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How Science Applications International (SAIC) Makes Money: A Visual Guide

Science Applications International (SAIC) generated $7.26B in revenue, earning $358.00M in net profit (4.9% margin). Its largest revenue source is Defense And Intelligence (83.2% of revenue). Below is an interactive breakdown of how revenue flows through the income statement.

In TTM through Q1 2026, Science Applications International (SAIC) generated revenue across 2 reportable product segments; the largest contributor was Defense And Intelligence at 83.2%, followed by Civilian (16.8%).

Science Applications International (SAIC) Income Statement Flow — TTM through Q1 2026

Calculated from the four most recent reported quarters, ending .

Science Applications International (SAIC) Revenue by Product Segment — TTM through Q1 2026

Revenue contribution by product segment for Science Applications International (SAIC) in TTM through Q1 2026.

  • Defense And Intelligence

    Revenue
    $6.04B
    % of total
    83.2%
  • Civilian

    Revenue
    $1.22B
    % of total
    16.8%
  • Total

    Revenue
    $7.26B
    % of total
    100%

Frequently asked questions

How does Science Applications International (SAIC) make money?

Science Applications International (SAIC) primarily makes money through Defense And Intelligence, which accounts for 83.2% of total revenue. For TTM through Q1 2026, Science Applications International generated $7.26B in total revenue with a net profit margin of 4.9%.

What is Science Applications International (SAIC) gross profit margin?

Science Applications International (SAIC) reported a gross profit margin of 12% for TTM through Q1 2026, equivalent to $872.00M in gross profit. This means Science Applications International retains 12% of each revenue unit after direct costs of production.

What is Science Applications International (SAIC) operating profit margin?

Science Applications International (SAIC) reported an operating profit margin of 7.1% for TTM through Q1 2026, equivalent to $517.00M in operating profit. This reflects profitability after operating expenses such as R&D, sales, and administration, but before taxes and non-operating items.

What is Science Applications International (SAIC) net profit margin?

Science Applications International (SAIC) reported a net profit margin of 4.9% for TTM through Q1 2026, equivalent to $358.00M in net profit. This is the share of revenue that remains as profit after all expenses, taxes, and non-operating items.

How much does Science Applications International (SAIC) spend on capital expenditures?

Science Applications International (SAIC) spent $8.00M on capital expenditures in TTM through Q1 2026 (0.1% of total revenue). Capital expenditures represent investments in physical assets such as property, equipment, and infrastructure.

What is Science Applications International (SAIC) free cash flow?

Science Applications International (SAIC) generated $609.00M in free cash flow for TTM through Q1 2026 (8.4% of total revenue). Free cash flow is the cash remaining after capital expenditures and represents the company's ability to fund growth, pay dividends, or reduce debt.

What is Science Applications International (SAIC) effective tax rate?

Science Applications International (SAIC) had an effective tax rate of 7.5% for TTM through Q1 2026. This is the actual percentage of pre-tax income paid as income taxes.

What are Science Applications International (SAIC) main revenue segments?

Science Applications International (SAIC) reports revenue across 2 reportable product segments, led by Defense And Intelligence at 83.2% of total revenue in TTM through Q1 2026. The full segment-by-segment breakdown is shown in the revenue-by-segment table on this page.

Data & methodology

What is a Sankey diagram?

A Sankey diagram shows how money flows through a company from revenue to net profit. The width of each flow represents its proportion.

How is the data calculated?

We use the income statement from company filings. For TTM (Trailing Twelve Months), we use a pre-aggregated twelve-month view aligned with our latest four quarterly periods. Revenue flows to cost of revenue and gross profit, then to operating expenses (R&D, S&M, G&A) and operating profit.

Where do segment and geographic numbers come from?

Product-segment shares come from the same TTM income statement that powers the Sankey chart. Geographic splits are first rebuilt from the four most recent quarterly geographic-segmentation filings so they align with the same TTM window; if quarterly geo data is missing, we fall back to the latest annual disclosure (the table heading shows which one is in use).

When was this data last updated?

Based on company filings through TTM through Q1 2026.