Lime (NASDAQ: LIME) Prices IPO as Micro-Mobility Company Enters Public Market
- Lime, the micro-mobility company operated by Neutron Holdings Inc., has priced its U.S. Initial Public Offering (IPO) at $25.00 per share, the midpoint of its expected $24.00 to $26.00 range.
- The company raised approximately $167 million by selling 6.68 million shares, giving Lime an estimated valuation of around $1.6 billion.
- Despite strong revenue growth from $522.00 million in 2023 to $886.70 million in 2025, Lime remains unprofitable, reporting a net loss of $59.30 million in 2025.
Strategic partnerships, especially with Uber Technologies (NYSE: UBER), and the long-term growth of the electric bike and scooter market remain key factors supporting Lime’s future expansion potential.
Neutron Holdings Inc., the operator of Lime scooters and e-bikes, has priced its IPO and is set to trade on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol LIME. The listing gives the micro-mobility company access to public capital markets as it looks to support future expansion, vehicle investments, and technology development.
The IPO was priced at $25.00 per share, the midpoint of the expected $24.00 to $26.00 range. Lime sold approximately 6.68 million shares, raising about $167 million. Based on the final pricing, the company’s valuation is estimated at roughly $1.6 billion.
Lime has demonstrated strong revenue growth in recent years. Revenue increased from $522.00 million in 2023 to $886.70 million in 2025. However, despite this top-line expansion, the company has not yet achieved consistent profitability. In 2025, Lime reported a net loss of $59.30 million, showing that the business still faces cost, regulatory, and operating challenges even as demand grows.
Uber Technologies (NYSE: UBER) remains an important strategic partner and shareholder in Lime. Through this partnership, users can rent Lime vehicles directly through the Uber app, giving Lime access to a large customer base. Uber also led a $170.00 million investment round in Lime in 2020, strengthening the relationship between the two companies.
Lime operates in a growing but competitive micro-mobility market. The company serves more than 230 cities globally and benefits from rising demand for electric bikes, scooters, and short-distance urban transportation. However, investors will likely continue to watch whether Lime can convert revenue growth into sustainable profitability while managing city regulations, fleet maintenance costs, and competition.
Overall, Lime’s IPO marks an important milestone for the micro-mobility sector. The company has built meaningful scale and strong brand recognition, but its long-term investment case will depend on whether it can improve margins, reduce losses, and prove that shared electric mobility can become a durable public-market business.
