What Is Revenue Geographic Segmentation?
Revenue geographic segmentation breaks down a company's total revenue by the regions where it is earned. Publicly traded companies report this data in their annual and quarterly filings (10-K and 10-Q), disclosing how much revenue comes from domestic markets, international markets, and specific regions such as the Americas, Europe, Greater China, Japan, and the Rest of Asia Pacific. Our free revenue geographic segments tool lets you look up any stock symbol and instantly see how its revenue is distributed across the globe — with both annual and quarterly breakdowns available for download.
How to Use This Revenue Geographic Segments Tool
- 1
Enter a Stock Symbol
Type any ticker symbol (e.g., AAPL, MSFT, GOOGL) in the Symbol field to look up that company's geographic revenue breakdown.
- 2
Select the Reporting Period
Choose between Annual (FY) or Quarter (Q1–Q4) to control the granularity of the geographic revenue data returned.
- 3
Analyze Regional Revenue
Review the revenue breakdown by region. Each row shows the fiscal year, period, date, and revenue figures for every geographic segment the company reports. Export to CSV for further analysis.
Understanding Geographic Revenue Data
Geographic Diversification
Companies that earn revenue from multiple regions are less exposed to any single economy. Geographic diversification reduces risk from regional recessions, currency fluctuations, and regulatory changes.
Regional Growth Trends
Tracking revenue by region over time reveals which markets are growing fastest. Investors can identify companies expanding into high-growth regions like Asia Pacific or emerging markets.
Currency Exposure
Revenue earned in foreign markets is subject to currency exchange risk. Understanding geographic revenue mix helps investors assess how currency movements may impact reported earnings.
Segment Concentration
If a large percentage of revenue comes from a single region, the company is more vulnerable to local economic downturns. Monitoring concentration helps gauge overall business resilience.
Peer Comparison
Comparing geographic revenue splits across competitors reveals strategic differences. One company may dominate in Europe while another leads in Asia — useful for sector analysis and portfolio construction.