Best Buy Co. Inc
Best Buy is the world's largest specialty consumer electronics retailer. Our purpose is to enrich lives through technology, which we do by providing our customers a unique mix of advice, products and services in our stores, online, and in homes. Our expert associates advise customers on our curated assortment of the latest, name-brand technology, while our highly trained services teams help with designs, consultations, delivery, installation, tech support and repair. We are a leader in corporate responsibility and sustainability issues, including through the Best Buy Foundation's nationwide Best Buy Teen Tech Center® network and the significant role we play in the circular economy through repair, trade-in and recycling programs. We generated more than $41.5 billion of revenue in fiscal 2025, operate more than 1,000 retail stores in North America, and have more than 80,000 employees.
Current Price
$60.98
+2.85%GoodMoat Value
$447.26
633.5% undervaluedBest Buy Co. Inc (BBY) — Q3 2026 Earnings Call Transcript
AI Call Summary AI-generated
The 30-second take
Best Buy had a solid quarter, with sales and profits growing thanks to strong demand for computers, phones, and gaming products. The company is excited about new initiatives like its online marketplace and in-store advertising, but remains cautious about the upcoming holiday season and some struggling categories like appliances.
Key numbers mentioned
- Q3 Revenue of $9.7 billion
- Adjusted earnings per share increased 11% year-over-year to $1.40
- Comparable sales growth of 2.7%
- Online marketplace launched with more than 1,000 sellers and 11 times more SKUs
- Paid membership ended the year with nearly 8 million members
- Customer contacts declined 17% in Q3 due to AI streamlining
What management is worried about
- The appliance market is very difficult, with most purchases being single-unit replacements due to breakage rather than discretionary upgrades.
- Growth for gaming consoles like PS5 and Xbox is slowing as they reach the later stages of their replacement cycles.
- The company recorded a $192 million noncash asset impairment related to Best Buy Health, reflecting pressures in the Medicaid and Medicare Advantage markets.
- Customers remain resilient but deal-focused and thoughtful about big-ticket purchases in the current environment.
- The fourth quarter sales outlook is cautious, with comparable sales guidance ranging from down 1% to up 1%.
What management is excited about
- The new online marketplace is ramping up, showing high unit sales in categories like accessories and positive early customer experience metrics.
- The retail media network (Best Buy ads) is highly profitable, gaining traction with new advertisers and non-endemic categories like financial services.
- In-store immersive experiences with partners like Meta, Breville, and IKEA are driving strong customer demand and positive early reads.
- Computing sales are thriving due to upgrade cycles and AI innovation, a trend expected to continue.
- The company is leveraging AI across the business to streamline customer support, optimize fulfillment, and improve efficiency.
Analyst questions that hit hardest
- Peter Keith (Piper Sandler) - Q4 Outlook Deceleration: Management responded by explaining that Q3 benefited from specific events and that year-over-year comparisons become tougher in Q4, with some category momentum shifting.
- Peter Keith (Piper Sandler) - Marketplace Challenges and EBIT Impact: The response was initially positive on early metrics but concluded by noting the EBIT impact for the year is now expected to be more neutral due to a slower ramp and different product mix.
- Seth Sigman (Barclays) - SG&A Sustainability and Normal Leverage: The answer was lengthy, detailing unique quarterly benefits and outlining future inflationary and investment pressures, avoiding a simple formula for normal operating leverage.
The quote that matters
Our model really shines when there is innovation. This is because we are the trusted source for the latest and greatest new technology.
Corie Barry — CEO
Sentiment vs. last quarter
Omit this section as no direct comparison to a previous quarter's transcript or summary was provided in the context.
Original transcript
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for joining us. Welcome to Best Buy's Third Quarter Fiscal '26 Earnings Conference Call. This call is being recorded for playback and will be available around 1:00 p.m. Eastern time today. I will now hand the conference call over to Mollie O'Brien, Head of Investor Relations.
Thank you, and good morning, everyone. Joining me on the call today are Corie Barry, our CEO; Matt Bilunas, our Chief Financial and Strategy Officer; and Jason Bonfig, our Chief Customer Product and Fulfillment Officer. During the call today, we will be discussing both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures and an explanation of why these non-GAAP financial measures are useful can be found in this morning's earnings release, which is available on our website. Some of the statements we will make today are considered forward-looking within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements may address the financial condition, business initiatives, growth plans, investments, and expected performance of the company and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from such forward-looking statements. Please refer to the company's current earnings release and our most recent Form 10-K and subsequent Form 10-Q for more information on these risks and uncertainties. The company undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances that may arise after the date of the call. And now I will turn the call over to Corie.
Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. Today, we are very pleased to report strong results for the third quarter. On revenue of $9.7 billion, we delivered an adjusted operating income rate of 4% and increased our adjusted earnings per share by 11% year-over-year to $1.40. We delivered better-than-expected comparable sales growth of 2.7%. Our better-than-expected profitability was due to the higher revenue and lower-than-expected SG&A expenses. We continue to drive strong sales performance across computing, gaming, and mobile phones. We also saw growth in other categories, including wearables and headphones. This growth was partially offset by declines in the home theater, appliance, and drone categories. In computing, we delivered our seventh consecutive quarter of positive comps with sales growth coming from across the assortment and price points. This is due to continued momentum driven by customers' need to replace and upgrade products, combined with our unique blend of broad assortment and expert advice, service, and support. We were there for students and their families no matter their budget, and we're pleased with our back-to-school sales performance. We were also focused on helping customers get what they needed to transition to Windows 11 as Microsoft ended support for the Windows 10 operating system in mid-October. This contributed to our comparable sales performance evidenced by strong Windows-based sales overall and almost 30% year-over-year growth in desktop computers. In gaming, we continue to see strong demand for the Nintendo Switch 2, as expected, the growth rate slowed from the more material Q2 launch time frame. We also continue to see healthy demand for handheld gaming and augmented reality glasses. In mobile phones, we leveraged our expanded partnerships and in-store operating model improvements with the largest carriers to drive strong sales growth across phones. Our Q3 Enterprise comparable sales were driven by growth across both our online assets and our stores. Online sales were up for the fourth consecutive quarter due to higher traffic and increased customer adoption of our highly rated app. We also drove our fastest shipping fulfillment speed ever, coupled with our highest on-time rate for a third quarter. According to our 5 Star surveys, our store customer experience ratings for product availability, store appearance, and associate availability all improved year-over-year. We were also pleased to see continued year-over-year growth in our overall relationship Net Promoter Score, reflecting improved customer perception on all relationship attributes with the largest gain in meeting my tech needs for the second straight quarter. For the most part, customer shopping behavior in Q3 did not change materially from the commentary we have shared for the past several quarters. Customers remain resilient but deal-focused and attracted to more predictable sales moments, including back-to-school sales events and our Techtober sales held in close proximity to the October Prime Day event. September, which was relatively quiet outside of the Labor Day sales event, had the lowest growth of the quarter. Importantly, while customers continue to be thoughtful about big-ticket purchases in the current environment, they are willing to spend on high-price point products when they need to or when there is technology innovation. To summarize our Q3 performance, we are flexing the unique strength of our model as customers need to upgrade or replace their CE and new products are coming to market. I want to thank our amazing employees for their dedication to our customers and their strong execution in delivering these Q3 results and setting us up well for an exciting holiday quarter... ...I would like to provide a few updates on the progress we are making on our fiscal '26 strategy. As a reminder, our strategy is to continue to strengthen our position in retail as a leading omnichannel destination for technology while building and scaling new profit streams that we believe will drive returns in the future. Our first fiscal '26 strategic priority is to drive omnichannel experiences that resonate with our customers. Last quarter, we provided multiple examples of store refreshes and upgrades planned for the back half of the year, many of which were in partnership with our vendors. A few updates. We launched the latest AI glasses from Meta across all stores. In more than 50 locations, we now have immersive showcase areas staffed by Meta experts to help customers discover and try the technology hands-on. The strong customer demand for in-person demos continues to outpace available appointments. We introduced new experiences with Breville and SharkNinja that feature expanded assortments for at-home baristas and chefs and innovative health and beauty solutions. Very early reads are positive, and we are excited to monitor customer response during the holidays as many of these new experiences will be staffed with expert sales associates to bring this innovation to life for our customers. We expanded the merchandising areas featuring TVs from TCL, Hisense, and LG, which are staffed by dedicated experts to address questions and help customers get what they need. These were not all live for the whole quarter, but very early reads are showing positive results. And earlier this month, we implemented most of the new IKEA pilots we announced last quarter. These 1,000 square foot areas are staffed by IKEA coworkers and showcase kitchen and laundry room settings from IKEA and appliances from Best Buy. While there are only 10 pilot locations, this is the first time IKEA products and services are available through another U.S. retailer, creating innovative ways for both of us to meet customer needs in a changing environment... ...We continue to drive the digital experience forward as well. Usage of our app is growing every quarter, which helps us recognize more customers as they shop with us and gives us the opportunity to provide better personalization and product recommendations. In addition to launching our marketplace, we continue to make online customer enhancements, a few specific examples include improving the online TV shopping experience by both lowering the price for our delivery and installation services and improving the digital flow to make it even easier for customers to add the services to their online TV purchase. For shippable products across categories, customers in all our markets can now pick a 2-hour window for delivery up to 7 days out. This capability was only available in about 1/3 of our markets last year. This is a great option for customers, especially those who may want more security around their high-price point purchases. As always, we have a relentless focus on the employee experience and being the best place to work, which is driving engagement, historically low turnover, and healthy applicant pools. This, in turn, allows us to provide our customers the expert service that Best Buy is known for across stores, online, and in homes. On top of that, our vendors have grown their investment in our specialized labor programs to augment our staff. We continue to expect vendor labor investment to be approximately 20% higher than last year in the second half of the year. Our second strategic priority for fiscal '26 is focused on incremental profitability streams. We are excited about our new Best Buy marketplace. We are about 3 months into the launch and have more than 1,000 sellers and 11 times more SKUs available online for customers than we did before. Now we have more tech options than ever for our customers, both from big names like Samsung, Dell, HP, and Intel, and new vendors that help us level up our tech assortment across categories. We also have hundreds of new brands and new categories like licensed sporting goods, seasonal decor, and much more. For our sellers, our marketplace provides an additional avenue to increase their reach and build their brands, leveraging our qualified traffic. I will share some early results and learnings. As expected and an important goal of Marketplace, we are seeing high unit sales in categories like accessories and