Stocks/NRDY

NRDY

Nerdy, Inc.
Technology·Software - Application
$0.82
$101M market cap
Claude Rating
2/10SHORT
Revenue
$180.1M
Free Cash Flow
$-19.6M
Rev Growth
+2.4%
FCF Margin
-10.9%
P/FCF
--
EV/FCF
--
Fwd EV/EBITDA
--
Fair Value
$0.45
Upside
-45.1%

Nerdy, Inc. operates platform for live online learning. The company's purpose-built proprietary platform leverages technology, including AI, to connect learners of various ages to experts, delivering value on both sides of the network. Its learning destination provides learning experiences across various subjects and multiple formats, including one-on-one instruction, small group classes, large format group classes, and adaptive self-study. The company's flagship business, Varsity Tutors, operat

2-Year Price History

$0.81-44.9%
$0.80$1.0$1.2$1.4$1.6$1.8volJun 24Oct 24Jan 25May 25Sep 25Jan 26May 26

Quarterly Financials & Projections

Quarterly Waterfall ($ M)
PeriodRevEBITDAOpInNIOCFFCFCapExCashDebtSharesROICIntCovEV/EBITDA
Est2028-Q153.0-0.5---4.2---2.7-1.37.3----------
Est2027-Q455.01.1---3.3---1.1-1.49.9----------
Est2027-Q338.0-10.6---13.3---6.8-1.111.0----------
Est2027-Q244.0-5.3---7.9---6.2-1.117.9----------
Est2027-Q150.5-2.5---6.1---4.0-1.324.0----------
Est2026-Q452.0-1.0---5.2---2.6-1.328.1----------
Est2026-Q336.5-12.8---15.3---7.3-1.330.7----------
Est2026-Q242.0-7.6---9.2---6.7-1.138.0----------
Act2026-Q148.72.61.8-4.1-1.8-3.0-1.244.719.5124.335.8%4.0x--
Act2025-Q449.1-12.313.4-9.2-2.9-4.3-1.347.919.3123.1276.2%-110.7x--
Act2025-Q337.0-18.4-19.1-12.3-2.4-4.1-1.732.70.0121.7------
Act2025-Q245.3-9.9-12.3-7.9-7.0-8.2-1.236.70.0120.2<-999%----
Act2025-Q147.6-14.6-16.6-10.5-6.4-7.6-1.244.90.0118.5<-999%----
Act2024-Q448.0-14.3-16.3-10.2-11.3-12.5-1.252.50.9116.0-668.7%----
Act2024-Q337.5-23.8-25.7-15.9-3.1-5.0-2.065.00.0113.3-799.5%----
Act2024-Q251.0-13.4-15.2-9.1-5.6-7.1-1.569.80.0109.9-276.2%----
Act2024-Q153.7-11.1-12.9-7.54.42.1-2.277.00.0108.0-223.1%----
Act2023-Q455.1-8.5-10.2-5.7-5.0-8.0-3.074.81.3105.2-166.9%----
Act2023-Q340.3-23.9-25.6-12.3-4.8-6.7-1.984.00.097.1-482.2%----
Act2023-Q248.8-8.8-10.5-3.3-4.5-5.6-1.190.91.494.5-372.0%----
Act2023-Q149.2-9.7-11.4-18.96.85.8-1.096.50.091.8-693.1%----
Act2022-Q441.8-18.7-20.4-8.7-14.5-15.5-1.090.71.589.7-410.3%----
Act2022-Q331.8-26.0-27.7-18.5-13.3-14.9-1.6106.40.087.7-555.9%----
Act2022-Q242.2-20.4-22.08.7-19.3-20.7-1.5121.00.088.6-280.8%----
Act2022-Q146.9-19.1-20.7-16.8-0.9-2.2-1.3141.70.079.6-623.6%----
Historical Valuation

Multiples vs the company's own history — cheap or rich relative to itself? Historical fiscal years, then TTM, then forward projections (E). Forward rows hold today's price against projected earnings, so the multiple compresses if the company grows into it.

YearPriceRev GrEBITDA %EBITDAEV/EBITDAEV/FCFP/EP/S
20222.25-51.8%-84n/mn/mn/m1.2×
20233.43+18.9%-26.3%-51n/mn/mn/m1.9×
20241.62-1.6%-32.9%-63n/mn/mn/m0.6×
20251.04-5.9%-30.9%-55n/mn/mn/m0.8×
TTM0.82-2.2%-21.1%-380.0×0.0×0.0×0.0×
2027E0.82+4.1%-0.1%-00.0×0.0×0.0×0.0×

EBITDA in reporting-currency $M. Historical multiples use year-end market cap (split-adjusted price history); TTM & forward years use today's.

