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Can Elastic's AI Push Strengthen Enterprise Platform Adoption?
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Key Takeaways
ESTC's Q3 FY26 execution showed AI traction across Search, Observability, and Security on its hybrid platform.
ESTC partnerships with NVIDIA and Dell place Elasticsearch inside enterprise AI factory architectures.
Elastic says 28% of $100K customers use its AI capabilities, representing about 470 enterprises.
Elastic N.V. (ESTC - Free Report) is positioning its platform as a practical on-ramp for enterprise AI (artificial intelligence) that still has to live inside hybrid and regulated environments. The company’s execution in the third quarter of fiscal 2026 reinforced that message across product delivery, partnerships, and large-deal momentum.
ESTC’s AI-First Platform Is Gaining Traction
Elastic’s AI-first, hybrid platform is gaining traction across Search, Observability, and Security, with the roadmap increasingly oriented around workflows, agents, and inference capabilities. That mix matters because many workloads still require on-premises or customer-controlled deployments for data governance and compliance.
Management highlighted that hybrid flexibility remains a differentiator for AI-heavy use cases that must stay on-premises, supporting strong outcomes across both self-managed and cloud environments. The company also cited consolidation and AI as key tailwinds behind broad-based momentum in the latest quarter.
Elastic and Partners Turn Search Into AI Infrastructure
Partnership leverage is becoming a central pillar of Elastic’s growth narrative. Elasticsearch is described as a core component of the Dell Technologies (DELL - Free Report) and NVIDIA (NVDA - Free Report) AI factories, pushing the product from “search tool” toward reusable AI infrastructure inside enterprise builds.
This matters for adoption because partners can accelerate use-case expansion beyond a single deployment. Elastic expects these ecosystems, along with its broader partner base, to compound usage across Search, Observability, and Security as customers standardize on a shared data layer.
In that context, NVIDIA and Dell Technologies also serve as a signal of where enterprise spending is going. When AI infrastructure budgets expand, vendors tied into reference architectures and factory-style deployments tend to benefit earlier in the cycle.
ESTC’s Product Releases Point to Faster Adoption Paths
Recent product milestones were designed to reduce friction for teams building and deploying AI features. Agent Builder reached general availability, giving developers a more complete set of tools to build secure, context-driven AI agents.
Elastic Workflows entered tech preview, extending the platform beyond core search into operational automation that can sit closer to real-world production processes. This expands how customers can embed Elastic into day-to-day engineering and security workflows.
Performance investments are also aimed at improving retrieval quality and speed. The company cited NVIDIA cuVS integration and the addition of Jina rerankers on Elastic Inference Service as concrete steps to sharpen results as AI workloads scale.
Elastic’s Cloud Connect Bridges On-Prem and GPU Inference
Cloud Connect is a key bridge for self-managed customers who want modern inference without standing up graphics processing unit infrastructure. Elastic said it enables customers to burst to Elastic Cloud for graphics processing unit inference while keeping core infrastructure and data on-premises.
The company also announced the availability of Elastic Inference Service through Cloud Connect for self-managed Elasticsearch deployments. This gives organizations on-demand access to cloud-hosted inference while avoiding the operational overhead of managing infrastructure, aligning with regulated and hybrid deployment needs.
ESTC’s AI Penetration Is Measurable in the Enterprise Base
Elastic’s AI penetration is already measurable inside its largest customer cohort. Management noted that 28% of customers with more than $100,000 in annual contract value use Elastic for AI, equating to about 470 customers, as of the end of the third quarter of fiscal 2026.
That adoption is starting to show up as a modest tailwind. Management observed an average of approximately 5% AI cohort tailwind so far, framing the impact as early but consistent.
Elastic’s Federal Expansion Signal Adds a Demand Vector
Federal demand is another potential vector, tied directly to the Security use case. Management expects continued federal expansion from the CISA SIEM-as-a-Service win over the next several quarters.
If that expectation plays out, it can reinforce enterprise momentum by adding a more durable, program-driven source of demand that fits Elastic Security’s positioning across prevention, detection, and response.
ESTC’s Watchouts: AI Investment and Cloud Cost Pressure
The setup is not without constraints. Elastic has emphasized that consumption variability and seasonality can create quarterly swings, and large deals tend to concentrate in the back half of the fiscal year, which can move revenue between periods.
Cloud mix is another pressure point. Elastic Cloud’s contribution has been rising, and filings note that a higher cloud mix modestly pressures gross margin due to third-party hosting costs.
Investment needs are visible in expense growth. In the third quarter of fiscal 2026, non-GAAP research and development spending increased 24% year over year, and sales and marketing rose 16% year over year, lifting the execution bar for sustained acceleration.
Investor Takeaway
The next few quarters should be evaluated through a handful of checkpoints. One is whether remaining performance obligations and current remaining performance obligations remain strong, supporting revenue visibility as multiyear commitments build.
Another is whether large-deal momentum persists, including continued strength in deals above $1 million in annual commitments. Monitoring whether monthly Elastic Cloud and professional services trends reaccelerate also matters for broadening growth beyond sales-led commitments.
Finally, investors should track whether AI penetration keeps rising within the more than $100,000 annual contract value cohort and whether margins hold up as cloud mix increases, especially as Elastic balances growth investments with operating discipline.
