SaaS Unit Economics: LTV, CAC, and the Metrics That Matter
A practical guide to SaaS unit economics - calculating LTV, CAC, payback period, and understanding why the LTV:CAC ratio determines your company's fate.
Unit economics answer the most fundamental question in SaaS: does each customer you acquire generate more value than it costs to acquire them? If yes, growth is fuel. If no, growth is a fire.
The Core Metrics
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)
CAC = Total sales & marketing spend / Number of new customers acquired
Include everything: salaries of sales and marketing teams, ad spend, tools, events, content creation, and any other cost directly related to acquiring customers.
Example:
- Monthly sales & marketing spend: $80,000
- New customers acquired: 40
CAC = $80,000 / 40 = $2,000 per customer
Important: Fully loaded vs. blended CAC
Fully loaded CAC includes all costs (salaries, benefits, tools, overhead). This is what investors care about.
Blended CAC averages across all acquisition channels, including organic (which has near-zero marginal cost). This makes CAC look artificially low.
Paid CAC only counts paid channels. Useful for evaluating ad spend efficiency.
Always know your fully loaded CAC - it’s the honest number.
Customer Lifetime Value (LTV)
LTV = Average Revenue Per Account (ARPA) x Gross Margin % / Churn Rate
Or equivalently:
LTV = ARPA x Gross Margin % x Average Customer Lifetime
Where Average Customer Lifetime = 1 / Monthly Churn Rate (in months) or 1 / Annual Churn Rate (in years).
Example:
- ARPA: $200/month
- Gross margin: 80%
- Monthly churn: 2.5%
- Average lifetime: 1 / 0.025 = 40 months
LTV = $200 x 0.80 x 40 = $6,400
Why gross margin matters in LTV
LTV uses gross margin, not revenue, because the cost to serve each customer (hosting, support, infrastructure) must be subtracted. A customer paying $200/month doesn’t contribute $200 toward recouping CAC - only the gross profit portion ($160 at 80% margin) does.
The LTV:CAC Ratio
LTV:CAC = LTV / CAC
This is the single most important ratio in SaaS. It tells you whether your business model works.
| LTV:CAC | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Below 1:1 | You lose money on every customer. The business is unsustainable. |
| 1:1 to 2:1 | You barely break even. No margin for error. |
| 3:1 | The target. You generate $3 for every $1 spent acquiring customers. |
| 5:1+ | Great efficiency, but possibly under-investing in growth. |
The 3:1 benchmark comes from a practical reality: roughly 1x covers CAC, 1x covers operating costs (R&D, G&A), and 1x is profit. Below 3:1, there isn’t enough margin to sustain the business. Above 5:1, you could likely grow faster by spending more on acquisition.
From our examples: LTV ($6,400) / CAC ($2,000) = 3.2:1 - healthy.
CAC Payback Period
Payback period = CAC / (ARPA x Gross Margin %)
This measures how many months until you recover the cost of acquiring a customer.
$2,000 / ($200 x 0.80) = $2,000 / $160 = 12.5 months
| Payback Period | Assessment |
|---|---|
| Under 6 months | Excellent |
| 6–12 months | Good |
| 12–18 months | Acceptable for enterprise SaaS |
| 18–24 months | Concerning |
| Over 24 months | Unsustainable without significant funding |
Short payback periods mean you recycle cash faster, enabling growth without as much external funding. A 6-month payback means every dollar spent on acquisition is returned in 6 months and generates profit for the remaining customer lifetime.
The Impact of Churn
Churn is the silent killer of SaaS unit economics. Small changes in churn rate have outsized effects on LTV.
Using ARPA $200/month and 80% gross margin:
| Monthly Churn | Avg. Lifetime | LTV | LTV:CAC (at $2K CAC) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1% | 100 months | $16,000 | 8.0:1 |
| 2% | 50 months | $8,000 | 4.0:1 |
| 3% | 33 months | $5,280 | 2.6:1 |
| 5% | 20 months | $3,200 | 1.6:1 |
| 7% | 14.3 months | $2,288 | 1.1:1 |
| 10% | 10 months | $1,600 | 0.8:1 |
Moving churn from 5% to 2% increases LTV by 150% without changing price, margin, or acquisition cost. This is why retention is the highest-leverage activity in SaaS.
