Xperi saw a decline in overall revenue last year, from $493.7 million in 2024 to $448.1 million in 2025. Its net loss grew from $14 million in 2024 to $56.3 million in 2025.
The technology company, which is the parent of DTS, HD Radio and TiVo, has released its Q4 and full-year results.
In Q4, revenue fell from $122.4 million a year earlier to $116.5 million in 2025. But Xperi cut its quarterly net loss from $46.2 million a year earlier to $17.1 million in Q4 2025.
CEO Jon Kirchner was upbeat in his summary of the year. He said Xperi has achieved 5.3 million monthly active users on its TiVo One ad platform. He said the DTS AutoStage footprint increased 40 percent to reach 14 million vehicles. And he said Xperi expects to double media platform revenue and achieve positive free cash flow this year.
He said the company saw “meaningful year-over-year improvement in adjusted EBITDA and operating cash flow in 2025.”
“[W]e achieved key milestones which clearly demonstrate the significant progress we have made toward our growth goals,” Kirchner said.
“We believe our success in growing our large and unique global footprint over the past few years has positioned us to accelerate our monetization efforts through advertising and data solutions.”
[Read the full announcement and results.]
Of specific interest to the radio industry, the company says it has had “continued strong growth in the Connected Car platform footprint as well as new automotive OEM programs that are expected to enable acceleration in long-term monetization.”
It noted that it recently Mercedes Benz to launch DTS AutoStage video service, “making Mercedes the first car brand to offer all four of Xperi’s connected car solutions: HD Radio, DTS:X immersive sound, AutoStage audio and video powered by TiVo.”
It said the expansion of DTS AutoStage continues, “achieving over 14 million vehicles on the platform by year-end and reaching important scale to enable in-car monetization trials.”
It launched HD Radio in several new models from manufacturers including Toyota, Honda and Audi, and signed a multi-year program for HD Radio with an unnamed large U.S.-based Tier 1 supplier.
And it said it has signed a multi-year DTS audio deal with “a large Asian Tier 1 supplier, which is expected to secure the DTS decoder technology in a number of future car programs.”