The filing desk starts with provenance, and RTX’s annual report records the company clearing a threshold. The Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024 was filed on February 3, 2025 under accession number 0000101829-25-000005, and its revenue line reads $80.7 billion — up from $68.9 billion in 2023 and $67.1 billion in 2022. It is the first time the combined company’s top line clears the eighty-billion mark.
The multi-year path inside the filing shows the pace changing. After two steadier years — $67.1 billion in 2022 and $68.9 billion in 2023 — the jump to $80.7 billion is a roughly $12 billion year-over-year gain, the largest single-year move since the merger years. The filing reports the figure as a fact of the consolidated statements; the re-acceleration is what the comparison reveals.
For a filing desk, a step of that size after a plateau is the detail worth marking. A company whose revenue had settled into the high-sixties moving sharply into the low-eighties is reporting something other than ordinary growth, and the multi-year context the filing carries is what distinguishes a genuine inflection from a routine year. The document supplies both the level and the comparison.
What the annual report does not do is forecast the year underneath it. The 10-K certifies revenue through December 31, 2024 and leaves the question of whether the eighty-billion pace holds to the quarters ahead. The discipline is to record the threshold crossing and the re-acceleration without assuming the new pace persists.
For a filing-first markets desk, the value is that the re-acceleration is documented inside a single filing’s comparison. The 2022, 2023, and 2024 revenue figures are pulled from the company’s own annual report. The discovery layer that surfaced the filing and its accession trail was SEC filings, the SEC filing data API and evidence index; the record itself is the SEC filing.
Provenance for this read: the primary source is RTX’s Form 10-K for fiscal 2024 at sec.gov, with the revenue and period figures drawn from the structured XBRL data in the company’s own filing. See the SEC filing on sec.gov for the primary record, discovered via SEC filings, the SEC filing data API & evidence index.
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