1stDibs reported Q1 2026 revenue of $12.3 million, down 7% year-over-year, with gross merchandise value holding flat at $87 million as the luxury home goods platform completed the first quarter of its three-year repositioning. CEO David Rosenblatt used the May 8 earnings call to flag 42% gross margins—up 320 basis points sequentially—and operating expenses down $1.8 million versus Q4 2025, signaling the company has entered what he termed "disciplined execution mode" after eighteen months of product overhaul and seller churn.
The quarter's performance reflects two concurrent realities. First, active seller count declined 6% to 3,240, but seller retention among the top 500 accounts improved to 94%, up from 89% a year earlier. Second, average order value rose 4% to $2,680, driven by what management described as improved merchandising algorithms and a shift toward higher-ticket furniture and lighting categories. Take rate held at 14.1%, unchanged from Q4 2025 but 40 basis points above the Q1 2025 mark, suggesting pricing power has stabilized after the turbulence of the platform migration completed in late 2024.
What matters for allocators is the margin trajectory and the cash position. 1stDibs ended Q1 with $38.7 million in cash and no debt, having burned $2.1 million in the quarter—the lowest quarterly cash consumption since Q2 2023. Rosenblatt guided to adjusted EBITDA break-even by Q4 2026, assuming GMV growth returns to low-single-digit positive territory by summer. The company is banking on a relaunch of its curated editorial product—internally dubbed "the summer catalog push"—to drive discovery and conversion among the 1.2 million monthly unique visitors, a figure that has held steady for three consecutive quarters despite reduced marketing spend. Marketing as a percentage of revenue dropped to 22% from 29% a year ago, and management indicated no plans to reverse that trend until unit economics on paid acquisition improve past the 18-month payback threshold currently in place.
Operators should watch three follow-on events. First, the summer catalog rollout is slated for late June, with early metrics expected on the Q2 call in early August. Second, 1stDibs has signaled interest in expanding its trade program—currently 18% of GMV—through partnerships with interior design platforms, with at least one partnership announcement expected before Labor Day. Third, the company faces a $4.2 million lease obligation refinancing in Q3, and management's language suggested they may pursue sale-leaseback or sublease arrangements for their New York headquarters to further compress fixed costs.
The stock closed May 8 at $3.14, up 11% on the day, and the call's tone suggested Rosenblatt believes the worst of the transition is behind him. The next test is whether the editorial push can convert static traffic into incremental GMV without requiring a return to the marketing spend levels that defined 2023 and 2024.