
United Community Banks (NYSE:UCB) capped a historic 2025 on Wednesday, reporting record full-year revenue of $1.063 billion as the Greenville-based regional lender successfully navigated a volatile interest rate environment to deliver double-digit earnings growth.
For the fourth quarter ended December 31, 2025, the bank reported net income of $86.5 million, or $0.70 per diluted share, matching analyst expectations.
On an operating basis, earnings reached $0.71 per share, a 13% increase over the same period last year.
The year-over-year surge was primarily fueled by a significant expansion in the net interest margin, which climbed to 3.62%—up from 3.30% a year ago—reflecting the bank’s disciplined deposit pricing and a favorable shift in its lending mix.
The 2025 results highlight a broader structural transformation at United Community.
The bank’s efficiency ratio—a key measure of profitability—improved to 53.1% on an operating basis, down from over 56% earlier in the year.
Total assets reached $28.5 billion, while the bank maintained a fortress-like capital position with a tangible common equity to tangible assets ratio of 9.92%.
While the bank reported strong headline numbers, it remained cautious on credit.
Net charge-offs rose to 0.34% of average loans in the fourth quarter, up from 0.21% in 2024, a move management attributed to normalizing trends in the consumer sector and specific office-related commercial real estate (CRE) adjustments.
However, the bank successfully optimized its liabilities by redeeming $35 million in senior debt and liquidating its manufactured housing loan portfolio earlier in the year, effectively de-risking the balance sheet.