If you are wondering whether GitLab’s current share price reflects its true worth, you are not alone. This article is aimed squarely at that question.
GitLab’s stock closed at US$26.30 recently, with returns of a 0.3% decline over 7 days, a 24.8% decline over 30 days, a 27.3% decline year to date and a 56.3% decline over the past year. This naturally raises questions about how the market is now viewing its potential and risk.
Recent coverage has focused on GitLab’s position in the software development and DevOps tools space, with attention on how its platform competes and integrates in a crowded market. This context helps frame the share price moves, as investors weigh the company’s role and execution in that sector.
On our checks, GitLab scores a 4 out of 6 valuation score, which suggests there is more to unpack when you compare simple multiples, cash flow based models and other methods. We will also come to a way of thinking about value that can give you an even clearer picture by the end of this article.
A Discounted Cash Flow, or DCF, model takes the cash a company is expected to generate in the future and discounts those amounts back into a single value today.
For GitLab, the model used is a 2 Stage Free Cash Flow to Equity approach, based on cash flow projections in $. The latest twelve month free cash flow is about $241.5 million. Analysts provide detailed estimates for several years, and Simply Wall St extends those projections further out. By 2031, free cash flow is projected at $608.45 million, with intermediate annual projections between 2026 and 2035 ranging from about $207.7 million to $846.0 million before discounting.
When all these projected cash flows are discounted and added together, the DCF model arrives at an estimated intrinsic value of about $65.80 per share. Compared with the recent share price of $26.30, this suggests a discount of roughly 60.0%, indicating that the shares are trading well below this cash flow based estimate.
P/S is often a useful yardstick for software companies, especially when profits are small or volatile but revenue is more established. It lets you compare how much investors are paying for each dollar of sales, which can be helpful when earnings based metrics are less meaningful.
In general, higher growth and lower perceived risk can support a higher P/S ratio. Slower growth or higher risk often point to a lower, more cautious multiple. That is why context matters when you look at any single number.
GitLab currently trades on a P/S of 4.89x. The Software industry average is about 3.35x and the peer average for GitLab’s group is around 6.04x, so the stock sits between those two reference points. Simply Wall St’s Fair Ratio for GitLab is 6.22x, which is the P/S level their model suggests based on factors like earnings growth, margins, industry, market cap and specific risks.
This Fair Ratio can be more useful than a simple peer or industry comparison because it attempts to tailor a “normal” P/S to GitLab’s own profile rather than treating all software names as the same. Since GitLab’s current 4.89x P/S is below the 6.22x Fair Ratio, the shares screen as undervalued on this metric.
Earlier we mentioned that there is an even better way to think about valuation, and on Simply Wall St this comes through Narratives. With Narratives you attach a clear story about GitLab to your own numbers, including fair value, revenue, earnings and margin assumptions. The company’s story then feeds into a forecast, which links directly to a fair value you can compare with the current price to decide whether you see opportunity or risk.
You can access Narratives on the GitLab Community page, where the system updates your view as new earnings or news arrive. You can see that some investors currently model a GitLab fair value of about US$34.00, while others are closer to US$72.00 or even US$150.00. This reflects very different expectations about AI competition, DevSecOps adoption and profitability, and gives you a practical framework to choose which story fits your own convictions and what that implies for how attractive the present share price looks to you.
This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.