AI Analysis

LLM Evaluations

Claude2/10SHORTFV: $0.45

Nerdy is a structurally challenged business trading at an optically cheap 0.59x P/S, but the apparent cheapness is a trap. The company has failed to grow revenue meaningfully over 3+ years despite massive investment, burns cash at ~$20M/year, faces NYSE delisting risk, carries a toxic $118M off-balance-sheet TRA liability, and has 75%+ potential dilution from Class B units and equity awards. The AI-native platform rebuild is a legitimate strategic pivot, but it's a bet on execution by a management team that has consistently missed targets while compensating itself generously via SBC (14.5% of revenue). Institutional revenue is collapsing, consumer member counts continue declining, and customer sentiment is deteriorating with billing complaints. The 22% short interest and 20-day days-to-cover reflect informed skepticism. Even in an optimistic scenario where the V3 platform drives member growth and margins improve, the fully diluted share count (~220M shares) and TRA overhang mean equity upside is severely capped. This is a value trap, not a turnaround.

Catalyst Potential delisting from NYSE could force a reverse stock split, further eroding retail confidence. Hercules loan covenant breach if contribution margins slip. Continued institutional revenue declines as federal education funding tightens. Full dilution event if the company somehow reaches profitability (triggering TRA payments and Class B conversions).
Risk To the bear case: if the V3/Maya AI platform genuinely inflects member growth and retention in H2 2026, combined with continued cost discipline, the company could achieve sustainable EBITDA profitability faster than expected, triggering a short squeeze given the 22% short interest and 20-day days-to-cover.
Trend
IMPROVING
Mgmt
4/10
Quarter
6/10
Exp. Move
-2.0%

Latest Earnings Call

Transcript Summary

Nerdy Inc. demonstrated strong operational progress in Q1 2026, reporting revenue of $48.7 million and a positive adjusted EBITDA of $1.0 million. The company has successfully transitioned to an AI-native foundation, launching its 'V3' learner experience and 'Maya' AI concierge. These innovations have led to significant margin expansion, with gross margins reaching 66.2% and adjusted EBITDA margins improving by over 1,500 basis points year-over-year. While active members decreased 9% to 36,900, the decline is decelerating, and the company anticipates growth by year-end. The institutional segment saw a decline in bookings, which management expects to address with a revamped platform for the upcoming back-to-school season. CFO Atul Bagga emphasized a disciplined path toward free cash flow positivity, supported by a 20% year-over-year reduction in headcount facilitated by AI automation. The company reaffirmed its full-year 2026 guidance, expecting roughly breakeven EBITDA on $180-$190 million in revenue. Analysts focused on the migration timeline for the customer base to the V3 platform and the durability of improved retention trends in new cohorts. Overall, Nerdy is leveraging AI not just as a product feature, but as a structural driver of efficiency and product development speed.

Valuation & Metrics

Market Stats

Price$0.82
Market Cap$101M
Enterprise Value$75M
P/S Ratio0.6x
P/FCF--
EV/FCF--
FCF Margin (TTM)-10.9%
FCF Yield-19.4%
Dividend Yield (TTM)--
Annual Dilution4.9%
CurrencyUSD

TTM Financial Snapshot

Revenue$180.1M
Net Income$-33.5M
Free Cash Flow$-19.6M

Revenue Growth (YoY)+2.4%
EBITDA Margin-21.1%
Net Margin-18.6%
FCF Margin-10.9%
CapEx % of Revenue3.0%
SBC % of Revenue14.5%
ROIC-1566.6%
WC Change % Rev1.2%
Interest Coverage-49.3x

DCF Fair Value Estimate

$-0.11
-113.0% upside
Fair Enterprise Value$-133M
− Net Debt$-25M
= Fair Equity$-13M
Revenue Growth5.0% → 2.0%
FCF Margin-10.9% → 5.0%
Discount Rate16.0%
Terminal EV/FCF8.0x

Forward Outlook & Risk

Short Interest

Short % of Float23.6%
Short Shares8.7M
Days to Cover19.6
Change (vs Prior)+4.4%
Short % Float History
23.60%+6.50pp
16.0%18.0%20.0%22.0%24.0%04-3007-1509-1511-1401-1504-30

Options

Call IV (ATM)--
Put IV (ATM)271%
ATM Spread--
Call $OI (near money)$30K
Put $OI (near money)$2K
ATM ExpiryJuly 17, 2026 (56D)
ATM Strike$2.5
Major Expirations3
Near-money chain · July 17, 2026
StrikeCall Bid/AskCall OIPut Bid/AskPut OI
$2.50--/$0.750$1.45/$2.100
$5.00--/$0.750$3.80/$4.800
$7.50--/$0.750$6.30/$7.300
Snapshot: 2026-05-22

Forward Projections & Estimates

NTM Revenue Growth+0.5%
Forward FCF Margin-11.4%
Forward EBITDA Margin-13.2%
Forward P/FCF--
Forward EV/FCF--
Forward Int. Coverage-9.0x
Model Risk Score8/10
Bankruptcy Odds18%
Est. Borrow Rate14.0%
Terminal EV/FCF8.0x
LT Growth2.0%
LT FCF Margin5.0%

Employees

Headcount600
Revenue / Employee$300,213
Gross Profit / Employee$180,237
2022: 700 → 2023: 500 → 2024: 600 → 2025: 5 (-81% CAGR)

Cash Runway

27.4months
WATCH

Institutional Ownership

Headline & net flow

BALANCED

In Q1 2026 so far (quarter still filing), institutions are roughly balanced — bought 5.5% of float, sold 6.4%.

