Microsoft is expected to report fiscal Q4 2026 earnings after the U.S. market closes on July 29, 2026, according to Wall Street Horizon’s unconfirmed earnings calendar. Because Microsoft has not yet officially confirmed the Q4 FY2026 earnings date, the safest expectation remains tentative.
The expected webcast time can be framed through Microsoft’s recent historical pattern. During the previous quarter, Microsoft hosted its Q3 FY2026 earnings conference call and webcast at 2:30 p.m. Pacific Time / 5:30 p.m. Eastern Time. Until Microsoft posts the official Q4 event page, investors should treat that timeline as a reference point.
The upcoming setup is demanding because Q3 created a high comparison base. Microsoft reported $82.9 billion in revenue, $38.4 billion in operating income, and $31.8 billion in net income for the quarter ended March 31, 2026. Diluted EPS was $4.27, up 23% year over year on a GAAP basis.
The cloud numbers are the real anchor of the company's valuation. Microsoft Cloud revenue reached $54.5 billion, up 29%, while the commercial remaining performance obligation increased 99% to $627 billion. Intelligent Cloud revenue was $34.7 billion (up 30%), and Azure and other cloud services revenue increased 40%. That means Q4 is not just a normal year-end quarter; it is a critical test of whether Azure can keep expanding rapidly even as Microsoft scales from a much larger base and spends aggressively on AI capacity.
Microsoft’s AI story has two sides. On one side, Azure demand remains strong, Microsoft Cloud revenue is growing at scale, and AI is increasingly embedded across Azure, Microsoft 365, GitHub, Dynamics, and security products. On the other side, the market is becoming highly sensitive to how much capital Microsoft must spend to support that growth.
According to the Microsoft Q3 FY2026 performance page, gross margin percentage decreased due to continued investments in AI infrastructure and growing AI product usage, which was only partly offset by cloud efficiency gains. Microsoft Cloud gross margin also decreased to 66% for the exact same reason.
This introduces the core tension for Q4. Strong AI demand is inherently positive, but investors increasingly want to know whether the revenue generated by AI workloads can outrun the massive costs of GPUs, data centers, networking, power, and model infrastructure. In short, Microsoft is being judged on AI operating leverage, not just AI adoption.
Reuters reported that Microsoft expected Azure and other cloud services revenue to grow 39% to 40% year over year in constant currency in fiscal Q4, sitting above the Visible Alpha estimate of 36.7%. Furthermore, Microsoft's anticipated fiscal Q4 revenue is targeted between $86.7 billion and $87.8 billion.
The capex (capital expenditure) number may prove to be just as important as the revenue guidance. The same Reuters report noted that Microsoft planned $190 billion in calendar-year 2026 capital spending, driven partially by higher chip and component costs, with an expected $40 billion in fiscal Q4 capital spending alone.
This sets up the Q4 report as a definitive return-on-capex test. If Azure growth accelerates or remains near 40%, backlog stays strong, and AI revenue commentary improves, the market will likely view Microsoft’s spending as a high-return infrastructure buildout. Conversely, if growth slows while capex rises, investors may begin questioning whether AI infrastructure costs are outpacing actual monetization.
Instead of treating the Microsoft earnings date as a simple revenue beat-or-miss event, traders should monitor these specific metrics:
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Microsoft’s fiscal Q4 2026 earnings date is currently expected to be Wednesday, July 29, 2026. Wall Street Horizon lists the date as unconfirmed, and Microsoft’s own investor relations homepage states the official release date will be announced soon.
Microsoft is expected to report after the U.S. market closes. For Q3 FY2026, Microsoft hosted its earnings call at 2:30 p.m. PT / 5:30 p.m. ET. Investors should verify the final Q4 webcast time on the Microsoft Investor Relations page once the event is formally posted.
Microsoft is expected to report Q4 fiscal 2026 results. This covers the June-quarter reporting period and represents the final quarter of Microsoft's 2026 fiscal year.
The Q4 report is vital because the market is actively testing whether Azure AI demand, Microsoft Cloud growth, Copilot adoption, and enterprise backlog are strong enough to justify Microsoft’s rapidly rising AI infrastructure spending.
In Q3 FY2026, Azure and other cloud services revenue increased 40%, or 39% in constant currency.
Microsoft Cloud revenue reached $54.5 billion in Q3 FY2026, reflecting a 29% year-over-year increase. The commercial remaining performance obligation also surged 99% to $627 billion.
AI capex matters because Microsoft is spending heavily on data centers, advanced networking, GPUs, and cloud infrastructure to support Azure AI and Copilot. The market wants to ensure these capital investments are translating into durable revenue growth and long-term operating leverage.


