Sportradar posted record revenues of just under $1.3bn for the 2025 financial year, with its sports division its second-most successful segment after closing its IMG Arena deal.
Full-year revenue was up 17% from $1.1bn to just under $1.3bn. Q4 2025 revenue also increased from the quarter prior by 20%, from $307.1m to $368.9m.
The ‘sports content, technology, and services’ segment was the company’s second-highest revenue driver, behind its ‘betting and gaming’ segment.
Revenue attributed to the sports content segment increased by 22% for the year, from $230m to $281m. This was primarily driven by a 24% growth in marketing and media services due to increased spending from technology and media customers and contributions from affiliates.
Despite this growth, the ‘sports performance and integrity services’ segment saw declines year-on-year in Q4, down 19% for the former to $8.9m ($11m) and 7% to $4.5m ($4.8m) for the latter.
The betting and gaming segment was the highest-revenue driver for Sportradar, increasing 15% from $1.05bn in 2024, to $1.214bn. This was primarily driven by a 16% increase in Betting and Gaming Content due to customer uptake related to the acquisition of IMG Arena.
Carsten Koerl, Chief Executive Officer of Sportradar, said: “Sportradar concluded 2025 with another quarter of strong performance, demonstrating significant momentum across our business as we continued to drive innovation and customer adoption.
“For the full year, we delivered on all fronts, achieving record revenue, substantial margin expansion and increased free cash flow generation.
“These results underscore the durability of our growth strategy and our mission-critical role within the global sports ecosystem. The acquisition of IMG further strengthens our competitive position, and we are rapidly integrating and monetising this premium content across our global customer base.”
Sportradar’s FIFA extension
Ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, Sportradar announced the extension of its integrity services agreement with FIFA in a five-year deal which expires in 2031.
Sportradar will continue to use its AI-based bet monitoring system for bets placed at the World Cup in North America.
Andreas Krannich, Sportradar’s EVP Integrity Services, said: “The expansion of our integrity agreement with FIFA further strengthens the ability to identify, assess and respond to risks in an increasingly complex global picture.
“It underlines both organisations’ commitment to fair and clean sport at all levels globally.”
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