Net flow · Q1 2026still filing
-0.8% of float (net)
Bought 5.5% · Sold 6.4%
93 filers reported (last quarter: 95)

Ownership composition

Active
9.1%(-13.8% YoY)
76 filers
hedge / family / endowment
Retail funds
Fidelity, Schwab, 401(k)
Passive
9.7%(-9.2% YoY)
9 filers
Vanguard, iShares, SPDR
Market makers
0.3%(-0.0% YoY)
5 filers
Citadel, Susquehanna
Insiders
7.0%
Form 4 — latest per insider
0%25%50%75%100%2022-062023-032023-122024-092025-062026-03
ActiveRetail fundsPassiveMarket makersRetail direct

Top holders

Fund$ valueCost basisΔ QoQΔ YoYα lifeFund AUM
BlackRock, Inc.Passive$3.5M$1.00−$70K−$679K-0.2%$5.69T
Technology Crossover Management VIII, Ltd.$3.2M$3.70+$0+$0-3.8%$298M
VANGUARD CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLCPassive$2.1M$0.82+$2.1M+$2.1M$4.04T
FRANKLIN RESOURCES INC$1.9M$2.46−$197K−$1.1M-0.2%$403.03B
GEODE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLCPassive$1.4M$2.23+$94K−$135K+2.3%$1.61T
STATE STREET CORPPassive$1.1M$2.80+$12K+$24K-0.2%$2.89T
GSA CAPITAL PARTNERS LLP$536K$2.48+$88K+$163K-5.9%$1.61B
NORTHERN TRUST CORPPassive$410K$2.20+$14K−$134K-0.2%$755.34B
AQR CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC$364K$1.22+$332K+$333K-0.2%$218.19B
VANGUARD FIDUCIARY TRUST COPassive$362K$0.82+$363K+$362K$395.83B
GOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INC$301K$1.97−$57K−$29K-0.2%$760.93B
VANGUARD PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT LLCPassive$290K$0.82+$290K+$290K$1.91T
MONETA GROUP INVESTMENT ADVISORS LLC$255K$1.57+$122K+$184K-0.5%$12.64B
JANE STREET GROUP, LLCMM$206K$1.81−$111K+$153K-0.1%$92.10B
XTX Topco Ltd$175K$2.08+$112K+$67K-1.9%$5.74B
UBS Group AG$156K$1.78+$102K−$79K-0.3%$562.11B
BRIDGEWAY CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLC$153K$1.01−$63K+$28K-2.3%$4.93B
CHARLES SCHWAB INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT INC$150K$2.08−$0−$37K+0.7%$645.81B
Bank of New York Mellon Corp$149K$2.34−$2K−$34K-0.2%$543.21B
Nuveen, LLC$149K$1.49+$1K−$143K+0.0%$368.63B
Cost basis is a volume-weighted estimate from accumulation periods within our 13F history; holders who built their position before our window started will show a stale basis. % above the cost basis is the unrealized gain at the current price.

Trading behavior

Smart-money alpha (lifetime, %/qtr)NEUTRAL
Holders
-1.98%
avg per quarter
Holders (ex-self)
-1.95%
excl. this stock
Buyers (this Q)
-0.39%
34 buyers · $0.00B in
Sellers (this Q)
-0.30%
29 sellers · $0.00B out
alpha coverage: 85% of $ has a lifetime-alpha record
Holder behavior on this stocksource: stock
On big dips (−10%+)
-21.6%
how holders react when this stock falls
On quiet Qs
-6.4%
−10% to +10% baseline
On rallies (+10%+)
+19.3%
how they react when this stock rises
Holders' portfolio flow this Q
+3.4%
inflows — adds are organic
Sellers' portfolio flow this Q
+2.9%
Sellers grew AUM elsewhere — opinionated cut of this stock.
▸ Compare to holder-profile behavior (across all their stocks)
Holder dip (any stock)
-1.8%
Holder mid (any stock)
-1.9%
Holder rally (any stock)
-6.5%

Top Holders Over Time

5-year share-count history (top 10 holders by peak, incl. exited) + price

016.2M32.4M48.6M64.8M$0.82$1.88$2.95$4.02$5.092021-092022-092023-092024-092025-092026-03
hover the chart for per-quarter detailprice (right axis)
TPG Group Holdings (SBS) Advisors, Inc.LIGHT STREET CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLCTechnology Crossover Management VIII, Ltd.3.9MGreenvale Capital LLPTPG GP A, LLCGOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INC369KFalcon Edge Capital LPMORGAN STANLEY30KFRANKLIN RESOURCES INC2.3MNORGES BANK

Analyst Coverage

Analyst Coverage
Price Targets
Last Year (1 analysts)$1.002160.0%
Current Price$0.82
Analyst Ratings
2
7
1
Buy: 2Hold: 7Sell: 1Consensus: Hold
Consensus Estimates
QuarterRevenueEBITDANet IncEPSEPS Range# Analysts
2025 Q339M1M-16M$-0.13$-0.13 – $-0.112
2025 Q446M1M-3M$-0.02$-0.03 – $-0.011
2026 Q147M1M-6M$-0.05$-0.06 – $-0.041
2026 Q243M1M-7M$-0.06$-0.07 – $-0.051
2026 Q340M1M-10M$-0.08$-0.09 – $-0.071
2026 Q450M1M-2M$-0.02$-0.02 – $-0.021
2027 Q153M1M-6M$-0.05$-0.05 – $-0.051
2027 Q252M1M-7M$-0.06$-0.06 – $-0.051
2027 Q344M1M-9M$-0.08$-0.08 – $-0.071
2027 Q453M1M-5M$-0.04$-0.04 – $-0.041