small appliances. The 5 Star customer reviews for third-party experiences are similar to those we see for our first-party business. Customer return rates for marketplace items have been running lower than our first-party return rates. And for customers who do have a return, they are taking advantage of the convenient return to store option for more than 80% of product returns. Marketplace ramped through Q3 in terms of sellers, SKUs, traffic conversion rate, and sales. We expect to continue to ramp through Q4. Our marketplace results had a positive impact on our Q3 gross profit rate, and we expect it to positively impact our Q4 gross profit rate as well, and it is already providing opportunities for Best Buy ads through new advertisers. ...Speaking of Best Buy ads during the quarter, we hosted our first-ever client showcase in September called We Got Next. It spotlighted our scale, performance, and innovation to key decision-makers across agencies, brands, partners, and press. We were encouraged by the reception. Advertisers are particularly excited about our new in-store takeover product, unique to Best Buy. This high-impact program features both large-format signage across the store and screens across the TV wall and computer monitors. It begins running in January with Meta and ESPN. We continue to invest in strengthening and advancing the technology platform we need to capitalize on the opportunity we see ahead. During the quarter, we launched our self-serve platform, My Ads, which is particularly important for our new marketplace sellers. We also enabled on-site programmatic buying, augmented our reporting capabilities, and expanded our on-site ad supply. We are successfully expanding into new opportunity areas like agencies and demand-side platforms or DSPs. We are also gaining traction in non-endemic categories, with several partners testing the platform in differentiated ways. Financial services is emerging as a standout vertical with PayPal, Klarna, and Capital One shopping, all activating campaigns. Other new non-endemic categories include quick-serve restaurants and sports entertainment. Our retail media network is already highly profitable and our Q3 growth in ad collections had a positive impact on our gross profit rate, and we expect it to positively impact our Q4 gross profit rate as well. We expect a neutral impact on this year's operating income rate compared to last year due to the investments we are making in technology and talent... ...This brings us to our third strategic priority for fiscal '26, which is a long-standing strategic imperative. Driving efficiencies and identifying cost reductions are crucial to help fund investment capacity for new and existing initiatives and offset pressures in our business. There are many ways we realize these efficiencies, with technology and analytics through ongoing vendor partnerships and vendor selections throughout the enterprise and by modifying existing processes or customer offerings. In our customer support capability, we are leveraging AI to streamline interactions and provide new experiences that empower customers with more self-serve content and options. As a result, we drove a 17% decline in the number of customer contacts in Q3 and improved our customer experience scores. By leveraging our new data-driven sourcing solution to choose the most efficient location to fulfill more than 70% of our online orders, we are seeing faster delivery times, better on-time delivery, and lower costs. Going forward, we will continue to use AI-augmented optimization across multiple areas of our business, from scan detection to customer support to personalized email marketing. And we are increasingly using AI for product search, product recommendations, and enriching product content as well as expanding into conversational AI and agentic commerce... ...We have officially kicked off the holiday season and we feel well positioned with compelling deals on hot products, strong marketing, and competitive fulfillment options. From a timing perspective, our promotional plans for the most part align with last year, doorbusters drop every Friday throughout the holiday, and our Black Friday sales started the week before Thanksgiving. We have something for every budget with deals across a wide range of price points. Because of our unique position, we can also offer customers great prices for the latest innovation and premium products and assortments that not everyone has. This includes limited quantity hardware, games and toys that drive traffic and excitement to our stores and digital properties through invitation-only and other exciting launch events. We expect gaming to be a hot holiday gift category with products like the Nintendo Switch 2, the ASUS Rog Xbox Ally handheld gaming system, gaming laptops, and gaming monitors. Other exciting gifts for the holiday include AI glasses from Ray-Ban and Oakley, 3D printers, OLED TVs, the new Hyperboot by Nike, limited quantity Pokémon cards and LEGO toys and JBL PartyBox speakers. For those looking for gifts that can be used every day, we have great deals on the new remarkable Paper Pro and Copilot+ laptops, small appliances like Ninja SLUSHi machines and Breville Barista espresso machines, health products like the new Oura Ring 4, and much more. In stores, you can interact with our immersive experiences and demos and get advice from our blue shirts and vendor experts. And every year ahead of holiday, we, like many vendors, hired thousands of seasonal flex employees. This year, we tried something new and brought all the new associates together for a full weekend earlier this month. The event was a resounding success, not only in training the new employees on products, tools, and transacting, but immersing new team members in the values, energy, and collaboration that define Best Buy's culture... ...Of course, all the in-store products and more are available for customers who prefer to shop from home. We have our holiday gift ideas page with curated gift lists based on interest and a personalized discover page designed to help customers discover new technology. In addition to great price points, we have our comprehensive trade-in program that we will highlight throughout the holiday to help customers more easily get new technology. For example, customers can save up to $1,200 by trading in their tablets or up to $1,100 trading in their phones. We also have great no-interest programs available on the credit card in addition to buy now, pay later options to help customers complete their holiday shopping list. We are excited about our holiday marketing campaign that meets people where they already are across sports, streaming, and social. We're teaming up with more than 200 influencers and Best Buy creators as they highlight the tech that's topping their gift list. And this year, we are going even deeper with sports. We continue to be the official home entertainment retailer of the NFL, and our holiday campaign will have an increased in-game presence across NBC, Peacock, CBS, Fox, and Netflix. We will also have a presence on cbssports.com and across streaming sports content on ESPN. In summary, we are pleased with our Q3 financial results and execution, which included improved share positions. We expect to deliver sales growth for the year. The high end of our Q4 outlook assumes growth in computing, gaming, and mobile. It also reflects trend improvements in TVs driven by a blend of sharp pricing, increased marketing, specialty labor, and improved delivery and install offerings. Our results demonstrate an important aspect of our thesis. Our model really shines when there is innovation. This is because we are the trusted source for the latest and greatest new technology. We have a broad range of assortments and price points for every budget in addition to unique in-store and digital experiences. We also have Geek Squad services to help our customers, and we are a true partner to our vendors, working with them from early in the product development cycle, all the way to launching products on our sales. And now I would like to turn the call over to Matt for more details on our Q3 performance and Q4 outlook.
