After recording its first profitable year in over a decade, Zillow was rewarded with a tanking stock.
The home search portal’s stock opened down 4 percent following Tuesday night’s earnings, but fell roughly 17 percent over the course of the day. At press time, the stock was trading at $45.42, its lowest mark since August 2024.
Despite hitting its marks for 2025 with revenue growth of 16 percent and net income of $23 million, analysts expressed concern over the uncertainty around private listings and the legal challenges still facing Zillow.
Zillow is currently facing a number of lawsuits, and those legal fees appear to be weighing on the company’s bottom line after the company announced lower-than-expected estimates for the first quarter of 2026. Zillow expects EBITDA — earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization — to land between $160 million and $175 million in the first quarter, below the more $183 consensus estimates from Wall Street.
The lower-than-expected margins are the result of investment in Zillow’s ancillary businesses like rental and mortgage, but also of ramped-up legal fees, which chief financial officer Jeremy Hofmann said would alone drop margins by 2 percent in the first quarter.
“It will be a drag, but it’s not stopping us from expanding margins, which we expect to do throughout 2026,” he said of the legal expenses during Tuesday’s earnings call.
Zillow has been inundated with lawsuits. Residential brokerage Compass sued Zillow in June over its policy that threatened to ban listings not uploaded to its platform in a timely fashion. It’s also facing lawsuits from CoStar and the Federal Trade Commission related to its rentals business, and a set of lawsuits related to its home loans business.
In notes following the earnings call, analysts released notes that appeared to almost lament the overcast from legal actions on earnings outlooks.
“While legal challenges are very real and even a bit intimidating, [Zillow] continues to execute well and build credibility around its $5 [billion] revenue objective,” wrote BTIG’s Jake Fuller, adding that the lawsuits in part kept the firm “on the sidelines” with a neutral rating.
“There are a lot of moving pieces in this stock. We think absent the legal expenses, [Zillow] would be showing a nice step-up in incremental margins,” wrote Needham & Company’s Bernie McTernan in a note titled “Why’d You Have to Go and Make Things so Complicated?”
Beyond its more tangible legal fees, Zillow has also been facing existential questions surrounding its business model that have surfaced in its fight with Compass over private listings.



