Corporate

Executive Compensation (2022-2025)

Direct Pay$13.8M
Incentive & Other$0.4M
Total Compensation$14.1M
% of Revenue2.5%

Insider Trading (last 12mo)

Open-market only (Form 4 P-Purchase + S-Sale). Excludes grants, option exercises, tax withholding, gifts.
Officers & directors
Buys ($, 12mo)
$54K
3 txns · 1 insider · 37,370 sh
Sells ($, 12mo)
$895K
23 txns · 4 insiders · 820,357 sh
Major holders (≥10% beneficial owners)
Buys ($, 12mo)
$4.36M
19 txns · 1 insider · 3,515,765 sh
Sells ($, 12mo)
$0
0 txns · 0 insiders · 0 sh
Recent transactions
DateSideInsiderTitleSharesPriceDollarsOwned $
2026-05-18SELLSwenson Christopher C.officer: Chief Legal Officer22,796$0.80$18K$1.53M
2026-04-16SELLPaszterko John Andrewofficer: Chief Operating Officer31,788$0.93$30K$1.07M
2026-04-16SELLSwenson Christopher C.officer: Chief Legal Officer69,796$0.93$65K$1.80M
2026-03-16SELLPello Jason H.officer: Chief Financial Officer30,609$0.90$28K$2.29M
2026-03-16SELLSwenson Christopher C.officer: Chief Legal Officer18,366$0.90$17K$1.80M
2026-03-10SELLPello Jason H.officer: Chief Financial Officer75,000$0.92$69K$2.37M
2026-02-17SELLPello Jason H.officer: Chief Financial Officer49,814$0.97$48K$2.57M
2026-02-17SELLSwenson Christopher C.officer: Chief Legal Officer32,641$0.97$32K$1.96M
2026-01-16SELLPaszterko John Andrewofficer: Chief Operating Officer18,457$1.01$19K$587K
2025-12-22SELLSwenson Christopher C.officer: Chief Legal Officer35,000$1.33$47K$1.94M
2025-12-16SELLSwenson Christopher C.officer: Chief Legal Officer19,204$1.20$23K$1.79M
2025-12-16SELLPello Jason H.officer: Chief Financial Officer32,006$1.20$38K$2.04M
2025-12-16BUYCohn Charles K.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer197,242$1.22$241K$40.10M
2025-12-15BUYCohn Charles K.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer174,076$1.36$237K$44.43M
2025-12-12BUYCohn Charles K.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer180,353$1.38$249K$44.84M
2025-12-11BUYCohn Charles K.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer180,000$1.38$248K$44.60M
2025-12-10BUYCohn Charles K.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer174,947$1.40$245K$44.99M
2025-12-10SELLPello Jason H.officer: Chief Financial Officer75,000$1.39$104K$2.40M
2025-12-09BUYCohn Charles K.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer176,215$1.44$254K$46.02M
2025-12-08BUYCohn Charles K.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer184,491$1.33$245K$42.27M

Order Flow (FINRA, ~3w lag)

43.2%retail+1.9pp
30.2%dark+10.4pp
week of 2026-04-13
10%20%30%40%50%60%24-1125-0225-0525-0825-1126-0226-04retail (non-ATS)dark (ATS)
Off-exchange volume from FINRA. Retail = non-ATS (wholesaler PFOF + broker internalization). Dark = ATS (dark-pool crossing networks, institutional). Lit-exchange = remainder.

Revenue Breakdown

Revenue Segments

By Product (2021-Q4)
Online$42.0MNEW

Filing Risk Analysis

Filing Risk Scores

Nerdy Inc.: Stagnant Growth Masked by Complex Up-C Structure and Massive Off-Balance Sheet TRA Liability

Overall Risk
7/10
Fraud
3/10
Dilution
9/10
Insolvency
5/10
Earnings Overstated
4/10
Hidden Liabilities
8/10
Legal
7/10
Audit Warnings
4/10
Hidden Upside
2/10
Contextually Acceptable
6/10

Counter-Thesis

Counter-Thesis & Recent News

📰 Recent News

Nerdy, Inc. (NRDY) is currently facing a delisting threat; on March 6, 2026, the company received a formal non-compliance notice from the NYSE as its Class A Common Stock averaged below $1.00 over a 30-day period (Investing.com). Adding to leadership instability, the company abruptly replaced CFO Jason Pello with Atul Bagga in April 2026 (Simply Wall St). Financially, the company has suffered from a string of misses, including a significant 34.4% drop in 'Institutional' unit revenue in late 2025, which management blamed on a 'cautious' federal and state funding environment (Seeking Alpha).

