2026-02-17 · CalcBee Team · 8 min read
LTV:CAC Ratio — The North Star Metric for Sustainable Growth
If you only track one business metric, make it the LTV:CAC ratio. It answers the fundamental question every business must get right: Are you making more from each customer than it costs to acquire them? This single ratio ties together marketing efficiency, product value, retention, and profitability.
The Formulas
LTV (Customer Lifetime Value):
LTV = Average Revenue per Customer per Month × Average Customer Lifespan (months)
Or more precisely:
LTV = (ARPU × Gross Margin %) ÷ Monthly Churn Rate
CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost):
CAC = Total Sales & Marketing Costs ÷ New Customers Acquired
LTV:CAC Ratio = LTV ÷ CAC
What the Ratio Tells You
| Ratio | Interpretation | Action |
|---|---|---|
| < 1:1 | Losing money on every customer | Stop spending — fix the model first |
| 1:1 – 2:1 | Unsustainable — barely covering costs | Reduce CAC or increase LTV urgently |
| 3:1 | The benchmark — healthy, scalable | Maintain and optimize |
| 5:1+ | Potentially underinvesting in growth | Increase marketing spend to capture more market |
| 10:1+ | Likely leaving significant money on the table | Scale aggressively |
The 3:1 sweet spot means for every dollar spent acquiring a customer, you earn three dollars back. This leaves enough margin for overhead, operations, and profit while still growing.
Calculate yours instantly with our LTV:CAC Ratio Calculator.
Worked Example
A B2B SaaS company:
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Average monthly revenue per customer | $200 |
| Gross margin | 80% |
| Monthly churn rate | 2% |
| Monthly sales & marketing spend | $100,000 |
| New customers per month | 80 |
LTV = ($200 × 0.80) ÷ 0.02 = $8,000
CAC = $100,000 ÷ 80 = $1,250
LTV:CAC = $8,000 ÷ $1,250 = 6.4:1
This company is in excellent shape — they could invest more in growth and still maintain healthy unit economics.
The Three Levers
There are only three ways to improve your LTV:CAC ratio:
1. Increase LTV
- Reduce churn: Even a 1% improvement in monthly churn dramatically improves LTV. Reducing churn from 5% to 4% increases LTV by 25%.
- Increase ARPU: Upselling, cross-selling, and pricing optimization all raise the revenue each customer generates.
- Improve gross margins: Higher margins mean more of each revenue dollar contributes to LTV.
- Expand revenue: Build features or products that increase spending over time (net revenue expansion).
2. Decrease CAC
- Improve conversion rates across the funnel
- Invest in lower-cost channels (SEO, referrals, content)
- Optimize ad targeting and creative
- Shorten the sales cycle
- Build brand equity that reduces paid acquisition dependency
3. Both simultaneously
The most powerful growth companies increase LTV (through great product and retention) while decreasing CAC (through brand and organic growth). This is how the ratio compounds from 3:1 to 5:1 to 10:1.
LTV:CAC by Industry
| Industry | Typical Ratio |
|---|---|
| SaaS (healthy) | 3:1 – 5:1 |
| E-commerce (subscription) | 2:1 – 4:1 |
| E-commerce (one-time) | 1.5:1 – 3:1 |
| Insurance | 3:1 – 6:1 |
| Financial services | 3:1 – 7:1 |
| Consumer apps | 1:1 – 3:1 |
Industries with high retention (SaaS, insurance) tend to have higher ratios because LTV compounds over long customer lifespans.
How Investors View LTV:CAC
Venture capitalists consider LTV:CAC one of the most important metrics in due diligence:
- Below 3:1: Red flag — "Why isn't this business profitable?"
- 3:1 – 5:1: Healthy foundation for an investment pitch
- Above 5:1: "Why aren't you spending more to grow?"
Paired with CAC payback period (months to recoup acquisition cost), these two metrics tell the complete unit economics story.
CAC Payback = CAC ÷ (Monthly ARPU × Gross Margin)
For our SaaS example: $1,250 ÷ ($200 × 0.80) = 7.8 months
A payback period under 12 months with a 3:1+ ratio is what most investors want to see.
Common Mistakes
- Not including all costs in CAC. If you exclude marketing salaries, tools, and overhead, your CAC looks artificially low and ratio artificially high. Be honest.
- Using projected LTV, not proven LTV. New businesses should use conservative LTV estimates based on actual data, not optimistic projections.
- Ignoring cohort differences. Your average LTV:CAC may be 4:1, but paid search customers might be 1.5:1 while organic customers are 8:1. Segment by channel.
- Measuring too infrequently. Track monthly; trends matter more than snapshots.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can LTV:CAC be too high?
Yes. A ratio of 10:1+ typically means you're not investing enough in marketing and growth. Competitors will eventually capture the customers you're leaving on the table. Scale your acquisition spend until the ratio approaches 3:1–5:1.
How does churn affect the ratio?
Exponentially. Cutting monthly churn from 5% to 3% increases average customer lifespan from 20 months to 33 months — a 65% increase in LTV. Churn reduction is usually the highest-leverage improvement you can make.
Should I calculate this for each customer segment?
Absolutely. Enterprise customers might have a 10:1 ratio while SMB customers are 2:1. This informs where to allocate resources and which segments to prioritize.
What if my business is pre-revenue?
You can project LTV:CAC using assumptions, but investors will heavily discount projections. Get real data as quickly as possible — even from a small cohort of paying customers — to validate your unit economics.
The LTV:CAC ratio isn't just a metric — it's a business model validation test. A healthy ratio means your growth is sustainable. An unhealthy one means you're building on sand, no matter how impressive the revenue numbers look.
Category: Business
Tags: LTV CAC ratio, Customer lifetime value, Unit economics, SaaS metrics, Growth strategy, Startup metrics, Profitability