22 February 2026
Disclaimer: This is a simplified summary of a public company filing. See full disclaimer here.
Aurora Innovation, Inc.
CIK: 1828108•2 Annual Reports•Latest: 2026-02-11
10-K / February 11, 2026
Revenue:$3,000,000
Income:-$816,000,000
10-K / May 24, 2024
Revenue:N/A
Income:-$796,000,000
10-K / February 11, 2026
Aurora Innovation, Inc.
What the company does
- Develops the Aurora Driver platform: an integrated hardware, software, and data services stack for autonomous driving across multiple vehicle types and use cases.
- The Aurora Driver is a common platform intended to adapt to cars, light commercial vehicles, and Class 8 trucks to support trucking, passenger mobility, and local goods delivery.
Core technology and offerings
- Hardware and sensing
- Advanced sensing suite combining lidar, radar, and cameras.
- FirstLight Lidar: a proprietary FMCW lidar designed for long-range sensing, capable of measuring distance and velocity with improved interference immunity.
- Software and data
- Verifiable AI approach that blends AI/ML with engineered Planning and Perception components to produce safe, human-like, rule-compliant driving behavior.
- Virtual Testing Suite for accelerated development and repeated testing in simulated environments.
- Mapping
- Aurora Atlas: a scalable, shard-based HD map approach that emphasizes local accuracy and rapid over-the-air updates.
- Driver-as-a-Service model
- Aurora Driver delivered via subscriptions:
- Aurora Driver for Freight (driverless trucking)
- Aurora Driver for Rides (driverless ride-hailing)
- Ecosystem model with third-party partners responsible for vehicle ownership, fleet operations, maintenance, financing, insurance, and related services.
- Aurora Driver delivered via subscriptions:
Markets and growth strategy
- Trucking (Freight): Initial focus on highway trucking with long-range perception; partnerships and pilots aim to commercialize at scale.
- Passenger Mobility (Rides): Targeting ride-hailing and related mobility services using the same Aurora Driver hardware and software stack.
- Local Goods Delivery: Last-mile, B2B, and consumer delivery use cases using the common platform for efficient delivery operations.
- Expansion: Plans to scale beyond the U.S. into Canada, Europe, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand as regulations and local road conditions permit.
- Scale in one market is expected to lower hardware costs, improve maps and data, and accelerate opportunities across all three markets.
Key partnerships and customers
- PACCAR and Volvo: Strategic partnerships for heavy-duty truck deployment and integration.
- Toyota and Denso: Global collaboration on driverless vehicle development and deployment.
- Uber: Partnership for ride-hailing integration and access to Uber data; Aurora acquired Uber’s self-driving unit in 2021.
- AUMOVIO (formerly Continental): Hardware-as-a-Service partnership covering hardware, firmware, and services with per-mile payments for hardware use.
- 2025 progress and pilots:
- Launched driverless commercial operations with Hirschbach and Uber Freight (April 2025) and expanded operations afterwards.
- Ongoing pilots with FedEx, Schneider, Volvo Autonomous Solutions, Werner, and collaboration with Ryder Systems (on-site fleet maintenance) to prepare for scale.
People, offices, and scale
- Employees: Approximately 1,900 as of December 31, 2025 (about 1,600 focused on engineering and product).
- Corporate offices: Headquarters in Pittsburgh, PA; an office in Mountain View, CA; and other U.S. locations.
Financial highlights
- Revenue recognition began in the fiscal quarter ended June 30, 2025.
- Net loss:
- Year ended December 31, 2025: $816 million.
- Year ended December 31, 2024: $748 million.
- The company reports continued investment in R&D and commercialization prior to reaching larger revenue levels, and expects the Driver-as-a-Service model to drive higher margins over time.
- At the end of 2025 the company reported large net operating losses and high cash burn associated with development and early commercialization.
Business model
- Two-phase approach to vehicle deployment:
- Phase 1: Aurora may own or lease and operate an initial fleet and invest in hardware, facilities, and operations.
- Phase 2: Transition to Driver-as-a-Service (DaaS), where third parties own and operate fleets powered by the Aurora Driver, with Aurora earning revenue on a per-mile or similar basis.
- Partnerships with OEMs, fleet operators, and service providers handle manufacturing, maintenance, financing, and operations to enable an asset-light, scalable revenue model over time.
Intellectual property
- Patent portfolio of over 2,000 patents and pending applications as of December 31, 2025, plus multiple trademarks.
- Protection focus includes self-driving technology, lidar, perception, planning, and associated software and hardware.