🐻 Bear Case

The bear case is anchored in stagnant growth and a lack of a clear path to profitability. Analysts have repeatedly slashed revenue estimates for 2026, with Simply Wall St reporting that NRDY is expected to underperform the wider industry’s growth rate of 9.9% by a wide margin (forecasting just 3–4% growth). Short interest has spiked to 9.09% of the float with an alarming 20.12 days-to-cover ratio, signaling heavy professional betting against the stock (MarketBeat). Furthermore, institutional heavyweights like Renaissance Technologies and Nuveen have slashed their positions by over 36% and 54%, respectively, in recent quarters (Quiver Quantitative).

🚩 Red Flags

The most glaring red flag is the 'Strong Sell/Reduce' consensus among analysts, with a consensus price target that has cratered to $1.00 (MarketBeat). Insider activity is overwhelmingly bearish; while the CEO made a small purchase, the CFO and Chief Legal Officer sold over $300,000 worth of shares in the six months leading up to May 2026 (Quiver Quantitative). Additionally, the company's P/B ratio of 5.89 is considered 'Expensive' by AAII for an unprofitable entity that is not forecast to break even in the next three years.

⚔️ Competitive Threats

NRDY is struggling with a high-cost human-led model in an era of rapid AI disruption. While the company claims to 'agentify' processes, it faces existential threats from leaner, AI-native education tools and broader budget cuts in its Institutional segment. The 'Institutional' revenue collapse (-34.4%) suggests that NRDY’s services are viewed as discretionary 'luxury' items by schools facing facility renewal and teacher recruitment pressures, making them the first to be cut during budget cycles (Seeking Alpha).

💬 Customer Sentiment

Customer sentiment is reaching a breaking point, with a surge in 1-star reviews on the BBB and Trustpilot in early 2026. Parents and students consistently report 'deceptive' billing practices, where one-time purchases are allegedly converted into unauthorized recurring subscriptions of $300–$600 per month (BBB). Complaints also highlight a 'guaranteed match' system that frequently pairs students with unqualified tutors and a rigid 'no-refund' policy even when tutors no-show or services are never rendered (Reddit, BBB).

