Customer Acquisition
What Is Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)?
A complete guide to CAC for SaaS and B2B: formula, what to include, channel-level tracking, benchmarks, and common mistakes.
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) is the average amount your company spends to win one new paying customer. For SaaS and B2B subscription businesses, CAC is the foundation of every growth decision, from channel mix to hiring plans to fundraising narratives.
How to use the CAC Calculator
- Open the CAC Calculator and select your currency if needed.
- Enter Total Acquisition Spend: include ads, sales compensation, marketing tools, and agency fees for the same period.
- Enter the number of new customers acquired in that period.
- Read your Customer Acquisition Cost instantly. Use the insights block below the results for benchmarks and next steps.
The CAC formula
CAC = Total Acquisition Spend ÷ New Customers Acquired
Both numbers must cover the same time period (usually monthly or quarterly) and the same customer definition (new paying logos, not trials or free users unless that’s your conversion model).
Example
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Paid advertising | $40,000 |
| Sales team salaries + commissions | $25,000 |
| Marketing tools (CRM, ads platform, etc.) | $5,000 |
| Agency fees | $10,000 |
| Total acquisition spend | $80,000 |
| New customers acquired | 160 |
| CAC | $500 |
Use our CAC Calculator to run your own numbers.
What to include in acquisition spend
Include
- Paid media: Google Ads, LinkedIn, Meta, display, sponsorships
- Sales compensation: salaries, commissions, bonuses tied to new deals
- Marketing software: CRM, marketing automation, ad platforms, analytics
- Agency and contractor fees: performance marketing, creative, SEO agencies
- Content and campaign production: landing pages, video, design for acquisition campaigns
- Events and field marketing: trade shows, webinars with lead-gen goals
Typically exclude
- Product development and engineering
- Customer success (post-sale retention)
- General administrative overhead
- Brand campaigns with no direct lead/customer attribution (debated, some teams allocate a percentage)
The rule of thumb: if the cost would not exist without the goal of acquiring new customers, include it.
Blended CAC vs. channel CAC
Blended CAC uses total spend across all channels divided by total new customers. It’s useful for board-level reporting but hides efficiency differences.
Channel CAC isolates spend and customers per source:
Formula: Channel CAC = Channel Spend ÷ Customers from Channel
| Channel | Spend | Customers | CAC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Paid search | $20,000 | 80 | $250 |
| Outbound sales | $30,000 | 40 | $750 |
| Content / SEO | $10,000 | 40 | $250 |
| Blended | $60,000 | 160 | $375 |
This table immediately shows outbound is 3× more expensive per customer, which may still be acceptable if those customers have higher LTV or faster close rates.
CAC and sales cycle timing
A common mistake is misaligning spend and customer counts across periods. If your average sales cycle is 90 days, marketing spend in January may produce customers in March.
Solutions:
- Track cohort-based CAC (spend in month X → customers attributed to month X, Y, Z)
- Use lagged attribution windows (e.g., 90-day lookback)
- For inside sales, align commission payouts with the period customers close
Early-stage companies with long cycles often understate CAC initially because customers haven’t closed yet.
CAC benchmarks for SaaS
Benchmarks vary significantly by ACV, market, and motion:
| Segment | Typical ACV | Blended CAC range |
|---|---|---|
| Self-serve / PLG | $100–$1,000/yr | $50–$300 |
| SMB sales-assisted | $1K–$10K/yr | $300–$1,500 |
| Mid-market | $10K–$50K/yr | $1,500–$10,000 |
| Enterprise | $50K+/yr | $10,000–$50,000+ |
CAC alone is not “good” or “bad”, it must be evaluated against LTV and payback period.
Healthy targets (in context)
- LTV:CAC ratio of 3:1 or higher
- CAC payback under 12 months
- CAC trending down over time as brand and product-led growth mature
How to reduce CAC
- Improve conversion rates: better landing pages, onboarding, sales scripts
- Shift mix toward efficient channels: double down on lowest-CAC sources with capacity
- Increase organic and referral: content, SEO, word-of-mouth lower blended CAC over time
- Raise ACV: selling higher-value packages improves economics even at constant CAC
- Shorten sales cycles: faster closes mean less sales cost per deal
Common CAC mistakes
| Mistake | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Excluding sales salaries | Dramatically understates true CAC |
| Counting trials as customers | Inflates customer count, deflates CAC |
| Using revenue instead of customers | Conflates ACV with acquisition efficiency |
| Ignoring channel mix shifts | Blended CAC can look fine while paid CAC spikes |
| Not updating quarterly | Stale CAC leads to bad budget decisions |
CAC in the context of unit economics
CAC is half of the unit economics equation. The other half is LTV:
- **LTV:CAC ratio: are you profitable per customer?
- **CAC payback: how fast do you recover spend?
- **Budget planning: how much must you spend to hit revenue goals?
Key takeaways
- CAC = total acquisition spend ÷ new customers, same period
- Always track CAC by channel, not just blended
- Benchmarks depend on ACV, compare against LTV and payback, not absolutes
- Align spend and customer timing with your sales cycle length