How much has Thomson Reuters raised?
Thomson Reuters is TSX/NYSE: TRI public company, so the useful funding answer is public-company capacity rather than venture rounds. Recent scale is 2025 revenue of about $7.47B; Q1 2026 organic revenue growth of 8%, and the capital story is shaped by cash flow, public markets, acquisitions, buybacks, dividends, debt capacity, or strategic reinvestment.
- Total raised
- Public company; no current VC funding
- Disclosed rounds
- Not a venture-backed startup
- Latest round
- Filed 2025 annual report in March 2026 and reported Q1 2026 organic revenue growth
- Latest valuation
- TSX/NYSE public market capitalization
- First raised
- 2008
- Notable backer
- Woodbridge/public shareholders
Thomson Reuters's funding rounds
Thomson Reuters's capital history is best read through public-market and strategic milestones rather than startup rounds.
- 1851Reuters foundedPaul Julius Reuter founded the news agency.
- 1934Thomson roots expandThe Thomson newspaper and information businesses grew across media and professional markets.
- 2008Thomson Reuters formedThomson acquired Reuters Group to create Thomson Reuters.
- 2018Refinitiv transactionThomson Reuters sold a majority stake in its financial data business.
- 2023Casetext acquisitionThomson Reuters acquired Casetext and CoCounsel.
- 2026Q1 2026 growthThe company reported strong organic growth in professional segments.
Sources:Thomson Reuters FY2025 resultsThomson Reuters annual reports
How much has Thomson Reuters raised in total?
Thomson Reuters does not have a current startup-style total funding number. It is TSX/NYSE: TRI public company, and its financing capacity comes from operating cash flow, balance-sheet management, public equity and debt markets, and corporate capital allocation.
For sellers, recent revenue of 2025 revenue of about $7.47B; Q1 2026 organic revenue growth of 8% is the better capacity signal than a VC total raised field.
Who are Thomson Reuters's investors?
The investor base is public shareholders, index funds, active managers, insiders where applicable, and debt investors rather than named venture funds. Strategic backers or legacy owners matter only where the company was spun off, acquired, merged, or controlled by a founder or family.
That structure usually means budgeting is annual, governed by business cases, and reviewed through mature finance and procurement controls.
Why has Thomson Reuters's valuation or capital story moved?
The valuation moves with organic growth, margin outlook, AI disruption or opportunity, advertising and subscription trends, interest rates, acquisition execution, content costs, and investor confidence in management's capital allocation. Recent investor materials emphasize legal AI adoption, Big 3 professional segments, recurring revenue, CoCounsel integration, tax/accounting software, Reuters trust/licensing, and workflow expansion.
Is Thomson Reuters profitable, and will it IPO?
Thomson Reuters is already public or has a public-company capital history. Profitability should be evaluated through GAAP earnings, adjusted operating income, EBITDA/OIBDA where management reports it, free cash flow, and segment margins, not startup burn.
IPO timing is not the relevant question; expansion, divestiture, merger integration, buybacks, dividends, and reinvestment are more useful signals.
What does Thomson Reuters's funding mean if you sell into them?
The seller signal is buying power paired with process maturity. Tie the proposal to board-level priorities such as AI productivity, audience or customer growth, revenue yield, security, compliance, workflow automation, cloud efficiency, rights management, or cost takeout.
Expect multi-stakeholder review involving business owners, procurement, legal, privacy, security, finance, and technology architecture.
As of June 2026.Sources:Thomson Reuters FY2025 resultsThomson Reuters annual reportsThomson Reuters leadership
Thomson Reuters — frequently asked questions