Good morning. Let me start with an overview of how the third quarter performed versus expectations we shared with you last quarter. Enterprise comparable sales growth of 2.7% exceeded our outlook of being similar to our second quarter growth of 1.6%. Our adjusted operating income rate of 4% was 30 basis points better than expected, which was largely driven by lower-than-planned SG&A expense. I will now talk about our third quarter results versus last year. Enterprise revenue of $9.7 billion increased 2.4% versus last year. Our adjusted operating income rate increased 30 basis points compared to last year, and our adjusted diluted earnings per share increased 11% to $1.40. By month, our Enterprise comparable sales were up approximately 3% in August, 1% in September, and 5% in October. In our Domestic segment, revenue increased 2.1% to $8.9 billion, driven by comparable sales growth of 2.4%. Our online revenue of $2.8 billion increased 3.5% on a comparable basis and represented 31.8% of our domestic revenue. Our online comparable sales growth includes net commission revenue earned from our third-party marketplace sellers. From an organic standpoint, the blended average sales price of our products was approximately flat to last year, with the unit growth being the primary driver of our sales growth. International revenue of $794 million increased 6.1% versus last year. The revenue increase was primarily driven by comparable sales growth of 6.3% and revenue from Best Buy's Express locations that are not yet included in comparable sales. The previous items were partially offset by the negative impact from foreign exchange rates. From a category standpoint, the largest drivers of international comparable sales growth were computing and mobile phones. Our domestic gross profit rate decreased by 30 basis points to 23.3%. This was primarily due to lower product margin rates partially offset by rate improvement within the services category. The lower product margin rates were primarily driven by an unfavorable sales mix and increased personalized promotional offers. Our international gross profit rate increased 30 basis points to 22.8%. The higher gross profit rate was primarily due to favorable supply chain costs. Moving to SG&A, where our domestic adjusted SG&A decreased $4 million, which included lower Best Buy Health expenses that were largely offset by higher incentive compensation expenses. During the third quarter, we recorded pretax noncash asset impairments of $192 million related to Best Buy Health, which were excluded from our adjusted results. The impairments were prompted by a change in Best Buy Health's customer base during the quarter and reflect downward revisions in our long-term projections in part due to pressures in the Medicaid and Medicare Advantage markets. Year-to-date, we have returned a total of $802 million to shareholders through dividends of $602 million and share repurchases of $200 million. For the year, we still expect to spend approximately $300 million on repurchases. Let me next share color on fourth quarter guidance. From a top-line perspective, we expect our fourth quarter comparable sales to be in the range of down 1% to up 1%. In addition, our fourth quarter comparable sales outlook for Canada more closely aligns with our expectations for the domestic segment. On the profitability side, we expect our fourth quarter adjusted operating income rate of 4.8% to 4.9%, which compares to 4.9% last year. Moving to gross profit, we expect our fourth quarter gross profit rate to decline versus last year due to a lower product margin rate, which is primarily due to increased promotional investments. Other notable drivers that are expected to benefit our gross profit rate include growth from Best Buy ads, our recently launched online marketplace, and improved profitability from our services category. Moving next to SG&A, where the most notable planned puts and takes are the following: increased SG&A in support of our Best Buy ads and marketplace initiatives, which include advertising, technology, and employee compensation expenses. Offsetting these items are lower Best Buy Health and incentive compensation expenses. Lastly, the low end of our guidance reflects our plans to further reduce our variable expenses, including incentive compensation to align with sales trends. Let me provide more details on our updated full-year fiscal '26 guidance, which incorporates the color I just shared on the fourth quarter and is the following: revenue in the range of $41.65 billion to $41.95 billion; comparable sales growth of 0.5% to 1.2%; adjusted operating income rate of approximately 4.2%; an adjusted effective income tax rate of approximately 25.4%; adjusted diluted earnings per share of $6.25 to $6.35 and capital expenditures of approximately $700 million. Our full-year gross profit and SG&A working assumptions are still very similar to what we shared last quarter, and some of the key callouts are the following: we believe our fiscal '26 gross profit rate will now decline approximately 15 basis points compared to last year. The high end of our guidance continues to reflect incentive compensation that is approximately flat to last year. As I noted, we now expect our adjusted effective income tax rate to be approximately 25.4%, which compares to our prior guidance of 25%. I will now turn the call over to the operator for questions.
Operator
Your first question comes from Simeon Gutman with Morgan Stanley.
Nice third quarter. I wanted to ask about the factors influencing Q4. It seems like the comparison may be lighter than we anticipated compared to the second quarter, suggesting a difference from your previous guidance, but potentially better on profit. Can you discuss how you approached your fourth quarter guidance? Is there any change in your thinking since we discussed this three months ago?