Full Earnings Call Transcript

Full Earnings Call Transcript — Q1 • 2026-05-08

Operator: Good afternoon. Thank you for attending Nerdy's Inc. Q1 2026 Earnings Call. My name is Angela, and I will be your moderator for today's call. [Operator Instructions] I would now like to pass the conference over to your host, T.J. Lynn, Associate General Counsel of Nerdy. You may proceed.
T. Lynn: Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us for Nerdy's First Quarter 2026 Earnings Call. With me are Chuck Cohn, Founder, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Nerdy; and Atul Bagga, Chief Financial Officer. Before I turn the call over to Chuck, I'll remind everyone that this discussion will contain forward-looking statements, including, but not limited to, expectations with respect to Nerdy's future financial and operating results, strategy, opportunities, plans and outlook. These forward-looking statements involve significant risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expected results. Any forward-looking statements are made as of today's date, and Nerdy does not undertake or accept any obligation to publicly release any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statements to reflect any change in expectations or any change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based. Please refer to the disclaimers in today's shareholder letter announcing Nerdy's first quarter results and the company's filings with the SEC for a discussion of the risks. Not all of the financial measures that we will discuss today are prepared in accordance with GAAP. Please refer to today's shareholder letter for reconciliations of these non-GAAP measures. With that, let me turn the call over to Chuck.
Charles Cohn: Thanks, TJ, and thank you to everyone for joining today's call. In the first quarter of 2026, we beat the top end of our revenue guidance and delivered our second consecutive quarter of positive non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA. We also translated the AI native foundation we finished building at the end of 2025 into shipped learner-facing products at a cadence we have never matched in the company's history. Revenue was $48.7 million, above the top end of our $46 million to $48 million guidance range and 2% up year-over-year. Non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA was positive $1.0 million, ahead of our guidance of approximately breakeven and improved by $7.3 million compared to Q1 2025. Adjusted EBITDA margin expanded more than 1,500 basis points year-over-year, our third consecutive quarter of sequential margin improvement. That represents roughly $30 million of annualized operating leverage on a flat-top line. Gross margin reached 66.2%, an expansion of more than 800 basis points year-over-year. We ended the quarter with $44.7 million of cash on the balance sheet. Three things stood out in the first quarter. First, the product velocity that we said an AI-native code base would unlock is now visible in shipped products with a meaningful slate of additional learner-facing releases reaching customers in the weeks ahead. Second, our cost structure is structurally not cyclically better, and AI is the reason. And third, the rate of decline in active members on a year-over-year basis narrowed for the third consecutive quarter, and we expect to return to positive growth by the end of 2026. When we finished replatforming on an AI native code base as we wrapped up 2025, we said the point of that work was not about the architecture itself. It was about the speed and quality of the products that we could ship on top of it. Q1 was the first full quarter operating in that new mode, and the cadence has fundamentally changed. The most visible expression of that shift is our new Learner Experience internally referred to as V3, which became the universal customer experience and surface for our consumer business in March. Every newly acquired customer is now onboarded directly to this new V3 experience, and we have begun migrating existing customers as well. Roughly 6,000 new customers came in directly on V3 in the back half of the quarter and approximately 10,000 existing customers have moved over from the prior experience, and we are seeing strong early signal and optimizing rapidly in response to user behavior and customer feedback, which is broadly positive with a constant point of feedback being it looks and feels like a whole different company or product. The same platform will imminently power our institutional offering, which we expect to expand the market opportunity in institutional beyond the more limited K-12 high-dosage tutoring market that business primarily targeted. Inside V3, the centerpiece for the learner is Maya, our AI concierge. Maya is the always-on guide built into the experience. She answers inbound questions, surfaces the right next step, helps the student find a diagnostic and resolves day-to-day issues like scheduling a tutoring session and she does so all without a phone call or a customer support ticket. She's available 24 hours a day with full context of each student's actual learning plan and past interactions, including past tutoring sessions, product interactions, diagnostics and practice-related engagement and the results of those and more. She now handles a meaningful share of in-product customer interactions. For a student or parent, Maya turns our platform into a relationship that feels alive, responsive and easy. Around Maya, V3 brings together the rest of the family experience. Our native mobile app launched in the App Store in Q1 and is approaching full feature parity with web with releases that shipping to mobile within 48 hours of going live. The Tutor Gallery lets families browse tutor profiles, watch introductory videos and book with guaranteed availability through Book Now. We also launched Games, a set of six math and ELA titles initially built to drive daily engagement and learning. We also launched On-Demand Courses, converting our top Live Classes into self-paced courses with supporting materials. We are launching with more than 350 of these courses that collectively span thousands of hours of live instruction. These updates shipped together as part of V3. They give families more ways to engage with our platform between live sessions, creating additional retention opportunities. And we're seeing the early signal in the numbers. Active members ended the quarter at 36,900, down 9% year-over-year, but the rate of decline has narrowed for 3 consecutive quarters and customer churn has improved meaningfully year-over-year as customers enter or experience our new platform and ways to get value out of the relationship with us. ARPM was $374, up 12% and Learning Membership revenue grew 3% to $38.9 million, 80% of total revenue. As to headline, the cohorts onboarded directly on the V3 are showing early indications that are directionally consistent with our thesis. While early, what we will say is the cohort signal is consistent across the metrics that matter and that retention is the highest growth lever we have given how small changes in extending the customer life cycle can have a meaningful impact on long-term revenue and profitability. At today's customer acquisition cost, every additional month of average tenure flows almost entirely through to contribution profit. We expect to provide a full read on our progress on our Q2 call in August. Our upcoming product releases have received strong early feedback. What has shipped to V3 today is the foundation, not the full picture. Three product areas in particular, are moving from internal development into the hands of customers in the weeks ahead with strong early feedback on all three. The first is college and career readiness. We were approached by the leadership from a top-10 U.S. school district about a need we're uniquely qualified to solve. This led to our always-on AI counselor now targeted for back-to-school 2026 release in 2 flagship high schools in that district. Early indications show other districts have similar needs. The counselor is highly interactive and guides students through post-secondary decisions. It has real-time integration with school systems, maintains persistent memory across years and is