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OpenAI

COMPANY PAGE

OpenAI

Frontier AI lab and consumer-AI default brand — ChatGPT, the OpenAI API, Codex and Sora — built on the GPT and o-series model families with multi-cloud capacity from Microsoft Azure, Oracle, AWS and the Stargate buildout.

Founded 2015
Private — PBC under non-profit OpenAI Foundation
Foundation Model Provider
openai.com

Last Updated: 28 May 2026
Fact-checked: 2 June 2026
Coverage: Tracker · Category Report #IM109 · Macro Briefing #IM105
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The Business

OpenAI is the frontier AI lab behind ChatGPT, the OpenAI API, the GPT and o-series model families, the Codex coding agent and the Sora video model. The product line spans four main surfaces: ChatGPT (consumer AI assistant on web, mobile and desktop, with Free, Plus at $20/month, Pro at $200/month, Team and Enterprise tiers), the OpenAI API and Microsoft Foundry / Azure OpenAI Service (developer and enterprise inference), ChatGPT Enterprise and ChatGPT Business (productivity-suite distribution including a Stripe-integrated Agentic Commerce Protocol for instant checkout inside ChatGPT), and verticalised products including Codex for coding and Sora for video generation. Governance sits under a non-profit OpenAI Foundation parent with the for-profit operating company structured as a Public Benefit Corporation; the structure was finalised in October 2025.

Customers and Distribution

ChatGPT crossed 800 million weekly active users in October 2025 (Altman at DevDay) and was disclosed at more than 900 million weekly active users on the March 2026 funding-round announcement, with paid subscribers across Plus, Pro, Team and Enterprise tiers reported at approximately 50 million. Enterprise customers contribute more than 40% of revenue. OpenAI disclosed 1 million paying business customers in February 2026, and named partners include Microsoft (Foundry / Azure OpenAI), AWS Bedrock (live May 2026 under a $38B framework), Oracle (Stargate-anchored capacity), Stripe (Agentic Commerce Protocol launched October 2025), Salesforce, Shopify, Booking.com and Etsy among ChatGPT instant-checkout merchants. CFO Sarah Friar confirmed end-of-2025 ARR at $20B, up from $6B at end of 2024 and $2B at end of 2023; the March 2026 disclosure cycle placed monthly revenue at approximately $2B (a ~$24B annualised run-rate).

Model Strategy

OpenAI is the canonical Frontier-trajectory case under the IM Framework eight-trajectories taxonomy: the strategic bet is that GPT-5 mainline and the o-series reasoning models, sustained at the leaderboard top across release cycles, are the durable moat — with the ChatGPT consumer brand and the OpenAI API converting that capability into paid users at a scale no rival has matched. The infrastructure backstop is the most aggressive compute-build in the industry: $250B Microsoft Azure services commitment, $300B Oracle capacity agreement, $138B AWS framework, $100B NVIDIA partnership, and the $500B Stargate Project lifetime commitment, of which the SoftBank-led project-financing arm covers $19B against a $30B SoftBank equity check. Microsoft concentration is down from roughly 100% of compute in 2024 to an estimated 40-50% range in 2026 as Oracle and AWS have scaled. The OpenAI API offers OpenAI-compatible endpoints used as the de facto standard across rival APIs — a capability OpenAI both benefits from (developer mindshare) and is structurally exposed by (API customers can substitute at the chat-completion interface with low switching cost).

At A Glance

Annualised revenue
$25B ●
2026-03-31 as-of

2024-03-312026-03-31

Weekly active users
900M ●
2026-02-27 as-of

2023-11-302026-02-27

Headcount
7,000 ●
2026-03-31 as-of

2024-12-312026-03-31

Funding to date
$122B ●
2026-04-30 as-of

2024-03-312026-04-30

The Numbers

Annualised revenue

$25B $2.0B 2024-03-31 — 2000 2024-06-30 — 3600 2024-09-30 — 4000 2024-12-31 — 5500 2025-06-30 — 10000 2025-07-31 — 12700 2025-12-31 — 20000 2026-03-31 — 25000 2024-03-31 2026-03-31

Weekly active users

900M 100M 2023-11-30 — 100 2024-08-29 — 200 2024-12-31 — 300 2025-02-28 — 400 2025-03-31 — 500 2025-08-04 — 700 2025-10-31 — 800 2026-02-27 — 900 2023-11-30 2026-02-27

Headcount (FTE)

7,000 2,400 2024-12-31 — 2400 2025-06-30 — 3500 2025-12-31 — 4800 2026-03-31 — 7000 2024-12-31 2026-03-31

Funding to date

$122B $13B 2024-03-31 — 13000 2024-12-31 — 18000 2025-03-31 — 24000 2025-09-30 — 40000 2025-12-31 — 58000 2026-04-30 — 122000 2024-03-31 2026-04-30

Leadership Team

CEO & Co-founder
Sam Altman
Co-founded OpenAI in 2015 and has led the company since 2019. Front-of-house for every major release; widely viewed as the central load-bearing figure in OpenAI’s strategy, fundraising and policy interface. Of the 11 original co-founders, only Altman and Wojciech Zaremba remain full-time. Altman’s centrality is itself a tracked risk.

