Opendoor Technologies Inc. NASDAQ:OPEN said it needs to add either one margin point or $9 million to reach breakeven for the second quarter.
Opendoor Technologies Inc. NASDAQ:OPEN must add one percentage point to its Q2 contribution margin or find about $9 million more below that level to meet its adjusted EBITDA breakeven target, according to analysis of company data. The company said Tuesday it will release earnings after the bell on Aug. 4.
The math is catching up to the stock after a sharp run. Opendoor ended Tuesday at $4.55, about 72% above the $2.65 price target KBW’s Ryan Tomasello set on Monday. Tomasello kept his Underperform rating. Volume was heavy at 98.38 million shares, more than double the 65-day average. U.S. markets were on track for a regular session Wednesday, with Opendoor gaining 0.2% to $4.56 before the open.
Opendoor expects revenue to rise about 25% from the first quarter’s $720 million, or close to $900 million, with contribution margin guided near the middle of its 5%-to-7% range. At 6%, that margin would mean about $54 million. Adjusted EBITDA was negative $31 million in Q1, with contribution profit at $32 million.
Q2 breakeven breakdown
| Q2 contribution margin | Contribution profit on about $900 million revenue | Implied adjusted EBITDA if Q1’s $63 million bridge repeats | Further improvement needed for breakeven |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5% | $45 million | $(18) million | $18 million |
| 6% | $54 million | $(9) million | $9 million |
| 7% | $63 million | At break-even | None |
Numbers are rounded. The table fixes the Q1 gap between contribution profit and adjusted EBITDA, which isn’t company guidance.
If Opendoor hits the low end of its margin range, it needs $18 million of lift in that cost and adjustment line. At 7%, it doesn’t need to improve at all under that scenario. A single point of margin equals roughly $9 million for the quarter, matching the distance from the midpoint to breakeven. Even a slim margin miss can have a big hit on earnings.
Opendoor posted new numbers on its accountability page Tuesday. Preliminary estimates through July 11 showed a 3% pickup in weekly acquisition contracts from the week before. The company says that figure can include contracts that are later cancelled. The data hasn’t been audited.
Contracts act as a lead indicator, unlike booked volume. Opendoor showed over 5,000 acquisition contracts in Q1, but only bought 2,474 homes. These figures reflect different points in the process, so they shouldn’t be read as a conversion rate. On Aug. 4, investors will want to see speed of newer home sales and the margins produced.
Scale still matters here. Opendoor brought in about nine times more revenue than Offerpad Solutions Inc. NYSE:OPAD last quarter and sold nine times the number of homes. Gross margin and adjusted EBITDA margin both came in higher for Opendoor, but both firms stayed in the red on an adjusted basis.
Q1 2026 direct peer snapshot
| Opendoor | Offerpad | |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue | $720 million | $80.1 million |
| Homes sold | 1,921 | 211 |
| Gross margin | 10.0% | 6.9% |
| Adjusted EBITDA margin | (4.3)% | (8.4)% |
The adjusted figures are just directional since each company can define them differently.
Offerpad is projecting adjusted EBITDA to turn positive before the end of 2026, after reporting a $6.7 million adjusted EBITDA loss in the first quarter. That’s a slower target than Opendoor, which is aiming to break even in the second quarter. Offerpad CFO Peter Knag said, “we reduced our Adjusted EBITDA loss sequentially” in Q1. Opendoor has the scale advantage and a shorter timeline. Offerpad Investor Relations
Opendoor CEO Kaz Nejatian put the turnaround simply back in May: “Better acquisitions, faster turns, stronger margins. The machine is working.” The company said Tuesday the Aug. 4 webcast will take live shareholder questions. That fits with Opendoor’s push to “build in the open.” But it’s the numbers that matter. Opendoor Technologies Inc.
The bridge is just an estimate. Opendoor’s non-GAAP numbers move with changes in inventory values, stock-based pay, and financing, and the company hasn’t given a full quantitative reconciliation for its guidance to GAAP, saying some figures can’t be reliably calculated. Home values dropping or resale timing slipping could push up holding costs, and some expected contracts could still vanish.
Opendoor’s numbers are clear now. With revenue around $900 million, the company needs a contribution margin near 6% plus roughly $9 million more from bridge improvement—so nearly 7% margin if almost nothing changes below the line. If it falls under 6%, breakeven is tough to hit.