Yes. Overall, the high end of our Q4 guide from a sales perspective is pretty similar to what we guided last time, maybe just a little bit lower. We did raise the bottom end of that sales guide from something that was implied to down 4% or maybe more to the number we talked about here today of down 1%. So feeling good about where sales are effectively similar to where we expect them to be on the August call. On the EBIT side, we actually slightly lower the EBIT expectations from what we would have implied last Q4 of closer to 5%. So most of that was on the low end. We did have a little bit more rate pressure on the low end because we adjusted the revenue expectations, and therefore, the incentive compensation changed a little bit. So overall, at the high end, not a very big difference from what we would have implied in the guide on the August call.
Okay. And then the follow-up, based on the adoption of either Switch 2 or other things in entertainment as well as the iPhone. What do the curves look like? Meaning, does it portend that you have another year's worth of good momentum? Like is a lot of demand pent-up? How do you think about it as you go into the fourth quarter and into next year?
Sure. To support the fourth quarter guidance, we still expect growth in computing and mobile phones. The computing sector will continue to thrive due to the need for upgrades and ongoing innovations in AI. This trend is expected to carry into Q4 and likely into next year, especially since many users have yet to upgrade from Windows 10 devices; there are also opportunities on the Mac side for those who haven't moved to the latest chip technology. Mobile phones are anticipated to maintain growth as we enter Q4 and beyond. We are benefiting from in-store improvements with carriers. On the entertainment front, we expect the Switch to contribute to our growth in Q4. However, growth for other consoles may slow as they enter the later stages of their replacement cycles, and recent price increases might be affecting sales. Looking ahead to next year, we still see some opportunities before the Switch 2 is launched in the middle of the year. We expect to see better trends in TV as we approach Q4 due to competitive pricing and increased marketing efforts, and we have made adjustments to our service offerings which should help improve the situation there as well. In fact, we've already noticed a slight growth in TV units during Q3. Additionally, our marketplace is continuing to ramp up as we head into Q4, and we feel optimistic about scaling that along with our ads business next year.
Operator
The next question comes from Peter Keith with Piper Sandler.
Nice quarter. I'd like to just follow up, Matt, on that last response on the Q4 outlook for comp because it does seem like you have quite a bit of momentum coming out of Q3 and some product momentum for the holiday. So what's driving the deceleration in the overall outlook compared to Q3?
Yes. I'll start with an overview for Q3. We are anticipating a Q4 outlook that is quite similar from a sales standpoint. Q3 performed slightly better than we had anticipated, benefiting from a robust back-to-school season and a strong October due to Techtober earlier in the year. We are experiencing positive growth as we approach Q4, although Q4 had its own growth last year compared to Q3, which experienced some sales challenges. This makes the comparisons more difficult as we enter Q4. The holiday season is always tricky to forecast. However, we believe the variety of scenarios we've outlined gives us a solid foundation for planning our operations. Some categories are showing changes in sales momentum as we transition from Q3 to Q4. For gaming, we expect overall growth, but perhaps not at the same rate as in Q3 and Q4. Wearables is another category where we likely won't see the same growth we experienced in Q3.
Okay. Helpful. And then maybe another question for Corie on the marketplace. How is it going now that it's rolled out? Do you still expect it will have a positive impact on EBIT this year? It sounds like you've shared some helpful KPIs. Are there any challenges now that it's out live? Just kind of give some of the puts and takes that you're seeing on that launch?
Yes. I'm incredibly proud of the work the team has done to launch the marketplace in a very omni-channel way. We mentioned now more than 1,000 sellers that we onboarded in a quarter and 11 times more SKUs. So right away, we can see customers looking for that broader assortment. We can see them leaning into some of the unit growth that we were looking for in places like accessories where you can have a much deeper assortment or small appliances where again, you have the ability to have more breadth across what we're doing. So we're really happy with that. We did hit a few of those points on the call where we're seeing that high unit sales in categories, we're seeing return rates be actually a little bit less than what we're seeing in first-party. And 80% of those returns coming back to stores. We really like the customer experience metrics we're seeing. And so in general, those kind of early indicators really feel healthy and good to us, but it still is really early in the ramp. And we want to make sure we give ourselves enough time to create the kind of scale that we're going to see throughout Q4. But we're excited with the progress that we're making and how quickly we've been able to broaden that assortment and how much our customers are leaning into that broader assortment for us.
Yes. Regarding the operating income rate impact for the year, I think we had previously said we thought maybe it would be a little bit of a rate improvement for the enterprise for the year. We're now expecting that to be a bit more neutral. Nothing super material has changed in our outlook. There's been just a little bit of a different product mix and a little bit slower ramp than we would have had originally modeled. So again, we never really expected it to have a really huge impact on the rate this year, but more neutral this time at this quarter end.
The last thing I'd say, Peter, I think the great part about having this, especially as we head into Q4, is it just really extends the amount of giftable items that we have for our customers. And the teams are finding really interesting ways to highlight these new extended assortments. So as you look on our global homepage or as you look at search, we're finding new ways to kind of pull the depth of this assortment up. So people really realize there's a lot more out there that our customers can find to be the perfect gift.
Operator
The next question comes from Joe Feldman with Telsey Advisory Group.
