It's the first Academy Award for Lord, Miller, Persichetti, Ramsey and Rothman. Ramsey is the first black winner in the category. It's the first time since 2011 that the trophy didn't go to a film from Disney or Pixar.

With its inspiring story and fresh visual style, Sony Pictures Animation's inventive Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse won the Oscar for best animated feature, marking the first Academy Award for directors Bob Persichetti, Peter Ramsey and Rodney Rothman, and producers Phil Lord and Christopher Miller. With Spider-Verse, Ramsey became the first African-American to be nominated for, and now win, an Academy Award in this category. The best animated feature category was first presented in 2001, and Into the Spider-Verse also marks the first category win for Sony Pictures Animation, as well as the first time since 2011 (when Rango topped the field) that the award didn't go to a film from Disney or Pixar. In fact, this is only the sixth time since the category was introduced that the award didn't go to a movie from Disney or Pixar. Spider-Man's fresh story that promotes diversity and follows African-American/Puerto Rican Brooklyn teen Miles Morales as Spider-Man. On stage, Miller saluted the more than 800 filmmakers that brought Into the Spider-Verse to theaters, as Lord emphasized "when we hear that somebody's kids was watching the movie and turned to them and said, 'he looks like me' or 'They speak Spanish like us,' we feel like we already won."

Ramsey thanked the film's audience, saying "we love you and we just want you all to know we see you, you're powerful. The world needs you. ... so please, we're all counting on you." Added Persichetti: 'Anyone can wear the mask; everyone is powerful and everyone is necessary, and that is the spirt of the movie. Backstage, Persichetti acknowledged Stan Lee and Steve Ditko "for inspiring the whole thing ... believing that all of us, human beings, have the capacity and potential to be heroes."