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DoorDash forecasts upbeat quarterly order value as delivery demand stays firm

By Thomson Reuters Feb 18, 2026 | 3:08 PM

By Angela Christy M

Feb 18 (Reuters) – Food delivery company DoorDash forecast first-quarter marketplace gross order value above Wall Street estimates on Wednesday, buoyed by steady demand and ​aggressive expansion across grocery, retail and international markets.

Shares of ‌the company jumped nearly 14% after the bell, reversing earlier losses that followed a muted profit outlook.

DoorDash expects marketplace GOV, or the total dollar value of orders placed through its platform, in the range of $31 billion ‌to $31.8 ​billion in the current quarter, above ⁠estimates of $29.61 billion, according to ⁠data compiled by LSEG.

The California-based company has benefited from consumers’ appetite for convenience, with orders rising 32% during the quarter from a year earlier.

That follows similar trends at Uber, ​which earlier this month recorded a surge in gross bookings for its delivery arm.

“DoorDash’s ability to continue drawing in new ⁠customers and encourage existing customers to ⁠order more frequently shows that the platform’s convenience ​proposition is resonating strongly with consumers, even with growing cost-of-living ​pressures,” eMarketer analyst Rachel Wolff said.

DoorDash is undertaking a costly ‌rebuild of its technology system aiming to move its brands including DoorDash, Wolt and Deliveroo onto a single platform. Executives said in November the company plans to invest several hundred million ⁠dollars in 2026 on new products and technology.

Those investments weighed on profitability, with the company forecasting first-quarter adjusted EBITDA of $675 million to $775 ⁠million, below analysts’ ‌average estimate of $798.22 million.

Competition remains intense in the ⁠online food‑delivery market, with rivals such as ​Instacart and ‌Uber Eats ramping up partnerships and promotions ​to win ⁠market share.

DoorDash’s marketplace GOV for the quarter ended December 31 jumped 39% to $29.68 billion from a year ago, surpassing estimates of $27.65 billion. It earned 48 cents per share, missing the estimate of 59 cents.

(Reporting by Angela Christy and Savyata Mishra in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Maju Samuel)