So I wanted to touch on the loyalty program a bit. And just if you could share some more details on how that's been performing. It seems like it's been a good driver for much of the year. I don't recall hearing too much this morning on it, so I was just curious if you could share some thoughts.
Our membership program is a crucial aspect of our customer experience and engagement strategy. We have over 100 million members across our three tiers, with the free My Best Buy membership being the most widely used. On the paid membership side, we ended the year with nearly 8 million paid members, an increase from 7 million the previous year. Currently, we are focused on delivering real value and unique offers to these members. We've found that personalized promotions are effective in reengaging customers who may have drifted away. By leveraging our customer data and shopping signals, we can target these customers with tailored offers. We've also experimented with significant discounts on the NFL Sunday ticket for our Plus and Total members, exploring additional services and subscriptions that might appeal to them. We plan to continue testing and learning from these initiatives in our membership program. Our consistent goal remains to drive engagement, increase customer spending, and use this approach to enhance our advertising business. The future developments will center around meeting these objectives for our customers.
That's great. And then just maybe shifting gears a little bit and may be early, but I did want to ask about how you are thinking about stores and store investment for the coming year? You've done a lot of things to keep tweaking the model and trying different things inside the stores. I'm just curious what your initial thoughts for next year would look like.
Yes, I'm going to start where I always start, which is our stores are incredibly crucial assets. They provide not only differentiated experiences, not only differentiated services but also amazing multichannel fulfillment options. We still are running at 46% in-store pickup no matter what all of the advancements that we made in terms of shipping speed are. So this is a really important asset base for us. We've been very consistent, and this is true for this year and it will bleed into next year. Our focus right now is on great store look and feel. A lot of our capital investments this year have been about ensuring that we're really investing in that look and feel. We've listed a number of the ways we're doing that both ourselves and in partnership with our vendors. That will continue as we think into next year as we continue to refresh and make sure that we feel like our store updates reflect those great immersive experiences in places like AR, gaming, TVs, small appliances, many of the categories that we've talked about, including the experiences that we're driving in mobile in partnership with some of our vendors. We do have some cohort of stores where they're a little bit larger than what we need. So we've been working on several different ways. This, again, will move into next year, including relocations, resizing some of the existing formats, now we're looking at some of the new and more innovative ways where maybe we can consolidate the space and bring partners like the IKEA pilot as a great example of that. You can imagine there's a multitude of partners who might be interested in having some of that shop-in-shop space. Finally, we've talked about some of the smaller format stores. We now have 3 new small format stores open, testing a couple of different concepts. One is somewhere like Bozeman, where maybe we can enter a market we wouldn't otherwise enter in other areas. It's closing a larger store and opening a small one. We like what we're seeing in those small format stores, and I would expect us to lean into those a bit as we head into next year. Overall, we are really focused on ensuring that if someone makes the trip to the store, they have an amazing experience.
Operator
The next question comes from Greg Melich with Evercore.
Two questions. First, on tariffs. Could you just update us on how much of that do you think has actually flowed through to on the shelf average unit retail at this point? Is it all in the numbers now or the base?
Overall, as mentioned in the prepared remarks, our average sales price at the enterprise level has remained fairly stable year-over-year. Most of our growth is driven by unit sales. This suggests that the adjustments we've made concerning tariffs on certain parts of our products are reflected in the pricing. However, any increases due to tariffs have only affected a small segment of our offerings overall. The effective tariff rate is likely still in the mid-teens. Nonetheless, this does not fully represent the actual price increases on those specific product segments, which were close to that rate. This is why our average sales price has generally remained flat year-over-year. Our industry is highly promotional, meaning we must keep our prices competitive despite the tariffs. This competitiveness can sometimes dampen the overall effect on average sales prices.
I just want to lift up one thing that Matt said. Our number one focus is on our customer and ensuring we have every price point and every budget available. One of the interesting things when we looked at our price bands, you can imagine we're looking at how many SKUs we have in each price band in a couple of our largest categories year-over-year, very similar amount of SKUs by price band. I think the team is doing an amazing job staying focused on having that breadth of assortment regardless of, to Matt's point, whether or not we have a few small price adjustments coming through so that whatever the budget is, we're there for them, and that will be the goal through the holiday.
Got it. Makes a lot of sense. I'd love to follow up on labor and working with vendors. Could you just level set us on how much of the store has some vendor support into labor? I think you mentioned you're adding TVs recently. Just would love to hear how that really helps engagement score with customers when you have vendors funding some of the labor in the store?
The amount of vendor labor is not a static answer. It flexes and depends on both the time of year and, of course, launches or innovation as different vendors choose to lean in and lead out at various points in time. I think one of the differences in our model regarding labor is we actually have several different ways in which we interact with customers from a labor perspective. We have everything from kind of that adviser who can flex over the whole store all the way into our own specialized category labor or something like an appliance pro who understands appliances, all the way into vendor labor, which the team, again, I give them a lot of credit, has done a great job. That's a very close partnership between us and our vendors. Most cases, that is our labor that we are training and deploying that is, of course, more trained against that particular vendor assortment but is part of our broader umbrella of labor here at Best Buy. Sometimes, we have a few examples where we also have just flat-out vendor-provided labor that's in our stores. What I think we've gotten good at is the operating model amongst all of those different types of labor, so you know when to hand off to a specialist who might have more experience with a certain product. Those specialists understand when it's time to maybe hand back off to someone who might be more of a generalist because they want to go shop another department. Concentrating on how the operating model works at Best Buy is embracing vendor partnership labor, but also ensuring it stays consistent with the culture, the values, and the way we think about serving the customer here at Best Buy.
