Le Lavoir doubles revenue as farm purchases dominate
Consolidated revenue jumped to ₹6.64 cr in FY26, with agricultural subsidiaries contributing ₹5.07 cr. Net profit grew 67%.
What's new
- Consolidated revenue doubled to ₹6.64 cr in FY26 from ₹2.65 cr in FY25.
- Net profit rose 67% to ₹2.24 cr from ₹1.34 cr.
- Agricultural segment now accounts for 76% of total revenue.
Why this matters
Le Lavoir is no longer just a laundry company. Agricultural acquisitions now drive three-quarters of revenue, fundamentally reshaping the business profile. The 67% profit growth, however, is more modest than the top-line surge, suggesting the new segment carries different margins.
What we're watching
- Margin trajectory as the agricultural mix deepens.
- Whether laundry-segment revenue can grow alongside the new businesses.
- Management's next move in farm acquisitions.
The full read
Le Lavoir's FY26 results show a company mid-transformation. Revenue more than doubled to ₹6.64 crore from ₹2.65 crore, and net profit climbed 67% to ₹2.24 crore. The headline number, though, is the ₹5.07 crore from agricultural subsidiaries. That makes up 76% of the new revenue base. The laundry business, the original core, was described as steady. So the growth is acquisition-led, not operational. The profit margin expanded less dramatically than the top line, sitting around 34% on consolidated revenue versus roughly 51% on the prior year's smaller base. The auditor signed off cleanly, but the strategic question is durability: how much of this revenue repeats, and at what margin, once the acquisition integration is complete.
Questions answered
- How much did the agricultural segment contribute?
- The newly acquired agricultural subsidiaries added ₹5.07 crore in revenue for FY26, representing 76% of the total ₹6.64 crore consolidated top line.
- Did the laundry business grow?
- The filing describes the laundry services segment as 'steady'. Total revenue grew from ₹2.65 cr to ₹6.64 cr, so laundry revenue was roughly flat while agriculture grew.
- What was the auditors' view?
- The auditors issued an unmodified opinion on the FY26 financial statements, meaning they found no material issues with the accounting.
- Is this growth organic or from acquisitions?
- The growth is acquisition-driven. The report explicitly credits contributions from 'recently acquired agricultural subsidiaries' for the revenue surge.