President & Co-founder
Greg Brockman
Co-founder; returned to the company after a brief leave in 2024 and continues as president. Public lead on engineering organisation, Stargate buildout, and large infrastructure partnerships including the Oracle, NVIDIA and AWS announcements.

Chief Scientist
Jakub Pachocki
Chief scientist since 2024, succeeding Ilya Sutskever. Public lead on the GPT-5 system card and the o-series reasoning models. Anchors model-research direction following the September 2024 departures of Mira Murati (CTO), Bob McGrew and Barret Zoph.

Chief Financial Officer
Sarah Friar
Joined June 2024 from Nextdoor (where she was CEO) and Square (CFO). Public spokesperson on OpenAI revenue and on the AGI commercial framing — including the January 2026 CNBC interview confirming $20B ARR at end of 2025, up from $6B at end of 2024.

Other named senior figures publicly active in 2026 include Brad Lightcap (COO), Jason Kwon (Chief Strategy Officer), Mark Chen (SVP Research) and Wojciech Zaremba (co-founder, remaining). Mira Murati (CTO), Bob McGrew (Chief Research Officer) and Barret Zoph (VP Research) departed in September 2024 in a coordinated transition; Murati’s new venture Thinking Machines Lab has since raised at scale. Governance sits under a non-profit OpenAI Foundation parent with the for-profit operating company structured as a PBC; the structure was finalised October 2025.

IM Framework Scoring

IM’s structured assessment of OpenAI’s competitive position. The summary below is the headline; expand “Show the full analyst-grade analysis” near the bottom for the per-dimension reasoning and evidence. Methodology →

Competitive Position
Dominant Innovator
Foundation Model Providers sector

The Information Matters Compass

5 7.5 10 5 7.5 10 Defensibility → Disruption Potential →Disruptive Challengers Dominant InnovatorsEmerging Players Established Incumbents OpenAI © Information Matters

Strategic Bet
Frontier capability wins — ChatGPT and the OpenAI API stay the consumer and developer AI default brand
Plus: Plus: vertical reach (Codex for coding, Sora for video, ChatGPT in Enterprise, ChatGPT instant checkout) converts consumer brand into commerce, productivity and developer revenue at a scale no rival has matched

Watch: The NYT copyright trial outcome (20M ChatGPT logs already in discovery); Amazon’s $35B contingent investment, which converts only on IPO or AGI; Stargate’s quarterly buildout pace at Oracle; and the foundation-model release cadence against Anthropic Opus 5 and Gemini 3.x — any of these can shift the disruption profile in either direction within a single quarter.

Funding History

Date Round Raised Post-money Lead investor(s)
Mar 2026 $122B mega-round $122B $852B SoftBank, Andreessen Horowitz, D.E. Shaw co-led; Amazon $50B, Nvidia $30B, SoftBank $30B
Mar 2025 Primary + secondary $40B $300B SoftBank (with Microsoft, Coatue, Altimeter, Thrive)
Oct 2024 Primary $6.6B $157B Thrive Capital (with Microsoft, NVIDIA, SoftBank, Tiger, Khosla)
Jan 2023 Microsoft strategic ~$10B (Microsoft) ~$29B Microsoft
Jul 2019 Microsoft strategic $1B (Microsoft) — Microsoft
2015–2018 Founding pledges & LP ~$1B pledged — Altman, Musk, Reid Hoffman, Peter Thiel, Khosla, Y Combinator

OpenAI raised $122B at an $852B post-money valuation in March 2026 — the largest private funding round on record — co-led by SoftBank, Andreessen Horowitz and D.E. Shaw, with $50B from Amazon (of which $35B is contingent on an OpenAI IPO or AGI milestone), $30B from NVIDIA and $30B from SoftBank. $3B of the round was raised from individual retail investors via bank channels for the first time. Cumulative external capital is now well above $170B. Microsoft has separately committed $250B of Azure services consumption; Oracle $300B of compute capacity; AWS $138B of framework spend; NVIDIA $100B of partnership compute. Stargate Project lifetime commitment is $500B.

Competitive Landscape

OpenAI’s competitive set sits in three concentric rings: frontier model labs running on Western hyperscaler infrastructure (Google Gemini, Anthropic Claude), hyperscaler-attached AI portfolios that are simultaneously partners and competitors (Microsoft, Meta), and the Chinese frontier labs that reset the cost-of-inference curve. OpenAI is unusual in the set because it leads the consumer-AI brand — ChatGPT is the default — while routing the underlying compute through three different hyperscalers and a vertically-integrated Stargate buildout.

