'25
Q3'25
Q2'25
Q1'25
Q4'24
YOY %
change
FY'25
FY'24
YOY %
change
Non-interest revenues
$1,858
$1,782
$1,758
$1,660
$1,723
8
$7,058
$6,729
5
Interest income
9
9
10
12
11
(18)
40
52
(23)
Interest expense
(172)
(181)
(165)
(143)
(160)
(8)
(661)
(703)
6
Net interest income
181
190
175
155
171
6
701
755
(7)
Total revenues net of interest expense
2,039
1,972
1,933
1,815
1,894
8
7,759
7,484
4
Total provisions for credit losses
70
5
5
(2)
6
#
78
42
86
Total revenues net of interest expense after
provisions for credit losses
1,969
1,967
1,928
1,817
1,888
4
7,681
7,442
3
Business development and Card Member
services
341
298
288
283
322
6
1,210
1,148
5
Marketing
116
105
96
76
130
(11)
393
411
(4)
Salaries and employee benefits and other
operating expenses
628
524
490
468
583
8
2,110
1,485
42
Total expenses
1,085
927
874
827
1,035
5
3,713
3,044
22
Pretax segment income
$884
$1,040
$1,054
$990
$853
4
$3,968
$4,398
(10)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Total network volumes (billions)
$506.2
$479.2
$472.0
$439.6
$464.0
9
$1,897.0
$1,764.8
7
Segment assets
$18,686
$18,879
$18,324
$18,083
$17,712
5
$18,686
$17,712
5
# - Denotes a variance of 100 percent or more.
See Appendix II for footnote references and definitions of certain key terms
13
American Express Company
(Preliminary)
Appendix I
 
Components of Return on Average Equity (ROE) and Return on Average Common Equity (ROCE)
(Millions, except percentages)
 
Q4'25
Q3'25
Q2'25
Q1'25
Q4'24
FY'25
FY'24
ROE
 
 
 
 
 
Annualized Net income
$10,833
$11,608
$11,540
$10,336
$10,129
$10,833
$10,129
Average shareholders' equity
$31,934
$32,364
$31,756
$30,733
$29,266
$31,934
$29,266
Return on average equity (E)
33.9%
35.9%
36.3%
33.6%
34.6%
33.9%
34.6%
Reconciliation of ROCE
 
 
 
 
 
Annualized Net income
$10,833
$11,608
$11,540
$10,336
$10,129
Preferred share dividends and equity related
adjustments
58
58
58
57
58
Earnings allocated to participating share awards and
other
74
82
75
69
76
Net income attributable to common shareholders
$10,701
$11,468
$11,407
$10,210
$9,995
Average shareholders' equity
$31,934
$32,364
$31,756
$30,733
$29,266
Average preferred shares
1,584
1,584
1,584
1,584
1,584
Average common shareholders' equity
$30,350
$30,780
$30,172
$29,149
$27,682
Return on average common equity (E)
35.3%
37.3%
37.8%
35.0%
36.1%
14
Appendix II
(Preliminary)
The financial measures in the preceding tables are presented on a basis prepared in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of
America (GAAP), unless otherwise indicated. Certain reclassifications of prior period amounts have been made to conform to the current period presentation. 
Amounts presented in the preceding tables may not sum and percentages may not recalculate due to rounding.
(A)
Represents net income, less (i) earnings allocated to participating share awards of $18 million, $20 million, $18 million, $18 million and $17 million in Q4'25,
Q3'25, Q2'25, Q1'25 and Q4'24, respectively; and (ii) dividends on preferred shares of $15 million, $14 million, $15 million, $14 million and $14 million in
Q4'25, Q3'25, Q2'25, Q1'25 and Q4'24, respectively.
(B)
Within assets, "other" includes the following items as presented in our Consolidated Balance Sheets: Other loans, less reserves for credit losses, Premises and
equipment and Other assets (including Other receivables); and within liabilities, "other" includes the following items: Accounts payable and Other liabilities.
(C)
Total loans reflects Card Member loans and Other loans.
(D)
Net interest yield on average Total loans and Card Member receivables represents net interest income, computed on an annualized basis, divided by average
Card Member loans, Card Member loans Held for Sale, Other loans and Card Member receivables.  Reserves and net write-offs related to uncollectible interest
are recorded through provision for credit losses and are thus not included in the net interest yield calculation.
(E)
Return on Average Equity (ROE) is calculated by dividing annualized net income for the period by average shareholders' equity for the period.  Return on
Average Common Equity (ROCE) is calculated by dividing annualized net income attributable to common shareholders for the period by average common
shareholders' equity for the period.
(F)
Average fee per card is computed on an annualized basis based on proprietary net card fees divided by average proprietary total cards-in-force.
(G)
FX-adjusted information assumes a constant exchange rate between the periods being compared for purposes of conversion into U.S. dollars (e.g., assumes the
foreign exchange rates used to determine results for the current period apply to the corresponding prior year period against which such results are being
compared).
(H)
Our practice is to include uncollectible interest and/or fees as part of our total provision for credit losses and we therefore present a net write-off rate including
principal, interest and/or fees.  We also present a net write-off rate based on principal losses only to be consistent with industry convention.
(I)
Net write-off rate for principal losses only and 30+ days past due metrics represent consumer and small business, and are not available for corporate due to
system constraints.
(J)
Other includes foreign currency impact on balance sheet re-measurement and translation.
As used in the preceding tables and/or in our full year and fourth quarter of 2025 earnings release, investor presentation slides or investor conference call:
Billed business (Card Member spending) — Represents transaction volumes (including cash advances) on payment products issued by American Express.
Cards-in-force — Represents the number of cards that are issued and outstanding by American Express (proprietary cards-in-force) and cards issued and outstanding
under network partnership agreements with banks and other institutions, except for retail cobrand cards issued by network partners that had no out-of-store spending
activity during the prior twelve months. Basic cards-in-force excludes supplemental cards issued on consumer accounts. Cards-in-force is useful in understanding the
size of our Card Member base.
Locations in force (LIF) — Represents proprietary and partner acquired merchant locations where the merchant is enabled to accept American Express. LIF estimates
incorporate data provided to us by certain third parties and include merchants that accept American Express through payment facilitators and merchants that accept
American Express through digital wallets in China.
Network volumes — Represents the total of billed business and processed volumes.
Operating expenses — Represents salaries and employee benefits, professional services, data processing and equipment, and other expenses.
Processed volumes — Represents transaction volumes (including cash advances) on cards issued under network partnership agreements with banks and other
institutions, including joint ventures, as well as alternative payment solutions facilitated by American Express.
Proprietary new cards acquired — Represents the number of new cards issued by American Express during the referenced period, net of replacement cards. Proprietary
new cards acquired is useful as a measure of the effectiveness of our customer acquisition strategy.
Reserve build (release) — Represents the portion of the provisions for credit losses for the period related to increasing or decreasing reserves for credit losses as a
result of, among other things, changes in volumes, macroeconomic outlook, portfolio composition and credit quality of portfolios. Reserve build represents the amount
by which the provision for credit losses exceeds net write-offs, while reserve release represents the amount by which net write-offs exceed the provision for credit
losses.
Variable customer engagement costs (VCE) — Represents the aggregate of Card Member rewards, business development, and Card Member services expenses.
Refer to the “Glossary of Selected Terminology” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K and our Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission for definitions of certain other terms used.