Image: Bigstock
Can Elastic's AI Push Strengthen Enterprise Platform Adoption?
Key Takeaways
Elastic N.V. (ESTC - Free Report) is positioning its platform as a practical on-ramp for enterprise AI (artificial intelligence) that still has to live inside hybrid and regulated environments. The company’s execution in the third quarter of fiscal 2026 reinforced that message across product delivery, partnerships, and large-deal momentum.
ESTC’s AI-First Platform Is Gaining Traction
Elastic’s AI-first, hybrid platform is gaining traction across Search, Observability, and Security, with the roadmap increasingly oriented around workflows, agents, and inference capabilities. That mix matters because many workloads still require on-premises or customer-controlled deployments for data governance and compliance.
Management highlighted that hybrid flexibility remains a differentiator for AI-heavy use cases that must stay on-premises, supporting strong outcomes across both self-managed and cloud environments. The company also cited consolidation and AI as key tailwinds behind broad-based momentum in the latest quarter.
Elastic and Partners Turn Search Into AI Infrastructure
Partnership leverage is becoming a central pillar of Elastic’s growth narrative. Elasticsearch is described as a core component of the Dell Technologies (DELL - Free Report) and NVIDIA (NVDA - Free Report) AI factories, pushing the product from “search tool” toward reusable AI infrastructure inside enterprise builds.
This matters for adoption because partners can accelerate use-case expansion beyond a single deployment. Elastic expects these ecosystems, along with its broader partner base, to compound usage across Search, Observability, and Security as customers standardize on a shared data layer.
In that context, NVIDIA and Dell Technologies also serve as a signal of where enterprise spending is going. When AI infrastructure budgets expand, vendors tied into reference architectures and factory-style deployments tend to benefit earlier in the cycle.
Elastic N.V. Price and Consensus
Elastic N.V. price-consensus-chart | Elastic N.V. Quote
ESTC’s Product Releases Point to Faster Adoption Paths
Recent product milestones were designed to reduce friction for teams building and deploying AI features. Agent Builder reached general availability, giving developers a more complete set of tools to build secure, context-driven AI agents.
Elastic Workflows entered tech preview, extending the platform beyond core search into operational automation that can sit closer to real-world production processes. This expands how customers can embed Elastic into day-to-day engineering and security workflows.
Performance investments are also aimed at improving retrieval quality and speed. The company cited NVIDIA cuVS integration and the addition of Jina rerankers on Elastic Inference Service as concrete steps to sharpen results as AI workloads scale.
Elastic’s Cloud Connect Bridges On-Prem and GPU Inference
Cloud Connect is a key bridge for self-managed customers who want modern inference without standing up graphics processing unit infrastructure. Elastic said it enables customers to burst to Elastic Cloud for graphics processing unit inference while keeping core infrastructure and data on-premises.
The company also announced the availability of Elastic Inference Service through Cloud Connect for self-managed Elasticsearch deployments. This gives organizations on-demand access to cloud-hosted inference while avoiding the operational overhead of managing infrastructure, aligning with regulated and hybrid deployment needs.
ESTC’s AI Penetration Is Measurable in the Enterprise Base
Elastic’s AI penetration is already measurable inside its largest customer cohort. Management noted that 28% of customers with more than $100,000 in annual contract value use Elastic for AI, equating to about 470 customers, as of the end of the third quarter of fiscal 2026.
That adoption is starting to show up as a modest tailwind. Management observed an average of approximately 5% AI cohort tailwind so far, framing the impact as early but consistent.
Elastic’s Federal Expansion Signal Adds a Demand Vector
Federal demand is another potential vector, tied directly to the Security use case. Management expects continued federal expansion from the CISA SIEM-as-a-Service win over the next several quarters.
If that expectation plays out, it can reinforce enterprise momentum by adding a more durable, program-driven source of demand that fits Elastic Security’s positioning across prevention, detection, and response.
ESTC’s Watchouts: AI Investment and Cloud Cost Pressure
The setup is not without constraints. Elastic has emphasized that consumption variability and seasonality can create quarterly swings, and large deals tend to concentrate in the back half of the fiscal year, which can move revenue between periods.
Cloud mix is another pressure point. Elastic Cloud’s contribution has been rising, and filings note that a higher cloud mix modestly pressures gross margin due to third-party hosting costs.
Investment needs are visible in expense growth. In the third quarter of fiscal 2026, non-GAAP research and development spending increased 24% year over year, and sales and marketing rose 16% year over year, lifting the execution bar for sustained acceleration.
Investor Takeaway
The next few quarters should be evaluated through a handful of checkpoints. One is whether remaining performance obligations and current remaining performance obligations remain strong, supporting revenue visibility as multiyear commitments build.
Another is whether large-deal momentum persists, including continued strength in deals above $1 million in annual commitments. Monitoring whether monthly Elastic Cloud and professional services trends reaccelerate also matters for broadening growth beyond sales-led commitments.
Finally, investors should track whether AI penetration keeps rising within the more than $100,000 annual contract value cohort and whether margins hold up as cloud mix increases, especially as Elastic balances growth investments with operating discipline.
Currently, Elastic carries a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold). You can see the complete list of today’s Zacks #1 Rank (Strong Buy) stocks here.