multimodal across mobile, desktop, voice, SMS and inbound and outbound calling. For consumer learners, it extends Varsity Tutors as well as tutoring specifically into a multiyear goal-setting process previously outside our reach. The second upcoming Q2 planned product release is related to daily math and reading content and practice. We're launching more than 4,600 K-8 math skills aligned to academic taxonomies achieving parity with several of the leading supplemental practice platforms with reading parity coming soon. These additions expand the lesson library, including tens of thousands of lessons all created year-to-date mapped to K-12 and college taxonomies and standards. The content integrates into V3 as structured daily practice alongside tutoring or self-study. Progress is visible to learners and parents. And for tutors, it helps ensure all tutors have prepared professional relevant content for their tutoring sessions across the millions of tutoring sessions per year on the platform. AI orchestrates and personalizes the learning experience that spans all of these product modalities on the platform in service of the learners' goals and preferences. Early feedback on sequencing and quality is strong, and we anticipate similar learner reception when we roll it out more broadly. And the third upcoming product is related to language learning, which is already a popular area for one-to-one tutoring on the platform. We're bringing to market an AI-enabled learning experience that will launch for both consumer and institutional customers, and we look forward to sharing more in the near future. I also wanted to touch upon our continuous efforts to utilize AI internally to improve product velocity and improve productivity. AI is at the center of how we're operating and expect our teams to operate. Not only is all of our software development done almost exclusively with AI, we are using it to do everything from automate our back-office workflows to handle inbound and outbound calls and help with customer service interactions on the platform and much, much more. Fixed headcount is lower year-over-year even as we enhance our existing products and build numerous new ones. These changes drove more than 1,500 basis points of adjusted EBITDA margin expansion in the quarter on roughly flat revenue. The improvements are structural with software and automation replacing manual processes. With both fixed and variable costs now lower, higher retention means new revenue flows through at a higher contribution margin rate to adjusted EBITDA. AI is how we operate. It's not what we sell. And what we sell remains that relationship between a learner and an expert that's now supported by the best technology available, and it's informed by more than 10 million tutoring sessions. Moving on to Varsity Tutors for Schools. The new Varsity Tutors for Schools platform built on the same V3 platform foundation and integrating AI-enabled tutoring and AI counseling layer and our expanded K-12 content library on the Live+AI engine that powers our Consumer business enters the back-to-school 2026 selling season as a meaningfully stronger offering than what we took to market a year ago. And now looking ahead to the rest of the year, the product velocity we have discussed, our V3 platform, Maya our AI concierge for learners, having modern mobile apps with full feature parity to web and the upcoming product releases in college and career readiness, daily math and reading practice and language learning have shipped or will be shipping before the end of the second quarter, and our customer base is only beginning to experience these enhanced features. As more of our active customers move on to the new platform and our first full V3 new customer cohorts mature, the leading indicators we are watching today should translate into inflecting active member growth later this year. A year ago, we were rebuilding the foundation. Today, we're building on it and the benefits of this increased product velocity will build throughout the year as we enhance more customer-facing services and allow for us to drive long-term growth and profitability. With that, I'll hand the call over to Atul to discuss the financials in more detail. Atul?
Atul Bagga: Thanks, Chuck. Before I walk through the numbers, I'd like to take a couple of moments to share what drew me to this role. Nerdy operates in one of the most underpenetrated markets in education technology. There are over 50 million K-12 and college students in the U.S. alone, and the tutoring market remains mostly fragmented and offline. Our active member base of about 37,000 represents a fraction of what this market can support, and that gap is the opportunity. What convinced me that Nerdy can close this gap, it's genuinely AI-first culture, product velocity and a team that moves fast. And these are not just talking points. They translate directly into margin expansion and operating leverage you'll see in the results. My mandate as the CFO is clear: get Nerdy to free cash flow positive while investing with discipline in the areas that drive member growth. That is the financial thread running through everything we are doing in 2026. Now let me walk you through our first quarter results. We beat the top end of our revenue guidance range. Revenue was $48.7 million, ahead of our guidance range of $46 million to $48 million and up 2% year-over-year, driven by higher consumer revenue and partially offset by lower institutional revenue. Within consumer revenue, Learning Membership revenue was $38.9 million, up 3% year-over-year and represented 80% of total company's revenue. Consumer revenue growth was driven by higher Average Revenue per Month or ARPM of $374, which was up 12% year-over-year, primarily driven by price increases enacted in Feb 2025. As of March 31, active members were 36,900, a decrease of 9% year-over-year. This rate of decline has narrowed sequentially for the 3 consecutive quarters, and we expect to return to positive active member growth by the end of 2026. Our institutional revenue was $9.3 million, a decrease of 1% year-over-year and represented 19% of total company's revenue during the first quarter. As a reminder, the institutional revenue in the first quarter was mostly supported by the prior period bookings. During Q1, Varsity Tutors for Schools bookings were $1.1 million versus $4 million in Q1 of 2025. Gross margin was 66.2%, an expansion of 820 basis points compared to a gross margin of 58.0% during Q1 2025. The increase in gross margin was primarily due to the benefit of price increases enacted in Feb 2025. Moving to operating expenses. Sales and marketing expenses were $14.2 million, a decrease of 10% year-over-year, driven by AI-enabled productivity gains and reduced investment in our institutional business. General and administrative expenses for the quarter were $23.9 million, down 16% year-over-year. G&A costs included product development costs of $9.2 million compared to $10.7 million in the same period last year. The cost reductions are primarily driven by our focus on applying AI systematically across the tech stack, which is resulting in durable efficiency gains and better unit economics. In the first quarter, non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA was positive $1 million and ahead of our guidance of breakeven. To put that in context, a year ago this quarter, we posted a non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA loss of $6.4 million. That's an improvement of more than $7 million just in a year. Non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA margin improved by more than 1,500 basis points year-over-year, our third consecutive quarter of year-over-year margin improvement. Non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA outperformance was driven by gross profit outperformance, efficiency improvement and strong cost control across every P&L item. Moving to liquidity and capital resources. We ended the quarter with $44.7 million in cash and cash equivalents. Free cash flow was negative $3 million compared to negative $7.6 million in the same period in 2025. Free cash flow improvement was driven by non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA improvement as previously discussed