RadNet reported record revenue of $477.1 million for the fourth quarter of 2024, a 13.5% increase from the previous year. Adjusted EBITDA also reached a quarterly high of $75 million, up 14%. The company's Digital Health segment saw significant growth, with revenue rising 28.1% to $18.9 million and Adjusted EBITDA increasing 61.6% to $4.5 million. Adjusted earnings per share for the quarter were $0.22, compared to $0.15 in Q4 2023. Procedural volumes increased overall by 8%, with MRI, CT, and PET/CT seeing double-digit growth.

For the full year, RadNet achieved revenue of $1.83 billion, a 13.2% increase from 2023, with Adjusted EBITDA growing 20.3% to $279.5 million. The company expanded its health system joint ventures, opening nine new centers and increasing partnered locations from 130 to 153. Investments in AI and Digital Health solutions, including DeepHealth OS and SmartMammo, are expected to improve efficiency and address labor shortages.

RadNet improved its financial position, raising $230 million in a stock offering and refinancing debt to lower costs and extend maturities. By year-end, its net debt to Adjusted EBITDA ratio fell below 1.0x, with a cash balance of $740 million.

Looking ahead, RadNet's 2025 guidance projects revenue between $1.825 billion and $1.875 billion and Adjusted EBITDA between $265 million and $273 million. The Digital Health segment is expected to generate $80 million to $90 million in revenue. Early 2025 results were impacted by severe winter weather and wildfires, causing a downward revision to Q1 forecasts.

RadNet remains focused on operational efficiency, expanding joint ventures, and implementing AI-driven automation to counter rising labor costs. Future growth will also be driven by new sales and licensing revenue from AI-powered diagnostic tools in mammography, lung, prostate, and brain imaging.