Operator
The next question comes from Jonathan Matuszewski with Jefferies.
Corie, you referenced Agentic Commerce. I was curious if you could expand there how you think about the top line and potential margin benefits from the prospects of something like instant checkout? And if you have any timeline slated for integration, that would be great.
My timeline is fast. How's that? But at the same time, joking aside, you really have to prioritize not just where is the incremental margin flow through, but what does the customer experience really look like, and particularly in a business like ours that often includes maybe scheduled delivery, maybe installation, maybe services or membership. You really need to think about in instant checkout. How do you want those experiences to translate for the customer? That's just when we're talking about the actual transaction point. More broadly, we want to make sure we're thinking about how our brand, how our specific knowledge of our customers show up and how is it helpful to customers as they're using a variety at this point of agentic tools. We're obviously working quickly to make sure that we are relevant and showing up in the right places. But most important for us is protecting the customer experience so that that stays consistent with how we would want them to experience our own digital assets.
Yes, thanks. We're not obviously going to guide next year, but I do think as it relates to how we're thinking about next year at a high level, we're clearly seeing some sales momentum this year, and we would hope to be able to continue to drive continued momentum on the sales side as we get into next year, and obviously, higher sales help from a rate leverage perspective. It is likely true that as we get into next year for some of our initiatives, we're going to need to continue to invest in those marketplace and the ads business, exactly how much and how much flows through still haven't completed the math on that quite yet. But that is something we want to do because over the long period of time, it'll help us drive more rate and fuel our other parts of our business over the long term, and we think that it's a good trade-off. So exactly how much that looks next year, hard to say, but we do think it's an accretive thing for us over the 1- to 3- to 5-year period.
Operator
The next question comes from Seth Sigman with Barclays.
I wanted to ask about SG&A. You were able to manage that down quite a bit this quarter despite the best sales growth in more than 4 years. So just curious, was there anything unique this quarter you could unpack that would be helpful? And then I'm just curious, does SG&A need to come back more as you think about a scenario where comps remain positive? What does the normal operating leverage in the business look like?
In the third quarter, we experienced favorable rates in SG&A, primarily driven by higher-than-expected sales and year-over-year growth. Several factors contributed positively, including reduced technology and labor expenses for the quarter, along with some smaller settlements that benefited us as well. While these elements weren't significant on their own, they collectively enhanced our SG&A performance due to the sales leverage. Looking ahead to next year, while I’m not providing guidance, we anticipate some inflationary pressures related to wages and ongoing investments needed for long-term growth, especially in areas like our marketplace and advertising business. Our objective is to drive sustained sales growth and achieve rate leverage as sales increase. We are still working on the specifics for next year but have consistently excelled at identifying operational efficiencies and reducing costs to counteract pressures. We’ve maintained this approach for years and expect to continue doing so. We’ve previously discussed initiatives like data-driven sourcing in our supply chain and our partnership with FedEx, as well as our ongoing tests of automated guided vehicles in our warehouses. Technology and analytics are key avenues for us to boost efficiency in customer support and explore future AI-related opportunities throughout our business operations. We believe we have the means to mitigate the usual annual pressures as we have been doing, and our long-term goal remains to enhance profitability as we grow sales.
Okay. That's helpful. Then, obviously, great to see comps positive, but I want to ask about the categories that are not performing as well. What needs to happen for the CE category and the appliance category to get back to growth?
The appliance category is probably the most difficult one that we have in the market today. The vast majority of the appliance market consists of customers replacing a product due to a breakage of some sort. We're also seeing a very high amount of single unit purchases, meaning a washer breaks, they're not replacing the washer and dryer; they're just replacing the washer. This is very different from what generally happens in the market, and that is a very high percentage in total, which means that promotions are not as effective as they are overall because you're dealing with a fixed customer base. We also don't have a Pro business. Really, our sweet spot primarily is in premium products and packages in historic years. We have to shift our model a little bit. So we're looking at increasing our labor coverage in the department, focusing on delivery and speed of delivery in particular, which is critical in a duress market, and also looking at even opportunities in some of our stores for a customer to take the product with them that day, which is something that has been emphasized more in the market that we're in. We are looking to adjust our model until it flips back a little bit more toward our sweet spot, which is again premium products and packages, but we need to meet the customer where they're at in this duress market. Hopefully, as housing and different things change, the market starts to swing back to something that might be a little more normal.
On the TV side, I would just make a couple of comments there. Our revenue performance did improve sequentially, even though it was still down year-over-year. What's interesting is that our unit performance really accelerated and moved to slight growth in the quarter. You can see some of the industry-wide average selling price compression there, which we've talked about. Our share trends have improved materially on the unit side, and we believe that we're up slightly year-over-year on TV. A lot of that is because we've invested in some of the things that we've been talking about, the sharp pricing, increased marketing, expanded specialty labor, and enhanced merchandising experiences in the stores with TCL, Hisense, and LG, along with augmenting that with expanded services offerings and working on how that experience works digitally. All of that, I think the team is doing a great job putting together a more fulsome assortment and more price point options for our customers, which is at least moving that business in the right trajectory.