and partially offset by higher working capital and by interest payment of $0.5 million on our term loan. With our cash on hand and the funding available under our term loan, we believe we have ample liquidity to fund operations and growth initiatives as we execute towards free cash flow positive. Turning to our business outlook. Today, we are introducing second quarter guidance and reaffirming full year 2026 guidance. Before sharing guidance, I want to flag 2 dynamics that shaped the Q2 revenue and EBITDA outlook. First, the decline in Q1 Varsity Tutors for Schools bookings will negatively impact Q2 institutional revenue given the lag between bookings and revenue recognition. Second, beginning in Q2, we start lapping the price increases implemented in Feb 2025, which will moderate ARPM year-over-year growth for our consumer business. We expect to see continued benefits from improving client retention to our consumer business, although that momentum builds through the year. The full year outlook assumes a more stable institutional funding environment in the second half of the year, reception of new Varsity Tutors for Schools platform and continued improvements in Consumer retention. Revenue guidance. For the second quarter of 2026, we expect revenue in the range of $42 million to $44 million. For the full year of 2026, we expect revenue in the range of $180 million to $190 million. Turning to adjusted EBITDA guidance. For the second quarter of 2026, we expect non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA to be negative $2 million to breakeven. For the full year of 2026, we expect non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA to be approximately breakeven. We expect to end the year with $40 million to $45 million in cash, inclusive of $20 million currently drawn on our term loan. To close, this quarter's result, a revenue beat, 820 basis point improvement in gross margin and non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA that improved from a loss of $6.4 million to a positive $1 million in 1 year, reflect on the progress across every line of the P&L. The work ahead is on active member growth and institutional bookings recovery. We know what we need to do, and we are executing against it. With that, I'll turn it over to the operator for Q&A. Operator?
Operator: We will now begin the Q&A session. [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Bryan Smilek with JPMorgan.
Bryan Smilek: Good to see the product velocity in V3 starting to drive improved learner trends. As we go through the back half here, Chuck, can you just talk about the underlying confidence in achieving return to active member growth, just the overall durability of these new cohorts that are seeing the improved retention and engagement. And I guess, conversely as well, you mentioned, I believe, right, 6,000 new active members on V3 and then 10,000 or so of the existing members migrating there. Can you just help us walk through the timeline of migrating your overall entire member base towards V3 and when you would start to realize returns on that shift?
Charles Cohn: Thanks, Bryan. Good question. So yes, we made a ton of progress on new product development in the quarter, and we're able to take the sort of base platform that we had built that we consider to be a brand-new version of the old platform, but with full parity, feature parity and AI native code base, which then allowed us to build and ship quickly. And we were able to really, I think, enhance it just over the course of the last 90 days or so in a pretty material way. So what we have seen is as we first introduced new customer cohorts to that experience, and we're able to work through the best way to onboard them to an experience that, frankly, is much more rich, much more robust and in many ways, looks like a whole new company and really optimize that onboarding experience to get them into many different non-tutoring products than we've had before, we saw sequential improvements in retention of those cohorts as they onboarded and started gaining confidence in accelerating that path to a broader rollout. And over the course of the rest of the quarter, we would expect to have -- get to 100% of the existing customers on the current experience. And broadly, what we've seen is that the new customers who come in that are then benefiting from an enhanced product suite, much deeper content and there are several more big enhancements planned over the course of the next couple of months. We have seen a pretty tight relationship between getting them into those new products and driving engagement and then that pulling through to early signs on customer retention. So, the signals are quite promising, but it's early.
Atul Bagga: Bryan, this is Atul. Just adding on to that, we are seeing some very good traction with the new customers who are onboarding on -- you asked about when do we realize the benefit of this in financials. What we see with the retention, the improvement of retention is going to drive higher lifetime value of the customer, and that is going to be seen over the lifetime. So, you see that continue to build the momentum on financial improvements from retention, it will come over time.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Greg Gibas with Northland Securities.
Gregory Gibas: I wanted to follow up there. If you could add a little bit more color on the trends you saw with churn versus maybe new or additions of new cohorts within active members. That would be helpful. It sounds like you're seeing some improvements in the churn side of things, and I wanted to get a sense of how those trended within the quarter.
Charles Cohn: Thanks, Greg. Good question. So, I think the consumer business has sort of shaped up collectively consistent with expectations. We're obviously still early in the year but feel good about our ability to drive growth in that business through enhancing the product and then kind of pulling it up funnel and making a lot of the product enhancements we have more visible, which we think is pretty compelling. And sort of the initial traction there is positive. Early in the year, but thus far, tracking pretty consistent with expectations. The retention benefits that we're seeing on the new platform are still early and applied to a relatively small percentage of the total business. And the recent weeks, trends and the initial sort of launch has gone well. But as it relates to deviating from expectations early in the year, I don't think we've seen that at all. So, it's been a pretty good start to the year, and the product velocity is exceeding expectations.
Gregory Gibas: Got it. Great. That's good to hear. And if I could, as it relates to just the full-year guidance, would you be willing to maybe go into a little bit more depth in terms of the trends on a quarterly basis with ARPM and then active members?
Atul Bagga: Yes. So we can talk about it. On active member, this is going to be a big focus for us. As you've seen, our trend on active member has been improving consistently in the last few quarters. And we do expect that to get better as we see higher retention and higher retention also translates into higher LTV, which means that improves our ability to acquire new customers more effectively. So that's one. Second, on the cost structure side, we have made some substantial improvements. So if you look at Q1 '25 to Q1 '26, we have delivered 1,500 basis points of margin expansion, 820 basis points coming from gross margin. We've improved efficiency of all our variable expenses: sales, marketing operations. And on the fixed headcount, we are seeing higher productivity. Just to give you a little context, our headcount is down about 20% year-over-year, while the revenue is roughly flat. So, we -- that momentum we expect to continue to build. We will continue to see more opportunities to lean on AI and improve our productivity. In terms of the rest of the business, Q2 and Q3, as you know, is seasonally weaker quarter for us. So, we do expect some drop in Q2 and Q3 and Q4, again, that picks up.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] There are no further questions at this time. And that concludes today's call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.