Earnings season follows a quarterly pattern, but timing is not identical across all companies or regions.
In the United States, most companies follow a standard quarterly reporting cycle, with results typically released a few weeks after each quarter ends. This creates four main reporting periods throughout the year.
- Q1 2026 (Jan–Mar 2026 results): reported mid-April 2026. (Indeed, for 2026, the Q1 season kicked off in mid-April.)
- Q2 2026 (Apr–Jun): reported in mid-July 2026.
- Q3 2026 (Jul–Sep): reported in mid-October 2026.
- Q4 2026 (Oct–Dec): reported in mid-January 2027.
Outside the US, reporting structures vary. Some markets follow semi-annual reporting cycles, while others issue interim updates depending on regulatory requirements. As a result, earnings activity is less synchronised globally, although the US earnings season remains the most closely watched period in global markets.
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 earnings season dates
While schedules differ, earnings activity is consistently concentrated into four main periods each year.
In the United States, reporting typically follows this structure:
- Q1 earnings → April to May
- Q2 earnings → July to early August
- Q3 earnings → October to November
- Q4 earnings → January to February
These periods often overlap heavily as companies cluster their results around similar timeframes.
Q1 earnings season overview
The Q1 earnings season is typically the most active period of the year, as many large US banks and major corporations report early in the cycle.
Key reporting clusters often include major financial and technology companies such as:
- JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo
- Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, BlackRock
- Johnson & Johnson, PepsiCo, Abbott Laboratories
- Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta Platforms
The final week of April is often referred to as the “Super Bowl of earnings” due to the concentration of large-cap technology companies reporting within a short timeframe.
Q2 to Q4 earnings cycles
Subsequent earnings seasons generally follow a similar pattern:
- Q2 earnings season (July–August): Begins with major banks, followed by technology and consumer-focused companies.
- Q3 earnings season (October–November): Often closely watched due to its influence on full-year expectations.
- Q4 earnings season (January–February): Concludes the annual reporting cycle and often shapes guidance for the year ahead
Timing may vary depending on the company's fiscal calendars, meaning not all firms report in the same sequence each quarter.