Most SaaS founders have a basic handle on their monthly recurring revenue. Fewer have a clear picture of their customer acquisition cost or lifetime value, and fewer still can explain the relationship between those numbers to an investor in a way that builds confidence.
The gap between knowing a metric and understanding what it means for the business is where fundraising conversations go wrong. Investors are not looking for a dashboard of numbers; they are looking for a founder who can narrate the business through those numbers.
This guide walks through every metric that matters, what it actually measures, what a healthy range looks like in 2026, and how the numbers connect to each other.
The Foundation Metrics: MRR and ARR
Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR)
MRR is the predictable revenue your business generates each month from active subscriptions. It is the heartbeat metric of any SaaS business. Investors use it to judge the current scale of the business and the rate of growth.
Calculate MRR by summing all active subscription values on a monthly basis. Annual contracts are divided by 12. A company with 100 customers each paying $200 per month has an MRR of $20,000.
Break MRR into its components for real insight: new MRR from new customers, expansion MRR from upgrades, churned MRR from cancellations, and contraction MRR from downgrades. The relationship between these four numbers tells the investor far more than the total alone.
Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR)
ARR is MRR multiplied by 12. It is the standard metric for Series A and beyond, because it maps to annual planning cycles and makes growth rates easier to compare across companies and time periods.
One important distinction: ARR is a predictive metric, not an accounting figure. It represents what you expect to earn over the next 12 months from current subscriptions, assuming no churn and no expansion.
Customer Acquisition and Retention Metrics
| Metric | What It Measures | 2026 Benchmark |
|---|---|---|
| CAC | Total cost to acquire one customer | Below 1/3 of LTV |
| LTV | Total revenue expected from one customer | 3x to 5x CAC minimum |
| LTV:CAC Ratio | Efficiency of growth spend | 3:1 or above for Series A |
| CAC Payback Period | Months to recover CAC | Under 12 months for B2B SaaS |
| Churn Rate | % of customers lost per month | Below 2% monthly for SMB SaaS |
| NRR | Revenue retained and expanded from existing customers | Above 100% is strong |
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)
CAC is the total sales and marketing spend divided by the number of new customers acquired in the same period. If you spent $50,000 on sales and marketing in Q1 and acquired 25 new customers, your CAC is $2,000.
Blended CAC combines all acquisition channels into one number. Segmented CAC by channel (paid search, outbound, referral, content) shows you which channels are worth scaling and which are burning money.
Investors watch CAC closely because it reveals operational leverage. A company whose CAC drops as it scales is building a machine. A company whose CAC rises as it scales is buying growth it cannot sustain.
Customer Lifetime Value (LTV)
LTV estimates the total net revenue you will earn from a customer over the full duration of their relationship with your product. The standard formula is Average Revenue Per Account divided by Monthly Churn Rate.
For a company with ARPA of $400 and monthly churn of 2%, LTV is $20,000. That makes a $2,000 CAC look very healthy, and a $7,000 CAC look dangerous.
LTV is always an estimate, not a fact. It depends on churn holding steady and expansion behaviour staying consistent. Treat it as a directional number and update it quarterly as you accumulate more historical cohort data.
Net Revenue Retention: The Metric That Separates Good SaaS from Great
Net Revenue Retention (NRR), also called Net Dollar Retention, measures how much of last month’s or last year’s revenue you still have from the same cohort of customers, including expansion from upgrades and minus churn and contraction.
An NRR above 100% means your existing customer base is growing on its own, without any new customers. This is sometimes called negative churn, and it is one of the most investor-appealing metrics in SaaS.
Benchmarks for 2026: top-quartile B2B SaaS businesses show NRR of 120% or above. Median for venture-backed SaaS is around 105 to 110%. Anything below 100% means churn is faster than expansion, which is a red flag at scale.
Churn: The Metric That Undoes Everything Else
Customer churn is the percentage of customers who cancel in a given period. Revenue churn is the percentage of recurring revenue lost. These can diverge significantly: losing your smallest customers while retaining your largest can mean high customer churn but low revenue churn.
Monthly churn targets vary by segment. Enterprise SaaS (high ACV, long sales cycles) typically shows 0.5 to 1% monthly churn. SMB SaaS (lower ACV, self-serve) runs 2 to 3% monthly. Consumer SaaS can run 5% or higher without being considered distressed.
Cohort analysis on churn is far more useful than aggregate churn rates. If customers who signed up 24 months ago churn at 0.8% monthly while customers who signed up 3 months ago churn at 4%, you have a product maturity problem, not a product-market fit problem.
Common Mistakes in How Founders Present SaaS Metrics
Including non-recurring revenue in ARR. Professional services, one-time setup fees, and variable usage revenue that is not contractually recurring should never be in ARR. Investors catch this quickly and it damages credibility.
Using bookings as revenue. A signed annual contract is a booking. It becomes MRR or ARR only as it is recognised month by month. Conflating the two makes a company look further ahead than it actually is.
Reporting gross churn without expansion context. A 5% monthly gross churn rate sounds alarming. An NRR of 115% in the same period shows the business is actually growing from its existing customers. Always present churn and expansion together.
FAQs
What LTV:CAC ratio do investors want to see at Series A?
Most Series A investors want to see a LTV:CAC ratio of at least 3:1. Some will accept 2.5:1 with a credible plan to improve it. Below 2:1 is a warning sign unless the business has a demonstrably short CAC payback period and a clear path to expansion revenue.
How often should SaaS metrics be reported to the board?
MRR, churn, and NRR should be reported monthly. ARR, LTV, and CAC are typically reported quarterly. Cohort analysis is usually a quarterly or semi-annual exercise. Boards with heavy SaaS experience often want a monthly metrics pack with a one-page narrative.
Should I calculate CAC including salaries?
Yes. Fully-loaded CAC includes all sales team salaries, marketing spend, tools, and allocated overhead. Investors assume fully-loaded figures. If your CAC excludes salaries, say so explicitly, and be prepared to recalculate when asked.
Making the Numbers Tell a Story
Numbers alone do not close funding rounds. What closes rounds is a founder who can explain why the metrics look the way they do, what the business is doing to improve the ones that are weak, and what the metrics will look like in 18 months if the business executes well.
Build a simple model that shows how changes in CAC, churn, and expansion revenue affect ARR over 24 months. Running that model with your investors, rather than presenting a static snapshot, demonstrates the operational understanding that distinguishes first-time founders from experienced operators.
For deeper coverage of SaaS unit economics and investor relations, follow WritoryBuzz for analysis that goes beyond the formula to explain what the numbers actually mean for building a business.