Smurfit Westrock has reported its first quarter 2026 results, with revenue holding steady but profitability under pressure as costs and external factors weighed on performance.
The global packaging group posted net sales of $7.7 billion for the three months to March 31, 2026, slightly up from $7.6 billion a year earlier. Net income fell sharply to $63 million, down from $382 million, with margins dropping to 0.8%.
Adjusted EBITDA also declined to $1.08 billion, compared with $1.25 billion in the same period last year.
The company said adverse weather in North America had a $65 million impact on earnings during the quarter.
At the same time, pricing trends began to shift. Containerboard prices increased by $20 per ton during the quarter, with a further $30 per ton increase implemented in April.
Demand improved progressively across paper grades, while corrugated box volumes remained in line with expectations. The company also added more than 600 new corrugated customers during the quarter, reflecting continued expansion in its packaging customer base.
In Europe, the Middle East, Africa and Asia-Pacific, the business delivered continued growth and outperformed peers, supported by improving demand and pricing. In Latin America, margins remained strong at around 20%, with the company expanding capacity through a new corrugated plant in Ecuador.
Smurfit Westrock also confirmed it has entered consultations at one UK mill and four converting facilities in the UK and the Netherlands as part of its ongoing asset optimisation programme.
The company expects volumes to grow in the second half of the year as demand conditions improve, and reaffirmed its full-year Adjusted EBITDA outlook of between $5.0 billion and $5.3 billion.
Why it matters
Editors’ Note: Based on Smurfit Westrock Q1 2026 earnings release.







