01 — At a Glance
A Unicorn That IPO’d and Immediately Started Questioning Its Life Choices
- 52-Week High / Low₹201 / ₹96.4
- Q3 FY26 Revenue₹383 Cr
- Q3 FY26 PAT-₹21.3 Cr
- Q3 FY26 NTV₹1,081 Cr
- FY26 YTD Revenue₹1,130 Cr
- Book Value₹15.8
- Price to Book7.04x
- ROE (LTM)15.5%
- ROCE2.37%
- IPO Price (Sep 2025)₹163
Reality Check: Urban Company went public at ₹163 in September 2025. Today (March 2026), stock trades at ₹110. That’s a -32.5% haircut for IPO believers in less than 6 months. Q3 saw revenues rocket 42% YoY, but PAT tanked -109% because the company is deliberately burning cash on InstaHelp (household cleaning startup inside the startup). GST demand of ₹51.30 crore looms. The stock is pricing in perfection. The company is delivering chaos. You do the math.
02 — Introduction
The Marketplace That Forgot to Actually Make Money
Urban Company is a technology-driven marketplace connecting consumers with trained service professionals across home, beauty, and wellness categories in India, UAE, and Singapore. Think of it as the “Uber of plumbing and facials” — which sounds less cool when the Uber comparison is a company that lost billions before finally turning profitable.
Founded in 2014, it just IPO’d in September 2025 after 11 years of venture capital patience. The pitch? 14.59 million unique consumers since inception. 47,833 monthly active service professionals. 1.5 lakh service touchpoints. A hyperlocal, densification-first strategy that supposedly powers network effects. 90,000+ permanent training capacity across 17 cities. Sounds solid, right? Except the company is burning ₹21 crore per quarter to pursue a strategy that even management admits is “not break even near-term.”
Q3 FY26 (ended December 31, 2025): Revenue ₹383 crore (+42% YoY), Net Transaction Value ₹1,081 crore (+36% YoY), but PAT of -₹21.3 crore because InstaHelp (the new household cleaning business) torched ₹61 crore in adjusted EBITDA losses. The core India Consumer Services business generated +₹44 crore in adjusted EBITDA — so Urban Company is basically printing money with one hand and burning it with the other. Wall Street would call this “strategic investment.” Your accountant would call this a cry for help.
Concall Highlight (Jan 2026): “The loss per order [in InstaHelp] has reduced from ₹760 to ₹381. It has to keep coming down.” Translation: we’re still losing ₹381 per order, but hey, it’s half of what it was. This is the startup version of “the cancer is shrinking.”
03 — Business Model: “We’re Like Uber, But For Your Plumbing”
Three Bets on One Platform (Pray One of Them Works)
Urban Company operates three distinct business segments, each with wildly different economics and maturity:
India Services77%Revenue Mix FY25
International13%UAE + Singapore
Native Products10%Water Purifiers, Locks
Segment 1: India Consumer Services (77% of revenue, 5.6% adj. EBITDA margin in Q3)
Cleaning, pest control, appliance repair, handyman work, painting, wall décor, haircuts, facials, massages. Basically, your mom’s to-do list, but delivered via an app. The company claims 51% of NTV is from cities with margins already north of 8% — suggesting a clear path to 9–10% margins long-term (management’s stated target). Q3 NTV +21% YoY ex-InstaHelp. Seasonality is brutal: Q1 (monsoon) and Q3 (Diwali) are fat, Q2 and Q4 are lean. This is why the company won’t let you benchmark quarters directly.
Segment 2: International (13% revenue, 2% adj. EBITDA margin)
UAE and Singapore operations are scaling. Like-for-like NTV growth: +79% YoY (excluding Saudi Arabia due to accounting changes). Management positioned these as “early stage but now should grow profitably.” They’re right, but “profitably” means 2% margins — hardly a growth engine. Saudi Arabia went into 50-50 JV structure effective January 2026, so the company no longer recognizes revenues, only its share of losses. Basically, SA is now a financial anchor.
Segment 3: Native Brand Products (10% revenue, improving margin trajectory)
Water purifiers and electronic door locks under the “Native” brand. NTV +93% YoY in Q3, with “meaningful margin improvement.” Supply chain de-risking: company partnered with Amber as a second contract manufacturer (previously relied on single supplier). The thesis: leverage existing ecosystem and service professionals for last-mile delivery. Break-even is not imminent but expected to arrive with scale. Think of this as the “Dyson meets the Indian middle class” play.
Segment 4 (The Elephant in the Room): InstaHelp
Daily/weekly household cleaning. Launched March 2025. Already at 1.61 million orders in Q3. Adjusted EBITDA loss: ₹61 crore (loss per order: ₹381). Management’s roadmap to break-even: “Latest by Q3 FY28.” Translation: we’ll burn roughly ₹200+ crore before this thing is even close to profitable. The grand thesis? Higher-frequency services create stickier customer relationships, deepening lifetime value. Unit economics are improving (loss/order down from ₹760 to ₹381) but still underwater. This is “growth at any cost” textbook.
Regulatory Overhang: GST demand of ₹51.30 crore for Apr 2021–Mar 2025 slapped on company in Dec 2025. Appellate authority upheld GST demand of ₹7.30 crore on Jan 21, 2026. Company to appeal. This is a rounding error relative to valuations, but the optics are ugly: a VC-backed marketplace suddenly under tax scrutiny.
💬 If InstaHelp loses ₹381 per order, and they process 1.61M orders per quarter, how many quarters can the balance sheet absorb that burn? Drop your math in the comments.
04 — Financials Overview
Q3 FY26: The Numbers That Broke the IPO Dreams
Result type: Quarterly Results | Q3 FY26 EPS: ₹-0.15 | FY25 Full-Year EPS: ₹4.90 | Status: Money-losing turnaround
| Metric (₹ Cr) |
Q3 FY26 Dec 2025 |
Q3 FY25 Dec 2024 |
Q2 FY26 Sep 2025 |
YoY % |
QoQ % |
| Revenue | 383 | 270 | 367 | +42.0% | +4.4% |
| Operating Profit | -42 | -16 | -13 | -165% | -223% |
| OPM % | -11% | -6% | -4% | -500 bps | -700 bps |
| PAT | -21.3 | -2 | 7 | N/A | -404% |
| EPS (₹) | -0.15 | -0.01 | 0.05 | N/A | -400% |
The Devil Is In The Adjusted EBITDA: Q3 consolidated adjusted EBITDA: -₹17 crore. But ex-InstaHelp, core business generated +₹44 crore. That’s the real story. The core India Consumer Services business is genuinely profitable (5.6% adj. EBITDA margin, target 9–10%). But InstaHelp is so deeply unprofitable (-₹61 crore loss) that it drowns out core profitability. Revenue +42% YoY is genuine. PAT -109% is because management is deliberately shifting cash from a profitable business to a loss-making venture. It’s not decline — it’s strategic choice.
05 — Valuation Discussion: Fair Value Range
Is ₹110 Cheap, Or Are You Just Hopeful?
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