Operator
The next question comes from Christopher Horvers with JPMorgan.
So my first question, I'm going to try to go at the marketplace and the ads margin and accretion a little bit differently. I know that others have asked. Can you talk about what you're seeing in terms of the benefits of both businesses to the gross margin line in the second half? And then as you think about in 2026, one would expect the revenue growth there to accelerate; is it your expectation that as the business scales, the margin rate of those businesses also accelerates? I think on our side, we think about that as strong double-digit margin rates for both businesses.
Yes. I'll break down a little bit for both the different parts of the P&L here. First, if I think about gross profit rate for both ads and marketplace, they have both helped the gross profit rate in the back half of this year. On the marketplace side, we're scaling that business. If you think about the rate, it's helpful there. As we get into next year, we would continue to expect the marketplace to scale, we're clearly going to lap the launch in midway through next year, which might have an impact. Generally speaking, the more you grow it, the more GMV and the more net commissions should be helpful to the gross margin rate, not exactly linear every quarter, depending on the scaling and when we lap. On the ad side, from a gross profit rate perspective, again, we're continuing to explore and expand into new parts of the ads business, and to the extent that we are successful in driving incremental revenue and profitability from that, which we're planning to do, that would also be helpful to the gross profit rate in the future. Now again, exactly how much and how it laps every quarter might not be exactly the same, but those would be the intent. On the operating income rate side, I think it's going to come down to, as we talked a little bit earlier, like how much do we feel like we need to invest and what the opportunity for that investment in return looks like. As we get into next year, that's something we're still evaluating in terms of the technology, the people, and other things that we might need to drive those two initiatives. We think those are the right decisions overall over time for us to drive more rate opportunities from those two initiatives; exactly how much flows through to operating income, we're not quite ready to commit to at this point, but we do believe it's a good return for us.
And Chris, the last thing I would add, and I know you know this, but I feel compelled. Our goal here is really to stay more relevant with the customer. Our goal is to drive more units to be there more often in consideration and to make sure we are leveraging partnerships. We mentioned a few on the call to stay relevant with that consumer who has so many choices. That part we are starting to see early green shoots on, and that becomes really the flywheel that we've been talking about that helps feed all parts of the business. That is as much what we're focused on building and expanding next year as anything.
Operator
The next question comes from Anthony Chukumba with Loop Capital Markets.
I know this is always kind of tough because of all the different product categories that you're in, but how do you feel just at a high level in terms of market share? I mean, particularly given the fact that your sales have accelerated and you did have the best comps in several years. So how do you think about that at a high level?
I appreciate where you started, Anthony, which is it is really difficult in this industry. There just isn't a single source of share information, and there are multiple cuts. That being said, when we try to pull and triangulate all the data sources, we believe we have improved our share position over the last two quarters. In Q3, we estimate that our share was flattish to slightly up. Obviously, we've always said share is a long game conversation for us and all the initiatives that we're talking about are driving toward more sustainability to, at the highest level, drive shares. In that, you're going to constantly be making trade-offs, promotion decisions, trade-off pricing decisions. We feel like we're strong right now, particularly in computing and gaming. I talked about our TV unit share position, which now we feel like is erring on the positive side. There's a lot of these kind of newer categories or the expanded assortment that we're seeing in marketplace that is bolstering our point of view about how we feel like we're sitting for share. Again, always a conversation, longer game, but feel like the trajectory is headed the direction that we want.
Got it. That's helpful context. And then just real quickly on the Switch 2, obviously, that's been selling quite well and Nintendo just hiked their unit estimate for their fiscal year. How have you felt about your Switch 2 allocations relative to your initial expectations? I know you historically have over-indexed on Nintendo products, particularly relative to PlayStation and Xbox. But just love to hear your thoughts just in terms of how you feel you guys are doing from an allocation perspective.
Yes. Thank you for the question. We've actually been very happy with Switch 2. Obviously, the launch was outstanding. It drove growth last quarter, and we do expect gaming to continue to grow as we lead into Q4. It's been highly publicized that the amount of Switch 2 units in the market is a lot higher than what Switch 1 was in the same timeframe. So we have actually been happy with the ability to come closer to meeting customer demand. We do think demand over the holiday will continue to still be very strong. And then in gaming, in general, it's not just Switch. There are other aspects of that business that are driving growth. We're just seeing handheld in general, whether it be the new product from Asus that is a partnership with them in Xbox or other products from companies like Lenovo with their Legion Go. Handheld gaming is a driver across the entire gaming segment. We're really excited that we think we have the best assortment there and can really meet customers' needs across anything they want to do, whether it be Switch all the way up to any aspect of handheld gaming in total. That's really making up for some of the slowing sales that you see in just the traditional PS5 and Xbox as those get to the end of their life cycle.
One of the things, Anthony, that's interesting about all the devices that Jason just talked about is these are pretty high-price point devices. Especially considering their gaming, they tend toward kind of a younger cohort, so we really like our position here, and we're doubling down both physically and digitally to make sure we offer the best possible experience. I give our teams a ton of credit. As part of the reason that we're able to get the kind of allocations we can is because we can deliver these amazing experiences, especially at retail. So with that, I think that's our last question. Thanks, Anthony. I appreciate it. Thank you all so much for joining us. We hope you all have a lovely holiday season, and we look forward to speaking with you all at the end of our year.
Operator
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for joining. You may now disconnect.