By Jaspreet Singh
Feb 26 (Reuters) – Intuit forecast third-quarter profit below Wall Street estimates on Thursday, as it anticipates higher marketing spending to โattract more customers during the U.S. tax season.
Shares of the company โfell around 4% in extended trading.
The third quarter is typically Intuit’s strongest, as the tax season โboosts demand for the company’s financial management tools such as TurboTax, Credit Karma, and QuickBooks.
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS), the U.S. federal government agency, began accepting federal tax returns on January 26 this year, with the filing deadline set for April 15.
Intuit โCFO Sandeep Aujla told โ Reuters that increased marketing and customer support spending are deployed in the third quarter to capitalize on the tax season and โ drive growth in the assisted tax and QuickBooks segments.
The company forecast adjusted earnings per share of $12.45 to $12.51 for the third quarter ending April 30, compared with analysts’ โaverage estimate โof $12.95, according to data compiled by โLSEG.
Intuit, which competes with rivals such โas H&R Block and Oracle’s NetSuite, expects about 10% revenue growth in the quarter, largely in line with analysts’ average estimate of 9.9% growth.
The forecasts come amid market fears that the growing use of AI tools would erode demand for traditional software, as customers increasingly seek personalized financial guidance and automated โsolutions for tasks such as bookkeeping.
The company has โsigned multi-year deals with AI startups Anthropic and โOpenAI to integrate their frontier โmodels into its software and to add Intuit’s personalized tax, โfinance, accounting and marketing capabilities into โClaude and ChatGPT.
“We’re paying โOpenAI and Anthropic for the capabilities. We’re not paying them revenue share,” Aujla said, adding that more than 3 million clients engage with โthe company’s AI agents.
Intuit โreiterated its fiscal 2026 forecasts and said its second-quarter revenue grew 17% โto $4.65 billion, beating analysts’ average estimate of $4.53 billion.
(Reporting by Jaspreet โSingh in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli)