Rapha has unveiled an optimistic vision of its future strategy as the company reveals a second successive year of operating losses. Following the news of the brand’s split with EF Education–EasyPost, Rapha has announced an expansive partnership with USA Cycling for the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.

Rapha’s 2024 results will soon be public, and reveal a turbulent picture for the company as operating losses sit at £17.2m, with an EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortisation – which more accurately reflects a business’s financial income in a year) loss of £2.6m.

The results came amid a drop in overall turnover, with total turnover sitting at £96m – down from £110m in the 2023 financial year.

Rapha’s CEO Fran Millar spoke to a handful of journalists in the Rapha headquarters in Archway, London, in advance of the financial results, explaining that she was “one year into a multi-year turnaround.” Millar had only been CEO for a handful of months during the time frame in which the 2024 financial results were reported.

Millar and Rapha CFO Michelle Woolaghan explained that the drop in revenue was partly down to “coming off the discounting drug”, as Rapha aims to rebuild customer quality and full-price sell-through.

The most startling figure amongst the new financial results is the write-down of Rapha’s parent company, Carpegna Ltd, reducing the effective theoretical value of Rapha’s parent company from £169m to around £65m. This doesn’t represent a cash loss, but instead that the board cut the carrying value by £102m at the holding company level. While largely an exercise in accounting, it represents a reassessment of the value of the business since the acquisition of Rapha by Walmart heirs Steuart and Tom Walton in 2017.

“We completed a funding round in May 2025,” revealed Woolaghan, stressing that there had been more investment in the business to move back to profitable growth with a target to be EBITDA-positive by 2027.

“Transformation takes time,” Millar explained. “The strategic decisions we are taking… will enable us to become profitable again as a business and support our vision to use the transformative power of cycling to make a difference to the world.”

The new strategy and financial results come at an interesting point, as they coincide with Rapha co-founder Simon Mottram’s departure from the business as director. However, the timing is purely coincidental, Millar explains. “Whilst he stepped off the board – his own choice – we… he’s going to stay as an advisor to me. So he’s quite often around.”