
26 Feb 2026
Amazon Becomes the World’s Largest Company by Revenue: What Changed in Global Retail
Author: Oleksandr Kovalov
Founder & CEO @ ANavigator
Amazon has officially moved ahead of Walmart in total annual revenue.
For the year ending December 31, 2025, Amazon reported approximately $717 billion in sales. Walmart reported $713.2 billion for its latest fiscal year. The gap is narrow, but symbolically significant.
Walmart held the top position for 13 years. That era has now closed.
This is not only a retail story. It is a structural shift in how revenue is built.
Where the Revenue Is Coming From
Amazon’s advantage does not come only from selling products online.
A large portion of the growth is driven by:
– Amazon Web Services (AWS) – $128.7 billion in revenue
– Advertising and marketplace services
– Prime subscriptions
– Cloud infrastructure and AI services
AWS alone generates more than half of Amazon’s operating profit. Retail remains massive, but the profitability engine is technology.
Walmart continues to dominate physical retail, with thousands of stores globally and strong grocery performance. But its revenue base is still primarily traditional retail and e-commerce.
Amazon operates across retail, cloud, ads, logistics, media, and AI infrastructure at scale. That diversification is now reflected directly in total revenue.
The Scale Behind the Shift
Several metrics illustrate how Amazon pulled ahead:
– Full-year revenue: $716.9B vs Walmart’s $713.2B
– Growth rate (2018–2025): Amazon is nearly 3x Walmart’s cumulative growth
– Prime penetration: around 80% of U.S. households
– U.S. digital retail share: roughly 40%
– Retail + third-party services revenue: $464B
This is not only volume growth. It is ecosystem expansion.
Amazon built revenue layers on top of commerce — cloud, ads, subscriptions — while Walmart expanded retail strength and omnichannel execution.
For Sellers and Brands
For brands selling online, this milestone signals something important.
Retail leadership is no longer determined only by store count or product volume. It is determined by infrastructure, data, advertising systems, and customer retention models.
Amazon’s marketplace, advertising stack, and Prime ecosystem give sellers multiple revenue entry points:
– Third-party marketplace scale
– Sponsored Ads and DSP visibility
– Subscription-based customer loyalty
– Global logistics network
Walmart, on the other hand, offers a strong omnichannel presence, physical store integration, and growing digital momentum.
For serious brands, the decision is not Amazon vs Walmart. It is about how to structure the channel strategy across both ecosystems.
Broader Retail Implications
This transition marks a deeper transformation in global commerce.
E-commerce alone did not move Amazon to the top.
Cloud computing did.
Advertising did.
AI infrastructure did.
Technology is now inseparable from retail revenue leadership.
The companies that combine commerce with digital services are building more resilient and scalable models. Pure retail, even at massive scale, competes against integrated ecosystems.
The Pattern Behind the Numbers
Amazon continues to expand vertically and horizontally at the same time:
– Retail scale
– Infrastructure ownership
– Advertising monetization
– Subscription lock-in
– AI and cloud dominance
Revenue leadership is the outcome of this integration.
Walmart remains one of the strongest retailers globally. But Amazon’s diversification strategy changed the revenue structure of modern commerce.
If you want to evaluate how your brand fits into Amazon’s evolving infrastructure — from ads to marketplace positioning — reach out to the ANavigator team at info@anavigator.co.
Visit our website at anavigator.co and follow the ANavigator Weekly Digest on LinkedIn.
— The ANavigator Team
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