Copart (CPRT) is easy to misread as a simple bet on wrecked-car volumes, used-vehicle prices, or accident frequency. That framing is too shallow. The stronger way to understand the business is as a scaled salvage-auction network embedded in insurer workflows, with physical yard density, buyer liquidity, and service breadth reinforcing one another. In the quarter ended April 30, 2026, Copart reported revenue of $1.24 billion, up 2.1% year over year, while gross profit rose 3.7% to $572.6 million. Even in a quarter that was hardly explosive on the top line, the company still showed why the model behaves like infrastructure rather than a cyclical trading venue.
Why yard density and buyer liquidity matter to the moat
Copart’s edge starts with a network that is hard to recreate. The company said in its May 2026 earnings release that it operates at more than 250 locations in 11 countries and connects vehicle consignors to approximately 1 million members in over 185 countries. That scale matters because salvage auctions work better when local yard capacity and global buyer liquidity feed each other. Sellers want fast pickup, compliant processing, and confidence that enough bidders will show up. Buyers want a broad, constantly refreshed pool of vehicles and a platform where inventory is deep enough to justify repeat participation.
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The result is a flywheel. More yards support more local intake and shorter transport friction, while more buyers improve price realization and sell-through. Copart’s own 10-K highlights timely vehicle pickup, title processing, internet sales, and technology-enabled communication as core parts of the value proposition. That combination makes the business more than an auction site. It is a physical-and-digital network whose usefulness increases with density.
How insurer relationships and service breadth shape pricing power
The insurer relationship is the second pillar of the moat. Copart disclosed in its fiscal 2025 annual report that insurance company sellers accounted for 81% of the total number of vehicles processed in fiscal 2025, matching fiscal 2024 and only slightly below 83% in fiscal 2023. That concentration is not a weakness by itself; it reflects how deeply Copart is embedded in the claims and remarketing workflow of large carriers.
Those relationships are sticky because insurers are not only outsourcing an auction. They are outsourcing a process. Copart’s filings describe a full range of services meant to expedite each stage of vehicle sales, minimize administrative and processing costs, and maximize sale proceeds. That includes towing coordination, storage, imaging, title processing, online auction execution, and delivery-related logistics. Once a salvage partner is integrated into insurer systems and field operations, switching becomes more disruptive than simply choosing a different venue.
That service breadth also supports pricing power. In the April 2026 quarter, Copart’s service revenue rose to $1.06 billion from $1.03 billion a year earlier, while vehicle sales were only $181.0 million. That mix matters because the company is primarily monetizing services and workflow, not just taking directional exposure to resale values. Investors who frame the story mainly around used-car prices can miss that the company earns through the process layer surrounding the asset.
What recent margins, cash generation, and expansion spending say about execution
Copart’s recent numbers show a business that continues to defend profitability while funding expansion. In the quarter ended April 30, 2026, operating income increased to $464.3 million from $451.5 million, and diluted EPS rose to $0.43 from $0.42. For the first nine months of fiscal 2026, operating cash flow was $1.25 billion, even though that was down from a very strong prior-year comparison of $1.36 billion.
Expansion is still a major use of capital, and that is part of the thesis rather than a problem to explain away. For the first nine months of fiscal 2026, Copart reported capital expenditures and acquisitions of $263.3 million. Management also said cash generated from operations, maturing Treasury investments, and existing liquidity support both facility growth and share repurchases. In the 10-Q, Copart said it expects to acquire or develop additional locations and expand some current facilities, subject to finding properly zoned land with the right size and road access. That is a useful reminder that capacity is strategic in this business.
Margins also remain notable. Gross profit of $572.6 million on $1.24 billion of revenue implies a business that is still converting network advantages into attractive economics. Even when quarterly revenue growth slows, Copart’s combination of service-heavy revenue, disciplined costs, and global buyer access can protect returns better than a plain cyclical narrative would suggest.
What investors may still be underestimating
The underappreciated point is that Copart is not just matching damaged cars with buyers. It is operating a workflow system for insurers and a liquidity hub for a fragmented global buyer base. That position lets it benefit from scale in several ways at once: local yard density, national insurer relationships, international buyer reach, and data-rich operating processes.
Investors may also underestimate how durable the growth runway can be even without a dramatic accident-volume surge. Copart can still gain from market-share wins, value-added services, international expansion, and better utilization of existing facilities. Its 10-K explicitly ties historical growth not only to overall salvage-market volume, but also to market-share gains, higher revenue per transaction, added services, and growth in non-insurance sellers.
That is why the better lens for Copart is networked workflow infrastructure. Used-car values and accident trends still matter at the margin, but they do not fully define the business. The deeper driver is whether Copart keeps strengthening the operational network that makes sellers and buyers alike more dependent on its platform.
Key Signals for Investors
Copart’s network scale of more than 250 locations, about 1 million members, and buyers across more than 185 countries strengthens both local intake density and auction liquidity.
Insurance companies supplied 81% of vehicles processed in fiscal 2025, highlighting how central insurer workflow integration is to the business model.
First-nine-month fiscal 2026 operating cash flow of $1.25 billion and capital expenditures plus acquisitions of $263.3 million show Copart is still funding expansion from a position of financial strength.
Sources
Copart, Inc., “Copart Reports Third Quarter Fiscal 2026 Financial Results,” May 21, 2026. https://www.copart.com/content/cprt-04-30-26-earnings-release.pdf
Copart, Inc., Form 10-Q for the quarter ended April 30, 2026, filed May 29, 2026. https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/900075/000119312526245578/cprt-20260430.htm
Copart, Inc., Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended July 31, 2025, filed September 26, 2025. https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/900075/000162828025042946/cprt-20250731.htm

















