Neil Blumenthal
Analyst · Baird
Thank you, Jaclyn, and good morning, everyone. In the first quarter, we delivered top and bottom line results that exceeded our guidance. Revenue reached $242 million, representing 8.3% year-over-year growth, and adjusted EBITDA was $30 million, reflecting a 12.2% margin. We achieved these results in a dynamic operating environment. As we shared on our last call, the quarter was impacted by periods of extreme winter weather, store closures, and continued softness in category traffic and unit demand. Against this backdrop, our performance underscores that customers continue to choose Warby Parker for our compelling value proposition, exceptional products, and differentiated shopping experiences, a combination that positions us well to continue to drive sustained market share gains over time. As we outlined in February, we have 3 strategic priorities for 2026. First, we are focused on scaling our industry-leading omnichannel model while consistently delivering remarkable customer experiences. Second, we are preparing for the launch of our AI glasses. And third, we are continuing to invest in brand awareness and customer acquisition, including advancing our efforts to capture vision insurance spend. We are encouraged by the progress we are making across all 3 of these priorities as well as the momentum we are seeing quarter-to-date. We are driving strong performance in several key areas, including eye exams, online glasses after sunsetting our Home Try-On program, average revenue per customer, and insurance penetration. Before looking ahead, I want to express my gratitude to our team. Their unwavering commitment to delivering exceptional patient and customer experiences is the foundation of everything we do, whether they are welcoming customers with a smile after digging out from a snowstorm or embracing new technology that our team has developed. Their dedication and agility make Warby Parker unique. That same combination is exactly what positions us to redefine the eyewear category when we introduce intelligent eyewear. 16 years ago, Warby Parker reimagined how consumers shop for glasses.?Today, we are developing products that will fundamentally transform the role glasses play in our lives. Working closely with our partners, Google and Samsung, we expect to launch our first line of intelligent eyewear later this year. We're designing a product and shopping experience that feels distinctly Warby Parker, one that is seamless, fun, easy, and always centered on our customers. We believe they will be the world's first truly intelligent AI glasses designed for all-day and everyday wear. AI glasses will redefine personal computing, moving technology off the screen and seamlessly into our daily field of vision. Instead of reaching for a device, wearers will stay present in the moment, while the technology works alongside them, providing contextual real-time assistance. Dave and I are actually wearing our prototypes right now. As part of our rigorous testing program, these glasses have already become essential to our daily routines. We're reviewing our schedules and adding meetings to our calendars, checking cross-city travel times, and working through complex math problems right off the whiteboard. I even had them help me review my son's Spanish homework. The best part is that they integrate seamlessly with the apps we and billions of other people use every day. Building a category and a product that customers will incorporate into their everyday lives requires a high degree of precision across every detail. We've contemplated every millimeter and curvature of the product itself while evolving our supply chain to incorporate our most complex lens fulfillment process yet. We're progressing this work with intensity and focus. Our ambition is to help define this category in a way that creates value on day one for our customers, our partners, and our investors. We look forward to sharing more updates closer to launch. Turning to the balance of the year. We're pleased with trends quarter-to-date while continuing to take a disciplined and prudent approach to our outlook. Consistent with the framework we outlined previously, we are reaffirming our full-year 2026 guidance. We're encouraged by what we're seeing in the business today, and we have a number of initiatives underway that we expect will build as the year progresses. This outlook does not include any revenue contribution from AI glasses, but it does reflect the known operating expenses and investments required ahead of launch. With that, Dave and I will walk through the drivers of our Q1 performance before Adrian provides more color on our financial results and guidance. I'll start with our first strategic priority, scaling our industry-leading omnichannel model and delivering exceptional customer experiences. We focus on 3 initiatives in this area in Q1. First, we expanded our retail footprint. We opened 14 net new stores in the quarter compared to 11 in the prior year period and remain on track to open 50 stores in 2026. These openings included entry into a new market, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, as well as continued expansion in 9 existing markets. Consistent with our strategy, the majority of these openings were in suburban locations as we continue to broaden access to our brand. Importantly, this expanded footprint also positions us well for the future introduction of intelligent eyewear, allowing us to bring the product to customers at scale through a retail experience that supports discovery, education, and service. Next, we drove growth within our existing fleet, particularly through eye care and higher-value products. Exams were a bright spot in the first quarter, growing 30% year-over-year with demand rebounding as weather normalized, highlighting both the needs-based nature of this category and the progress we're making in scaling this part of our business. We are still in the early innings of this opportunity.?During the quarter, we expanded exam services to nearly 90% of stores, rolled out retinal imaging across all active exam lanes, and introduced new tools that reduce the administrative burden for our optometrists and allow them to focus more fully on clinical care for our patients. On the product side, we saw strong customer response to our new collections, including our sport collection, which launched in late April. This has been one of the most requested categories from our customers and represents our first entry into this growing segment of the eyewear market. We designed this collection to seamlessly bridge everyday style with sport-specific functionality, aiming to reach customers looking for products that can keep up with their multidimensional lifestyles. This is our most advanced performance offering and is built in partnership with leading Italian manufacturers that specialize in flexible, lightweight nylon production. It includes performance polarized lenses and wrap prescription capabilities, which we believe is a key area of differentiation. We also focused on delivering value by offering an accessible price point for prescription glasses with prices for our sport glasses starting at $195 for nonprescription and $295 for prescription, compared to competitive products that can exceed $800. During the quarter, we also introduced several new core collections, including Spring 2026 and The New Deco 2.0. These assortments lean into current trends such as 90's inspired oval silhouettes, which are resonating well with younger customers and are helping to drive engagement with that audience. Our $95 frames continue to outperform expectations, reinforcing our ability to deliver exceptional value while also driving mix towards higher-value products like progressives, lens enhancements and other add-ons. Finally, we continue to invest in e-commerce through an increasingly personalized online experience. E-commerce revenue was down 4%, in line with our expectations as we lapped a period that includes our Home Try-On program, which was sunsetted at the end of last year. We expect this headwind to diminish as the year progresses and excluding Home Try-On, underlying demand in the channel was healthy. We are driving engagement and conversion by introducing AI-powered tools like Photo Booth, a feature that leverages our Virtual Try-On technology to allow customers to see themselves as the model directly on product pages. We also unveiled a new personalized recommendations engine to further enhance discovery and relevance. The year-over-year online growth in non-Home Try-On glasses, driven in part by these features reinforce our confidence in the underlying trends of the channel, and the bets we have placed for the future. As we discussed on our last call, contact lens demand moderated late last year. In response, we've taken a more deliberate and disciplined approach to contact customer acquisition, reallocating marketing spend towards the growth of glasses, an area where we can continue to showcase the strength of our brand and grow more profitably. In the quarter, contacts revenue grew mid-single digits with penetration consistent at around 10% of revenue. This year, we are focused on building deeper customer relationships across our holistic vision care offering with exams and glasses serving as the key entry points. Our store footprint and doctor network remain a durable competitive advantage and a sustainable engine for long-term growth, and we have seen strong year-over-year growth in contact lens orders that follow an exam. Ultimately, customers who engage across glasses, contacts and exams generate the highest lifetime value, reinforcing our strategy of serving more of their vision care needs over time. I'll now turn it over to Dave to walk through the remaining two strategic priorities.