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Where Will Lemonade (LMND) Stock Be in 2030?
Lemonade (LMND +10.98%), the online insurer that used AI chatbots and algorithms to streamline the onboarding and claims processes, went public at $29 per share in July 2020. Its stock subsequently went through some wild swings, but it now trades at about $55. Will this volatile stock generate sweeter returns by 2030, or will it turn sour?
Image source: Getty Images.
What happened to Lemonade over the past five years?
Lemonade’s simplified approach to buying insurance attracted many younger and first-time insurance buyers. It initially only offered homeowners and renters insurance, but it expanded its platform with term life, pet health, and auto insurance policies after its public debut.
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NYSE: LMND
Lemonade
Today’s Change
(10.98%) $6.34
Current Price
$64.08
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$4.4B
Day’s Range
$62.02 - $64.94
52wk Range
$24.31 - $99.90
Volume
34K
Avg Vol
2.6M
Lemonade served 2.98 million customers at the end of 2025. That’s nearly triple the 1.00 million customers it served at the end of 2020. It’s still tiny compared to insurance leaders like Allstate (ALL +1.41%), which serves over 16 million households, so it could have plenty of room to grow.
Lemonade, like most insurance companies, gauges its growth by its total number of customers, its growth in in-force premiums (IFP), and gross earned premiums (GEP). The sustainability of its business can be measured by its gross loss ratio, which should stay below 100%, and its adjusted gross margin, which should ideally expand as economies of scale kick in. All of those key performance metrics improved over the past five years.
Data source: Lemonade. YOY = Year-over-year. TTM = Trailing 12 months.
What will happen to Lemonade over the next five years?
In its latest investor day presentation in November 2024, Lemonade predicted it would grow its IFP to $10 billion (compared to $944 million in 2024 and $1.24 billion in 2025) in the “coming years”. It also expects its adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) – which has remained in the red since its IPO – to turn green sometime in 2026.
From 2025 to 2027, analysts expect Lemonade’s revenue to grow at a 46% CAGR, with adjusted EBITDA turning positive in the final year. With an enterprise value of $4.2 billion, Lemonade’s stock still looks reasonably valued at 3.5 times this year’s sales.
If Lemonade matches those targets, grows its sales at a slower 25% CAGR through 2030, and trades at a more generous five times sales, its stock could more than triple by the final year. It could hit that target as long as it continues to gain new customers, expand its platform, and widen its moat against its larger competitors.