Competitor Positioning Distribution edge Threat profile
Gemini 2.5 / 3.x
(Google (NASDAQ: GOOGL))
Frontier multimodal family with the largest distribution surface in the set — Workspace, Android, Search, YouTube, Vertex AI. 900M-MAU Gemini app, 2.5B AI Overviews, 1B AI Mode plus Vertex AI for developers; Workspace and Android default placement. High — the only rival with consumer reach approaching ChatGPT and with self-funded $180-190B 2026 capex behind it.
Claude Opus / Sonnet
(Anthropic)
Frontier model with category-leading coding and long-context reasoning; enterprise-leaning brand. Claude.ai direct, AWS Bedrock prime placement, Google Vertex AI; Microsoft 365 Copilot frontier-model option from late 2025. High — the closest substitute on the API and the brand most enterprises pair against OpenAI in 2026 RFPs.
Copilot / Azure AI
(Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT))
Productivity-suite AI; OpenAI’s largest distribution partner but increasingly building MAI / Phi in-house models that compete with the OpenAI API. Microsoft 365 install base; Foundry developer platform; Azure OpenAI Service. High and asymmetric — Microsoft is OpenAI’s biggest customer, biggest cloud landlord and an emergent direct competitor on model layer.
Llama / Meta AI
(Meta (NASDAQ: META))
Open-weight frontier models plus consumer Meta AI assistant embedded in WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook. Consumer reach across Meta’s family of apps; open-weight enterprise distribution. Medium-high — open-weight pressure on closed-model pricing and consumer-reach competition for ChatGPT.
DeepSeek / Qwen / Z.ai Chinese frontier labs with credible reasoning and coding capability at materially lower training and inference cost; open-weight by default. API plus open-weight distribution; constrained in US enterprise procurement by geopolitical posture but widely used in EU/APAC developer ecosystems. Medium-high — reset the price-of-frontier-inference curve and the open-weight quality floor; structural cost pressure on OpenAI API margin.

Pricing benchmark: GPT-5 mainline on the OpenAI API and Azure OpenAI is priced per-token in line with Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4 and Google Gemini 2.5 Pro — within roughly a 2x band depending on input/output mix and context window. ChatGPT consumer pricing (Free / Plus $20 / Pro $200) sets the consumer-AI price anchor for the sector. The competitive frame is capability cadence and distribution, not headline per-token price.

Potential Risks

The case for OpenAI at IM Framework 8.56 rests on the consumer-AI brand monopoly, the model-release cadence, the unique reach of ChatGPT (800M+ weekly active users in late 2025; 900M+ on the March 2026 disclosure) and a $852B-post-money capital base. The case against splits into five risks of differing magnitude — with copyright/regulatory exposure the most active and the capital-intensity ratio the most structural.

Regulatory and copyright exposure — multiple active fronts

A January 2026 court order in the New York Times copyright suit compelled OpenAI to produce 20 million ChatGPT user-conversation logs — the largest AI-related discovery production to date and the most-watched AI copyright trial heading to a jury. Separately, the Munich Regional Court ruled against OpenAI in November 2024 on German song-lyric reproduction, the first major EU ruling against a frontier-model developer. The EU AI Act’s general-purpose-AI obligations now bite on text-and-data-mining where rightsholders have asserted opt-out. The sub-rubric score on D4c regulatory exposure was lowered from 5 to 4 on this evidence.

Capital intensity vs. cash-flow profile

OpenAI raised $122B at an $852B post-money valuation in March 2026 — but is projecting cash burn of roughly $14B in 2025, rising to ~$27B in 2026 and ~$63B in 2027 on the trajectory described in the same disclosure cycle. Sarah Friar has indicated the company does not expect to be cash-flow positive before 2030. The war chest is enormous, but so is the burn; $35B of Amazon’s investment is contingent on an IPO or an AGI milestone, neither of which OpenAI commits to a date for.

Compute concentration and supplier entanglement

Concentration has improved sharply — Microsoft was roughly 100% of OpenAI’s compute through 2024 and is now estimated at ~40-50% as Oracle, AWS and Stargate-direct capacity have scaled — but the absolute scale of compute commitment ($250B Azure + $300B Oracle + $138B AWS + $100B NVIDIA + $500B Stargate lifetime) is unprecedented and creates supplier-side concentration risk in a different form: every major hyperscaler is now economically aligned with OpenAI’s revenue trajectory, and a shortfall would propagate widely.

