Profits were also impressive. Zoom recorded $27 million for the three months compared with $198,000 a year ago.
The San Jose based company is the latest tech darling to emerge from San Francisco, with other firms like Slack also seeing it business soar during lockdown.
Zoom listed on the Nasdaq in New York last year and late last night its shares rose 3% after the results.
Eric Yuan, chief executive and co-founder at Zoom
Kena Betancur/Getty Images
The share price increase means Zoom now has a market value of about $59 billion, greater than the combined market values of the four largest US airlines, which have seen their businesses hammered by the coronavirus outbreak that has dramatically curtailed travel.
But questions remain over Zoom's security practises, with people accessing calls uninvited.
Zoom competes with Cisco Systems, Microsoft Teams and Google.
One of Zoom’s biggest costs is data centers and bandwidth to host calls. The company runs some of its own data centers, but also pays for cloud computing services from Amazon Web Services and Microsoft.