The Japanese company posted net profit of Y492 million for the year ended 28 February 2026, versus Y503 million a year earlier.
Revenue rose to Y11.40 billion from Y10.61 billion, while operating profit increased to Y944 million from Y880 million and pretax profit to Y1.03 billion from Y953 million.
Earnings per share slipped to Y533.84 from Y545.82, with the results prepared under Japanese accounting standards.
Is this company's profit squeeze a canary in the coal mine for Japan's entire service sector?
As a weak yen fuels both tourism and costs, how will Arigatou Services restore its shrinking profit margins?
Can booming tourism shield Japanese firms from the pressures of record wage hikes and high inflation?