Marketing
CAC vs LTV: The Single Ratio That Decides If Your Business Scales
Investors don’t ask about your revenue growth first. They ask about your LTV:CAC ratio. It’s the cleanest single signal that a business model works — that the money you spend acquiring customers comes back to you many times over.
The Two Numbers
CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost) = Total sales & marketing spend ÷ New customers acquired. Run yours in our CAC Calculator.
LTV (Customer Lifetime Value) = Average revenue per customer × Gross margin × Average customer lifetime (in months or years). Use our LTV Calculator.
The Ratio Benchmarks
- Below 1:1 — You lose money on every customer. Stop scaling.
- 1:1 to 3:1 — Underwater. Improve retention or cut acquisition cost before raising.
- 3:1 — The healthy floor. Most US SaaS investors look for at least this.
- 3:1 to 5:1 — Strong. You can confidently increase paid acquisition.
- Above 5:1 — You’re underinvesting in growth. Spend more.
Why CAC Payback Matters Too
A great LTV:CAC of 5:1 still kills you if it takes 36 months to pay back. Track CAC payback period = CAC ÷ (Monthly ARPU × Gross margin). Best-in-class SaaS recovers CAC in under 12 months.
Common Calculation Mistakes
- Forgetting gross margin in LTV. $100/mo revenue at 70% margin is $70/mo of value, not $100.
- Using paid CAC instead of blended. Blended CAC includes organic too, hiding how expensive paid actually is. Track both.
- Assuming infinite lifetime. Cap your model at 36–60 months unless you have churn data proving longer retention.
- Ignoring sales team costs. Account executive salaries belong in CAC.
Worked Example: A US SaaS Startup
ACME Analytics charges $99/mo. Gross margin 80%. Average customer stays 28 months. Q4 sales + marketing spend: $420,000. New customers acquired: 350.
- CAC = 420,000 ÷ 350 = $1,200
- LTV = $99 × 0.80 × 28 = $2,217.60
- LTV:CAC = 2,217.60 ÷ 1,200 = 1.85
That’s underwater. ACME needs to either increase ARPU, improve retention (reduce monthly churn), or cut paid spend. Most likely all three.
How to Fix a Broken Ratio
- Lift LTV: raise prices, add upsells, reduce churn through onboarding and CS.
- Lower CAC: double down on the channel with the lowest CPA, kill underperforming ones, build organic content and referral loops.
- Segment: some customer cohorts have 8:1 ratios while others sit at 1:1. Stop spending on the bad cohort.
FAQs
Should LTV use revenue or gross profit? Always gross profit. Revenue-based LTV inflates the number.
Is the 3:1 rule outdated? No, but in 2026 with higher CACs across paid channels, top-tier SaaS often targets 4:1 or higher.
How often should I recalculate? Quarterly at minimum. Monthly if you’re actively scaling spend.