ConocoPhillips

COP Q1 2026 Earnings

Reported Apr 30, 2026 at 7:31 AM ET · SEC Source

Q1 26 EPS

$1.89

Q1 26 Revenue

$16.05B

MISS 2.14%

Est. $16.41B

vs S&P Since Q1 26

-4.1%

TRAILING MARKET

COP -3.8% vs S&P +0.3%

Market Reaction

Did COP Beat Earnings? Q1 2026 Results

ConocoPhillips delivered a stronger-than-expected first quarter in 2026, with adjusted earnings per share of $1.89 clearing the consensus estimate of $1.69 by 11.62%, even as revenue of $16.05 billion came in 2.14% below expectations and slipped 2.5%… Read more ConocoPhillips delivered a stronger-than-expected first quarter in 2026, with adjusted earnings per share of $1.89 clearing the consensus estimate of $1.69 by 11.62%, even as revenue of $16.05 billion came in 2.14% below expectations and slipped 2.5% from a year ago. The bottom-line beat came despite a meaningful headwind from commodity prices, as the company's total average realized price fell 6% year-over-year to $50.36 per BOE, compressing adjusted earnings to $2.32 billion from $2.68 billion in Q1 2025. Lower costs helped cushion the blow, while the Willow project in Alaska reached 50% completion, underscoring progress on longer-term production growth. Total production of 2,309 MBOED declined modestly on a reported basis but was nearly flat on a pro forma underlying basis. Looking ahead, ConocoPhillips set full-year 2026 production guidance at 2.30 to 2.33 MMBOED, with Qatar excluded from near-term targets amid ongoing geopolitical uncertainty, and raised capital spending guidance to $12.00 to $12.50 billion.

Key Takeaways

  • Lower realized commodity prices, particularly Permian gas prices
  • Lower production volumes partially offset by lower costs
  • 6% decline in total average realized price to $50.36 per BOE
  • Organic growth from Lower 48 offset by downtime including Middle East conflict impact on Qatar and higher Surmont royalties

COP Forward Guidance & Outlook

For Q2 2026, ConocoPhillips expects production of 2.185–2.215 MMBOED, excluding Qatar due to uncertainty from the Middle East conflict. Full-year 2026 production guidance is 2.295–2.325 MMBOED, reflecting a 20 MBOED annual adjustment for Qatar and a 15 MBOED royalty rate adjustment at Surmont due to higher oil prices. Capital spending for 2026 is expected to be $12–$12.5 billion, including incremental Permian activity, with the range reflecting uncertainty around macro conditions and North Field East/South capital timing in Qatar. Operating cost guidance remains unchanged.

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COP YoY Financials

Q1 2026 vs Q1 2025, source: SEC Filings

“Our thoughts are with our team, partners and everyone impacted by the ongoing conflict in the Middle East.”

— Ryan Lance, Q1 2026 Earnings Press Release