Economically, ownership is shared across several groups. The OpenAI Foundation holds roughly 26% of the company, Microsoft about 27%, and the remaining 47% is owned by employees and outside investors.
This arrangement allows OpenAI to raise large amounts of capital while preserving nonprofit governance at the top.
The nonprofit foundation effectively governs the entire organization. Because it appoints the board of the operating company, it retains ultimate oversight of strategy and mission alignment.
The board includes technology, policy, and finance leaders such as Bret Taylor, Adam D’Angelo, Sue Desmond‑Hellmann, Nicole Seligman, and Adebayo Ogunlesi, alongside CEO Sam Altman.
This governance model is unusual in the tech industry: a nonprofit controlling a company valued in the hundreds of billions of dollars.
Although widely associated with ChatGPT, OpenAI now runs a broad AI platform spanning consumer, developer, and enterprise markets.
ChatGPT is the main consumer and workplace interface for OpenAI’s models. It provides conversational AI, multimodal tools, document analysis, research capabilities, and integrations into productivity workflows.
The product is available in multiple tiers including free access, Plus, Business, and Enterprise plans with higher limits and collaboration features.
OpenAI’s developer platform provides APIs for integrating AI capabilities into other software products. The platform supports text generation, coding assistance, image generation, speech and audio tools, and reasoning models.
Pricing is typically usage‑based—for example, token‑based billing for language models such as GPT‑5.5 and GPT‑5.4.
This developer layer powers thousands of applications built on top of OpenAI models.
Large organizations use OpenAI through enterprise workspaces, API integrations, and custom deployments with security features such as encryption, access control, and enterprise data policies.
Enterprise customers have become a major revenue driver as companies embed AI across internal workflows and software platforms.
OpenAI has also expanded into multimodal models capable of generating images, audio, and video. For example, its Sora technology enables AI‑generated video production through developer APIs and consumer tools.
These capabilities push the platform beyond text into broader creative and automation workflows.
OpenAI’s financial growth has been extremely rapid since ChatGPT launched.
Company disclosures and reporting indicate that OpenAI now generates roughly $2 billion in monthly revenue.
This scale is supported by massive usage:
To support expansion, OpenAI has raised unprecedented amounts of capital.
In February 2026 the company announced $110 billion in new investment at a $730 billion pre‑money valuation.
Shortly afterward, in March 2026, it confirmed closing $122 billion in committed capital at an $852 billion post‑money valuation, one of the largest private funding rounds in technology history.
The company also expanded its revolving credit facility to about $4.7 billion to provide additional financial flexibility.
The economics of AI are dominated by compute infrastructure.
Training and operating large AI models requires enormous clusters of GPUs and specialized data centers. OpenAI is investing heavily in infrastructure partnerships and large‑scale compute projects to support this demand.
For example, initiatives like the Stargate infrastructure program aim to build hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of AI data‑center capacity over several years.
Because of these costs, revenue growth does not necessarily mean immediate profitability.
OpenAI publicly shares high‑level revenue and funding figures but does not disclose full audited financial statements.
External analysis suggests the company still spends heavily on research, model training, and inference infrastructure. Estimates from analysts indicate cash burn could reach tens of billions annually, though these figures are not official disclosures.
In practice, the company appears to be prioritizing scale and infrastructure over near‑term profit.
OpenAI’s structure reflects the tension between two goals:
• Developing extremely expensive frontier AI systems
• Maintaining governance aligned with a public‑interest mission
By keeping the nonprofit foundation in control while allowing a commercial operating company to raise capital, OpenAI created a structure that can fund large‑scale AI development without abandoning its founding mission.
Whether this hybrid model remains stable as the company grows—potentially toward trillion‑dollar valuations—remains one of the most closely watched governance experiments in modern technology.
OpenAI today resembles three organizations at once:
• A nonprofit mission steward through the OpenAI Foundation
• A global AI product platform serving consumers, developers, and enterprises
• A capital‑intensive infrastructure company building massive compute capacity
The company’s revenue, funding rounds, and user growth place it among the fastest‑scaling technology platforms ever built. But the long‑term financial picture—particularly profitability and infrastructure economics—remains only partially visible from public disclosures.
What is clear is that OpenAI is no longer just a research lab or a chatbot company. It has become one of the central platforms shaping the global AI industry.
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