A live performance from Jay Chou, whose Children of the Sun is said to have generated about $14.7 million on Tencent Music during Q1 2026. Photo Credit: GEM_Ady
Amid a continued SVIP expansion and a triple-digit revenue boost on the concerts side, Tencent Music Entertainment (TME) has reported nearly $1.2 billion in Q1 2026 revenue.
The QQ, Kugou, Kuwo, and WeSing operator shed light on its first-quarter financials today. Unfortunately for us, there isn’t a ton of depth to the report; execs previously disclosed plans to cease including subscriber totals and ARPU in quarterly breakdowns.
As these and other metrics will only appear in full-year analyses, it’ll be some time yet before we learn about Tencent Music’s precise subscribership (and MAU) positioning in 2026. (Paid user retention remains solid, higher-ups noncommittally added during the corresponding earnings call.)
Regarding what we do know, TME identified almost CNY 7.90 billion (currently $1.16 billion) in Q1 2026 revenue, representing a 7.3% year-over-year (YoY) improvement.
Therein, the all-encompassing “music related services” category – formerly “online music services” – achieved 12.2% YoY growth to hit $959.10 million/CNY 6.51 billion, the report shows.
And in keeping with a long-running trend, the remaining $203.18 million/CNY 1.38 billion (down 11.0% YoY) is said to have derived from social entertainment services.
Meanwhile, Tencent Music also acknowledged a first-quarter cost of revenue bump to $640.45 million/CNY 4.35 billion, besides reduced profit of $315.07 million/CNY 2.14 billion.
Beyond those figures, TME brass touched on a number of interesting topics during the earnings call.
First, fundamental market differences mean Tencent Music has comparative freedom in the AI realm. CEO Cussion Pang reiterated the continued growth of proprietary “tools to reshape every stage of the creative process,” with Venus now stimulating “the full-cycle songwriting process of professional musicians.”
Additionally, TME in more words underscored AI remixes’ and derivatives’ ongoing role in driving renewed catalog consumption.
Next, Tencent Music is capitalizing on its considerable domestic reach and unique ability to freely pursue exclusives. Just in passing, TME and Silence Wang rolled out an “inaugural fan club,” Romance Universe, featuring priority ticketing and various exclusives.
Plus, Tencent Music released “tailored collections” of physical items on behalf of K-pop mainstays Exo and Blackpink. And “combined digital and physical benefits” are said to have fueled close to $15 million in sales for Jay Chou’s Children of the Sun.
Throw in “triple-digit year-over-year growth in” concerts revenue as well as a continued emphasis on offerings like bubble and WeverseDM, and it seems safe to say that Tencent Music’s superfan presence will be worth tracking in the approaching years.
More immediately, solid results and an on-schedule share-buyback program aside, the value of Tencent Music stock (NYSE: TME) is still down about 50% from 2026’s start.