Key-person dependency — Altman centrality and senior-research churn

Of the 11 original OpenAI co-founders, only Altman and Wojciech Zaremba remain full-time. The September 2024 departures of Mira Murati (CTO), Bob McGrew (Chief Research Officer) and Barret Zoph (VP Research) were the most senior coordinated transition in the company’s history; Murati’s Thinking Machines Lab has subsequently raised at scale. The sub-rubric score on D4e key-person dependency was held at 5 on this evidence — the team has restocked but Altman’s load-bearing role on fundraising, policy and public communication is itself a tracked single-point dependency.

Frontier-capability cadence is contested every quarter

OpenAI’s strategic bet is consumer-AI default-brand status sustained by frontier model cadence. The leaderboard position changes monthly — Anthropic, Google and Meta have all retaken the top slot at points across the past 18 months, and Chinese frontier labs (DeepSeek, Z.ai, Alibaba Qwen) are credible at the frontier on coding and reasoning. The disruption composite at 9.65 is essentially priced for continued top-of-leaderboard cadence; a sustained capability slip against Anthropic or Google would compress the pricing power that the OpenAI API and the ChatGPT Pro tier currently enjoy.

Recent IM Coverage

  • Eight Futures for Agentic AI (#IM105) May 2026.
  • Foundation Model Providers — Category Report May 2026.

Show recent press coverage of OpenAI
  • Mar 2026 — OpenAI closes $122B funding round at $852B valuation — Amazon $50B, NVIDIA $30B, SoftBank $30B.
  • Mar 2026 — OpenAI announces $122B raise; ChatGPT at 900M+ weekly active users; enterprise >40% of revenue.
  • Feb 2026 — OpenAI: 1 million businesses now putting AI to work — Enterprise and API milestones.
  • Jan 2026 — OpenAI to focus on practical adoption in 2026, says CFO Sarah Friar — ARR $20B at end of 2025.
  • Jan 2026 — Court compels OpenAI to produce 20 million ChatGPT user logs in NYT copyright suit.
  • Oct 2025 — Sam Altman: ChatGPT has hit 800M weekly active users — roughly 10% of the world.
  • Oct 2025 — Stripe and OpenAI launch Agentic Commerce Protocol — ChatGPT instant checkout.
  • Sep 2024 — Mira Murati, Bob McGrew and Barret Zoph depart OpenAI in coordinated transition.

Curated feed of named-source coverage — OpenAI’s own blog and investor / product announcements, named-author tech and business press, court filings and SEC-equivalent disclosures. Excludes paywalled article bodies of The Information, WSJ, FT and Bloomberg (headline + free-snippet only), wire-aggregator reposts and unsourced AI round-up pieces.

Show the source register for the figures on this page

IM operates a primary-source-where-possible discipline. The figures above come from:

  • Revenue: OpenAI is private and does not file. CFO Sarah Friar disclosed end-of-2025 ARR at $20B (up from $6B end-2024 and $2B end-2023) in the January 2026 CNBC interview. The March 2026 funding-round CNBC report and OpenAI’s own announcement add that the company is now generating ~$2B per month (~$24B annualised run-rate) with enterprise customers contributing more than 40% of revenue. We label this “ARR” rather than “GAAP revenue” because OpenAI does not publish GAAP financials.
  • Usage — ChatGPT weekly active users: Sam Altman publicly disclosed 800M weekly active users at TED in October 2025 (TechCrunch coverage). The March 2026 funding-round disclosure raised this to more than 900M weekly active users on ChatGPT, with enterprise accounting for over 40% of revenue. Paid subscribers separately reported at approximately 50M across Plus / Pro / Team / Enterprise tiers.
  • Headcount (basis-disclosure note): OpenAI does not publish precise headcount. Multiple named press sources triangulate a 2026 employee base in the ~5,000-7,000 range, materially up from ~1,500 at end of 2023. We decline-to-publish a precise headcount figure pending a primary disclosure and reference the range only with the caveat that it is press-triangulated, not company-disclosed.
  • Funding to date: Cumulative external capital well above $170B through the March 2026 round. Reference: OpenAI’s own $122B announcement and corroborating CNBC and TechCrunch coverage. Compute commitments (Azure $250B, Oracle $300B, AWS $138B, NVIDIA $100B, Stargate $500B) are framework-spend commitments not equity, and are listed separately in the funding note rather than as raised capital.

Methodology & Disclaimer

For metric definitions, source-tier hierarchy, and decline-to-publish rules, see the tracker methodology. Confidence dots (• green / • amber / • red) follow the same convention as the AI Tracker.

Spotted a figure you believe is wrong? Send corrections to info@informationmatters.net.

Information Matters Framework scores are the considered opinion of the IM team — human and AI — applied to publicly-available evidence under a disclosed methodology. They are not statements of fact about the companies scored and they are not investment advice.

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