Net Revenue Retention (NRR)
Churn only tells half the story. Net Revenue Retention accounts for expansion revenue from existing customers:
NRR = (Starting MRR + Expansion - Contraction - Churn) / Starting MRR
Example:
- Starting MRR: $100,000
- Expansion (upsells, upgrades): $8,000
- Contraction (downgrades): $2,000
- Churn (cancellations): $3,000
NRR = ($100,000 + $8,000 - $2,000 - $3,000) / $100,000 = 103%
NRR above 100% means your existing customer base generates more revenue each period even without acquiring new customers. Best-in-class SaaS companies achieve 120–130% NRR.
| NRR | Assessment |
|---|---|
| Below 80% | Severe churn problem |
| 80–90% | Below average |
| 90–100% | Average |
| 100–110% | Good |
| 110–120% | Great |
| 120%+ | Exceptional (Snowflake, Datadog territory) |
When NRR exceeds 100%, the traditional LTV formula understates true customer value because it doesn’t capture expansion. Adjusted LTV models incorporate NRR for more accurate projections.
Improving Unit Economics
Reducing CAC
Invest in content marketing and SEO. Organic acquisition has near-zero marginal cost per customer. The investment is upfront (content creation) with compounding returns over time.
Improve conversion rates. Doubling your trial-to-paid conversion rate cuts CAC in half without spending more on marketing. Focus on onboarding - most users who fail to get value in the first 7 days never convert.
Build referral loops. Customer referrals have the lowest CAC of any channel and typically higher LTV (referred customers churn less).
Move upmarket. Enterprise deals have higher CAC in absolute terms but often much better LTV:CAC ratios because deal sizes are larger and churn is lower.
Increasing LTV
Reduce churn. Identify why customers leave (lack of engagement, missing features, poor support, found a cheaper alternative) and address the top reasons systematically.
Increase ARPA through expansion. Usage-based pricing tiers, add-on products, and seat-based pricing all create natural expansion paths.
Improve gross margin. Optimize infrastructure costs, automate support with documentation and self-service tools, and negotiate better hosting agreements.
Extend contracts. Annual contracts lock in revenue and reduce churn (customers are less likely to cancel mid-contract). Offer a 10–20% discount for annual prepayment.
Shortening payback period
Collect upfront. Annual prepayment dramatically improves cash flow. If your monthly plan is $200/month and annual is $2,000/year, you collect 10 months of revenue on day one.
Charge implementation fees. For enterprise SaaS, one-time onboarding or setup fees can offset a significant portion of CAC.
Offer premium onboarding. Charge for white-glove onboarding that guarantees faster time-to-value. Customers get value sooner (reducing churn), and you recover CAC faster.
Cohort Analysis: The Reality Check
Aggregate metrics hide important trends. Always analyze unit economics by customer cohort (typically by sign-up month or quarter).
Track for each cohort:
- CAC at time of acquisition
- Revenue retention curve (month 1, 3, 6, 12, 24)
- Churn rate over time
- Expansion revenue
- Cumulative revenue vs. CAC (payback visualization)
Healthy cohort curves show:
- Churn rates decreasing over time (early churn is normal; later churn should be minimal)
- Revenue per customer increasing over time (expansion)
- Newer cohorts performing better than older ones (your product and process are improving)
Red flag: If newer cohorts have worse retention than older ones, you may be acquiring lower-quality customers as you scale - a common problem when expanding into less-ideal market segments.
Benchmarks by Segment
| Metric | SMB SaaS | Mid-Market SaaS | Enterprise SaaS |
|---|---|---|---|
| ARPA | $50–$500/mo | $500–$5K/mo | $5K–$100K+/mo |
| CAC | $200–$2,000 | $5K–$25K | $25K–$200K+ |
| LTV:CAC | 3:1+ | 3:1+ | 3:1+ |
| Payback | 6–12 months | 12–18 months | 18–24 months |
| Monthly churn | 3–7% | 1–3% | 0.5–1.5% |
| NRR | 90–100% | 100–115% | 110–130% |
The target LTV:CAC ratio of 3:1 applies universally, but the acceptable payback period and churn rates vary significantly by segment. Enterprise SaaS tolerates longer payback because deal sizes and retention justify the wait.
The Bottom Line
Unit economics don’t lie. You can’t scale your way out of bad unit economics - growth just accelerates the losses. Get the fundamentals right: acquire customers efficiently, deliver enough value that they stay and expand, and maintain healthy margins on the cost to serve them. When LTV:CAC exceeds 3:1 and payback is under 18 months, you have a business worth investing in.
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