Davita Inc.

DaVita prints $13.6B a year and trades at 13.8x earnings. That's a very polite price for a very unglamorous machine.

If you own DVA, here's what you should know right now.

dva

healthcare large cap updated feb 27, 2026
$148.95
market cap ~$8B · 52-week range $101–$153
xvary composite: 72 / 100 · average
our overall rating — combines growth, value, risk, and momentum
Start here if you're new
what it is
DaVita runs 3,247 dialysis clinics and related care for people with chronic kidney failure.
how it gets paid
Last year Davita made $13.6B in revenue. Medicare/Medicaid dialysis was the main engine at $8.30B, or 61% of sales.
why it's growing
Revenue grew 6.5% last year. Revenue reached $3.62B, up 10% from $3.29B. The quarter also posted a 20.4% operating margin, and management guided 2026 adjusted EPS to $13.60-$15.00.
what just happened
Q4 EPS hit $3.40 versus $2.99 expected, a 13.71% beat.
At a glance
B+ balance sheet — decent shape, but not bulletproof
70/100 earnings predictability — reasonably predictable
13.8x trailing p/e — the market's not buying it — or you found a deal
12.5% return on capital — nothing to write home about
xvary composite: 72/100 — average
What they do
DaVita runs 3,247 dialysis clinics and related care for people with chronic kidney failure.
DaVita runs 3,247 clinics. That scale is hard to copy. Government programs fund 61% of reimbursement, versus 32% from commercial payers, so the business sits in a pay mix others cannot easily steal. If you need dialysis three times a week, your schedule and clinic relationship become the product.
healthcare mid-cap dialysis reimbursement value
How they make money
$13.6B annual revenue · their business grew +6.5% last year
Medicare/Medicaid dialysis
$8.30B
Commercial dialysis
$4.35B
Other government dialysis
$0.95B
The products that matter
outpatient dialysis treatment
Dialysis Services
$13.6B revenue · 100% of sales
it's the entire revenue engine: ~295,000 patients treated across 3,242 centers. if this business stalls, there is nowhere else for the numbers to hide.
core
minority home-health stake
Elara Caring Investment
~$200M investment
the approximate $200M minority investment adds exposure to home healthcare and hospice, but next to a $13.6B core dialysis business, this is optionality — not the thesis.
adjacent bet
lab and support services
Ancillary Services
supports 3,242 centers
these services help keep care delivery running for ~295,000 patients, but the snapshot does not break out separate revenue. that makes them operationally important, not yet investable on their own.
support layer
Key numbers
13.8x
trailing p/e
Price-to-earnings → price divided by last year's profit → you pay 13.8 years of earnings for the stock. That is cheaper than a lot of healthcare at 19.0% operating margin.
$10.2B
long-term debt
Debt → borrowed money → DaVita owes $10.2B, which is 55% of capital. That limits room if rates stay high.
19.0%
operating margin
Margin → profit left after paying operating costs → 19.0% says the business keeps $19 from every $100 of sales.
12.5%
return on capital
Return on capital → profit from money invested → 12.5% says each $100 invested earns $12.50.
Financial health
B+
strength
  • balance sheet grade B+ — solid but not elite
  • risk rank 3 — safer than 50% of stocks
  • price stability 55 / 100
  • long-term debt $10.2B (55% of capital)
  • net profit margin 7.6% — keeps 8 cents of every dollar in revenue
B+ — functional but not a standout on the balance sheet.
Total return vs. market

You invested $10,000 in DVA 3 years ago → it's now worth $17,790.

The index would have given you $13,880.

source: institutional data · total return
What just happened
beat estimates
Q4 EPS hit $3.40 versus $2.99 expected, a 13.71% beat.
Revenue reached $3.62B, up 10% from $3.29B. The quarter also posted a 20.4% operating margin, and management guided 2026 adjusted EPS to $13.60-$15.00.
$3.62B
revenue
$3.40
eps
20.4%
gross margin
the number that mattered
The $3.40 print beat $2.99 by 13.71%, and that is the number that told the market the quarter was stronger than expected.
source: company earnings report, 2026

Get this snapshot in your inbox

This page, delivered free — plus weekly updates when the numbers change. plain english, no spam.

weekly updates earnings alerts plain english no spam
What could go wrong

the #1 risk is dialysis reimbursement pressure from medicare and private insurers. davita can operate 3,242 centers efficiently, but it cannot unilaterally raise the price of a regulated treatment.

med
reimbursement rate cuts
this business lives on what payors decide a dialysis treatment is worth. if government or commercial reimbursement tightens, revenue and margin feel it immediately.
a 5% rate cut would pressure roughly $680M of annual revenue against a business that only posts a 7.3% net margin.
med
slow treatment-volume growth
u.s. treatment volumes per day grew 0.9% last quarter. that's positive, but it leaves very little cushion if patient growth stalls or treatment frequency softens.
the snapshot does not break out enough per-treatment detail to size the revenue hit precisely, but with only 0.9% volume growth, there is not much buffer.
med
balance sheet constraint
$10.2B in long-term debt equals 55% of capital. that does not make the equity broken, but it does mean policy pressure and operating slips compound faster.
when a company with an $8B market cap carries $10.2B in long-term debt, room for error is finite.
reimbursement pressure reaches essentially all of the $13.6B revenue base, and the $10.2B debt load means even a steady operator does not get unlimited second chances.
source: institutional data · regulatory filings · risk analysis
Pay attention to
earnings
next guidance check
watch whether management keeps 2026 adjusted eps guidance at $13.60–$15.00 or starts trimming the low end.
metric
revenue per treatment
last quarter got a $12.01 sequential lift in revenue per treatment. if that fades, the recent revenue acceleration gets harder to repeat.
trend
treatment-volume direction
u.s. treatment volumes per day rose 0.9%. you want that number at least stable, because this is still a recurring-treatment business before it's anything else.
risk
buybacks versus debt
management repurchased 2.7M shares for $331M last quarter. good for eps, but with $10.2B in debt, capital allocation discipline matters.
Analyst rankings
short-term outlook
top 5%
momentum score 1 — analysts expect above-average price performance in the next stretch. in human-speak: they like the setup right now.
risk profile
average
stability score 3 — neither bunker-safe nor especially fragile.
chart momentum
below average
technical score 4 — the stock's recent tape is weaker than the short-term fundamental rank suggests. welcome to conflicting signals.
earnings predictability
70 / 100
the business is recurring, but reimbursement, buybacks, and adjusted-versus-reported definitions can still create surprises.
source: institutional data
Institutional activity

institutions have been net selling for 3 consecutive quarters — 207 buyers vs. 348 sellers in 3q2025. total institutional holdings: 67.2M shares. net selling for 3 quarters.

source: institutional data
Price targets
3-5 year target range
$114 $249
$149 current price
$182 target midpoint · +22% from current · 3-5yr high: $330 (+120% · 22% ann'l return)
source: institutional data · analyst targets

Want the deeper analysis?

The full deep dive: dcf model, scenario analysis, competitive moat breakdown, and quarterly tracking — everything on this page, taken further.

see plans from $5/mo
The deep dive
DVA
xvary deep dive
dva
the full analysis is in the works.
what you'll get
dcf valuation model
bull / base / bear scenarios
competitive moat breakdown
quarterly earnings tracker
operating model projections
risk matrix with kill criteria
original price target + conviction
updated with every earnings
free · no spam · you'll be first to read it