SaaS Fundamentals
The Complete Guide to SaaS Growth Metrics
A founder and marketer's guide to the SaaS metrics that matter: CAC, LTV, payback, churn, ROAS, and how they connect into a single growth framework.
SaaS and B2B subscription businesses live and die by a small set of metrics. Unlike e-commerce, where a single transaction can be evaluated in isolation, subscription companies must model how much it costs to win a customer, how much that customer is worth over time, and how quickly capital is recovered to reinvest in growth.
This guide maps the core metrics, how they relate, and when to prioritize each one.
The SaaS metrics stack
Think of SaaS metrics in four layers:
| Layer | Metrics | Question answered |
|---|---|---|
| Acquisition | CAC, ROAS, funnel conversion | How much does it cost to win customers? |
| Value | LTV, ARPU, gross margin | How much is each customer worth? |
| Efficiency | LTV:CAC, CAC payback | Is growth profitable and sustainable? |
| Retention | Churn, NRR, expansion | Are customers staying and growing? |
Healthy companies optimize across all four. A business with great acquisition but terrible retention will eventually collapse under the weight of replenishing churned revenue.
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)
CAC measures the average cost to acquire one new paying customer.
Formula: CAC = Total Acquisition Spend ÷ New Customers Acquired
Acquisition spend includes paid media, sales compensation, marketing tools, agencies, and content production directly tied to winning customers. It does not typically include product development or general overhead.
CAC is most useful when tracked by channel (paid search vs. outbound vs. partnerships) and by cohort (customers acquired in Q1 vs. Q2).
→ Deep dive: What Is Customer Acquisition Cost? · CAC Calculator
Customer Lifetime Value (LTV)
LTV (also called CLV) estimates the total gross profit a customer generates before they churn.
Formula: LTV = (ARPU × Gross Margin) ÷ Monthly Churn Rate
(ARPU = Average Revenue Per User: your average monthly revenue per customer. Gross Margin = the % of revenue left after direct product costs.)
LTV is a projection, not a historical fact. It assumes churn and ARPU remain relatively stable, which is why segmenting by customer type (SMB vs. enterprise) produces more accurate models.
→ Deep dive: What Is Customer Lifetime Value? · LTV Calculator
LTV:CAC ratio: the unit economics test
The LTV:CAC ratio answers the most important question in SaaS: Are we making more from each customer than we spend to acquire them?
Formula: LTV:CAC = LTV ÷ CAC
| Ratio | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| Below 1:1 | Losing money on every customer |
| 1:1 – 3:1 | Marginal to acceptable; 1:1 means gross profit barely covers CAC (opex not yet covered); may work temporarily for land-and-expand models |
| 3:1 – 5:1 | Healthy; standard target for growth-stage SaaS |
| Above 5:1 | Strong economics, but may signal under-investment in growth |
→ Deep dive: LTV:CAC Ratio Guide · LTV:CAC Calculator
CAC payback period: the cash flow test
Even with a strong LTV:CAC ratio, payback period determines how fast you can recycle capital into more acquisition.
Formula: Payback Period = CAC ÷ (ARPU × Gross Margin)
Most B2B SaaS companies target under 12 months. Best-in-class companies often achieve 6 months or less, especially at higher ACVs.
Long payback periods constrain growth: you spend cash today but don’t recover it for 18+ months, which increases burn and reduces flexibility.
→ Deep dive: CAC Payback Period Guide · Payback Calculator
Churn and net revenue retention
Churn is the rate at which customers cancel or downgrade. It directly reduces LTV and forces you to acquire more customers just to maintain revenue.
Two types matter:
- Logo churn: percentage of customers lost
- Revenue churn: percentage of MRR lost (can be negative if expansion exceeds downgrades)
Net Revenue Retention (NRR) measures revenue from existing customers including expansion (upsells/seat growth), downgrades, and churn. It tells you whether your existing customer base is growing or shrinking in value, independent of new customer acquisition.
Formula: NRR = (Starting MRR + Expansion − Contraction − Churn) ÷ Starting MRR
NRR above 100% means your existing base is growing even without new logos, a hallmark of strong product-market fit.
→ Deep dive: Churn & Retention Guide · Churn Impact Calculator
ROAS and advertising efficiency
ROAS (Return on Ad Spend) measures revenue generated per dollar of advertising.
Formula: ROAS = Revenue from Ads ÷ Ad Spend
ROAS alone doesn’t prove profitability. A 5:1 ROAS on a product with 20% margins still loses money. Pair ROAS with break-even ROAS (1 ÷ Gross Margin) to set profitable targets.
→ Deep dive: ROAS vs Break-even ROAS · ROAS Calculator
Funnel and budget planning
Growth doesn’t happen in a single metric, it happens through a funnel: traffic → leads → opportunities → customers → revenue.
(Leads are contacts who’ve shown interest: a form fill, demo request, or trial signup. Opportunities, also called SQLs (Sales Qualified Leads), are leads vetted as ready for a sales conversation. MQLs (Marketing Qualified Leads) are contacts scored as ready to pass to sales.)
Modeling conversion rates at each stage reveals bottlenecks and forecasts pipeline requirements. Combined with CAC, you can reverse-engineer the marketing budget needed to hit a revenue target.
→ Deep dive: Marketing Funnel Guide · Budget Planner
Which metrics to prioritize by stage
| Stage | Primary focus | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-PMF | Retention, NPS, activation | Prove customers stay before scaling acquisition |
| Early growth | CAC, LTV:CAC, payback | Validate unit economics before pouring fuel on the fire |
| Scale | CAC by channel, NRR, funnel conversion | Optimize efficiency and expand what works |
| Mature | NRR, expansion revenue, payback | Maximize revenue from existing base; defend margins |
Putting it together: a monthly metrics review
A practical monthly review for a growth team:
- Acquisition: CAC by channel, new customers, blended CAC trend
- Value: ARPU, gross margin, LTV by segment
- Efficiency: LTV:CAC ratio, payback period
- Retention: logo churn, revenue churn, NRR
- Pipeline: funnel conversion rates, lead volume, budget vs. plan
Use our calculators hub to model each metric with your own numbers.
Connect metrics in the Growth Dashboard
For a unified view, where changing churn updates LTV, payback, and LTV:CAC together, use the Growth Dashboard. It includes scenario planning (current, best case, worst case), benchmark tiers, charts, and recommendations.
→ Step-by-step walkthrough: How to Use the Growth Dashboard
Key takeaways
- No single metric tells the full story. CAC without LTV is meaningless; LTV without churn context is optimistic.
- Segment everything. Blended averages hide problems in specific channels, cohorts, or customer types.
- Cash flow matters as much as profitability. Payback period determines how aggressively you can grow.
- Retention is a growth lever. Reducing churn increases LTV and reduces the customers you must acquire to hit revenue goals.