RH
F:RS1
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RH
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RH
RH is a luxury home-furnishings company best known for selling furniture, lighting, textiles, decor, and outdoor pieces for homes. It also sells bath and kitchen fixtures through its Waterworks business and has expanded into related home and design categories that fit its upscale style. Customers are mainly affluent homeowners, interior designers, and trade buyers who want a coordinated, high-end look for a home. The company makes money by designing, sourcing, and selling products through its galleries, online channels, catalogs, and design services. A large part of its appeal is that it presents furniture and decor as a complete lifestyle offering rather than as one-off items, which helps drive bigger room-by-room purchases. RH also uses hospitality-style spaces, such as restaurants and guest experiences tied to its galleries, to strengthen its brand and encourage customers to spend more time with it. What makes RH different is that it sits between a retailer and a brand-led design house. It controls much of the customer experience, from the way products are displayed to the way rooms are styled, and it targets the higher end of the home market where design and brand image matter a lot. That gives RH a business model built around premium pricing, repeat purchases for home projects, and strong brand identity rather than mass-market volume.
RH is a luxury home-furnishings company best known for selling furniture, lighting, textiles, decor, and outdoor pieces for homes. It also sells bath and kitchen fixtures through its Waterworks business and has expanded into related home and design categories that fit its upscale style. Customers are mainly affluent homeowners, interior designers, and trade buyers who want a coordinated, high-end look for a home.
The company makes money by designing, sourcing, and selling products through its galleries, online channels, catalogs, and design services. A large part of its appeal is that it presents furniture and decor as a complete lifestyle offering rather than as one-off items, which helps drive bigger room-by-room purchases. RH also uses hospitality-style spaces, such as restaurants and guest experiences tied to its galleries, to strengthen its brand and encourage customers to spend more time with it.
What makes RH different is that it sits between a retailer and a brand-led design house. It controls much of the customer experience, from the way products are displayed to the way rooms are styled, and it targets the higher end of the home market where design and brand image matter a lot. That gives RH a business model built around premium pricing, repeat purchases for home projects, and strong brand identity rather than mass-market volume.
Quarter beat: RH said first-quarter revenue of $800.3 million and adjusted EBITDA margin of 7.1% came in above the high end of its outlook, even with backorder and special-order balances about $75 million higher than a year ago.
Outlook raised: Management raised full-year fiscal 2026 guidance to revenue growth of 4.5% to 8%, adjusted EBITDA margin of 14.2% to 16%, and adjusted free cash flow of $300 million to $400 million.
Estates launch: The company framed RH Estates as a major new growth engine, with rollouts in galleries ramping through the year and broader launches in the U.S. and Europe intended to open a much larger luxury market.
Trade program: RH is adding a new program for interior designers and architects, with Gary Friedman saying the company had under-recognized the trade and now sees a chance to expand demand while rewarding professionals.
Cash flow plan: Management reiterated that debt reduction remains a priority, pointing to $200 million to $250 million of annual asset sales over the next two years and saying tariff refunds are not included in guidance.
Margin view: Despite heavy preopening and start-up costs, management said it expects meaningful margin expansion over time as the investment cycle peaks and new galleries and product lines ramp.