SANTA CLARA, California, May 11, 2026, 10:02 PDT
- Archer Aviation will release its first-quarter numbers after the bell, and the webcast kicks off at 2:00 p.m. Pacific time.
- The stock gained roughly 1.4% to $6.57 late this morning in U.S. trading, putting the company’s market cap near $4.33 billion.
- Archer points to a recent UAE regulatory decision as a step that could help pave the way for restricted initial air-taxi service.
Archer Aviation Inc. will report first-quarter results Monday, and investors aren’t paying much attention to immediate revenue. Instead, certification milestones and the company’s cash burn are front and center.
Archer, the electric air-taxi company, will release results after the bell. The timing’s notable: executives have repeatedly flagged 2026 as the year its Midnight aircraft could edge into passenger service in the U.S. and UAE. For now, Archer remains in build-out mode, not yet operating as a full-fledged airline.
Archer shares traded at $6.57, a 9-cent gain, with volume topping 30 million, market data show. The increase isn’t dramatic, but the backdrop is: the company’s latest report arrives only days after a new regulatory move in Abu Dhabi.
Archer said last week that the UAE’s General Civil Aviation Authority advanced its Midnight aircraft into the Restricted Type Certificate program. The Midnight, an eVTOL—short for electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft—rises like a helicopter, then shifts to fixed-wing flight. A restricted certificate speeds things along, granting limited operational approval ahead of full commercial sign-off.
Archer CEO Adam Goldstein described the UAE decision as “a major step” for electric air taxis in the country. Eng. Aqeel Al Zarooni, assistant director general for aviation safety affairs at the GCAA, said the regulator is focused on safely bringing new aviation technology into UAE airspace. Archer Aviation
The UAE project isn’t a one-off. Archer laid out plans for Midnight’s entry into service in Abu Dhabi through Abu Dhabi Aviation, its local partner. The focus stretches across certification, operations, maintenance, pilot training, airspace management, vertiport setup, security, and oversight.
Back in March, Archer reported the Federal Aviation Administration had signed off on all of Midnight’s Means of Compliance—the set of FAA criteria confirming the aircraft aligns with airworthiness standards. With that milestone, Archer says it can now wrap up its last certification plans and push ahead toward Type Inspection Authorization, which is when regulators start the official testing linked to certification.
Competition isn’t letting up. Back in March, the U.S. Department of Transportation and FAA picked eight projects for the eVTOL Integration Pilot Program, naming Archer, Joby Aviation, and BETA Technologies among those involved in multiple efforts across New York/New Jersey, Texas, and Florida. “Valuable operational experience” is what FAA Deputy Administrator Chris Rocheleau expects from the program, with an eye on safe advanced air mobility. Federal Aviation Administration
Archer remains grouped with Joby and BETA under regulators, despite differences in their aircraft and business strategy. Back in March, Reuters noted that all three—BETA, Joby, and Archer—were chosen for several FAA-supported pilot programs. Shares of the publicly traded firms moved higher after the news.
Money’s another hurdle. Archer wrapped up 2025 holding roughly $1.96 billion in cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments. Still, it logged a net loss of $618.2 million for the year, and flagged an adjusted EBITDA loss for the first quarter in the range of $160 million to $180 million. Adjusted EBITDA strips out interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization, and certain other expenses.
Consensus forecasts remain subdued, reflecting Archer’s pre-scale status. MarketBeat put Wall Street’s first-quarter estimates at a 25-cent loss per share on $1.66 million in revenue—actuals still pending.
The risk is hard to ignore. Limited approvals, trial runs and fresh partner tie-ups aren’t the same as full-scale commercial certification—and holdups around FAA sign-off, ramping up aircraft output, vertiport construction or pilot training could all drag out revenue timelines. Archer has flagged that the timing for its certification, U.S. and UAE rollouts, and those first flights carrying passengers all remain forward-looking, meaning they might not play out as planned.
Come Monday, it’s not so much about first-quarter sales for investors—they’ll be watching to see if Archer’s progress in the UAE, the FAA approval track, and its cash pile all still support the commercial launch target for 2026.