Although cytotoxic chemotherapy remains the standard treatment for recurrent/progressive endometrial cancer, clinical benefit is short-lived and toxicity significant. Despite the high frequency of genomic aberrations characterizing endometrial cancer, the development of molecularly targeted agents has been challenged by an incomplete understanding of molecular predictors of response. This single arm study demonstrates an encouraging signal of activity for cabozantinib across different histologic and molecular subtypes of endometrial cancer. The observation of increased frequency of responses in patients with tumors harboring CTNNB1 mutation or concurrent KRAS and PTEN/PIK3CA mutations, is hypothesis-generating for future studies. The results reported here not only provide support for the further evaluation of cabozantinib in endometrial cancer, but also justify the critical need for endometrial cancer drug studies to be inclusive, enrolling broad, molecularly-characterized, patient populations to facilitate insights into the heterogeneity of clinical benefit, and factors predictive of resistance and response.