Kaspersky reported a four percent year‑on‑year increase in global sales that brought the company close to USD 836 million. The growth was driven primarily by a strong surge in its B2B portfolio, which expanded by 16 percent year‑on‑year. The Middle East remained one of the company’s standout regions, delivering 23 percent growth in B2B sales and an impressive 39 percent rise in B2C sales.
The company’s momentum came against the backdrop of an intensifying cyberthreat landscape. Kaspersky detected an average of half a million malicious files every day in 2025, underscoring the need for continuous innovation. Over the year, the company issued more than 560 product releases and upgrades, strengthening protection for both consumers and enterprises.
Kaspersky’s B2B business continued its multi‑year upward trajectory. Enterprise sales grew by 21 percent, while small and medium‑sized business sales rose by seven percent. Non‑endpoint solutions — designed to protect infrastructure beyond traditional devices — outpaced endpoint products with 29 percent growth compared to one percent. The company’s flagship Kaspersky Next platform, launched in early 2024 with EDR and XDR capabilities, recorded a remarkable 158 percent year‑on‑year increase. In 2025, the line expanded with Kaspersky Next XDR Optimum and Kaspersky Next MXDR Optimum, targeting small and mid‑sized businesses.
Kaspersky’s strategic corporate solutions also performed strongly. Its next‑generation AI‑powered SIEM platform grew by 30 percent following enhancements such as DLL hijacking detection, new UEBA rules, and integrations with Digital Footprint Intelligence and Managed Detection and Response. Kaspersky Threat Intelligence, recognised by Frost & Sullivan for its leadership, grew by 18 percent. Demand for industrial cybersecurity remained high, driving a 25 percent increase in Kaspersky Industrial CyberSecurity, a portfolio the company has developed for more than a decade.
Managed Detection and Response services saw exceptional demand, with sales rising 90 percent year‑on‑year as organisations continued to face cybersecurity talent shortages. Kaspersky also advanced its innovation roadmap, launching an updated Kaspersky Thin Client and achieving an 85 percent increase in sales of Kaspersky OS‑based products.
While global B2C sales dipped three percent due to geopolitical factors, the company achieved strong consumer growth in supportive markets. The Middle East grew 11 percent, Russia and CIS surged 16 percent, and Asia‑Pacific recorded a 19 percent rise in new customers. Kaspersky’s consumer base reached 70 million users, supported by new offerings such as Kaspersky Who Calls and the Kaspersky eSIM Store.
CEO Eugene Kaspersky said the results reflect the company’s resilience and strategic clarity, noting continued investment in people, technology, and regional expansion, including a new office in Vietnam and strengthened teams across Asia‑Pacific, Latin America, and the Middle East.











