Compare monthly vs. annual subscription pricing. Calculate annual savings, effective monthly rate, MRR, ARR, and churn-adjusted lifetime value.
Setting the right balance between monthly and annual subscription pricing is one of the most consequential decisions a SaaS or membership business can make. Our Subscription Pricing Calculator lets you model both billing periods side by side, showing annual savings for customers, effective monthly cost, and the revenue impact of different annual discount levels.
Beyond simple pricing math, the tool incorporates churn-adjusted lifetime value so you can see how a higher upfront annual commitment translates to greater customer value — even if the per-month price is lower. Enter your monthly price, annual price, monthly churn rate, and subscriber count to get a full revenue picture including MRR, ARR, and expected LTV.
Whether you're launching a new SaaS product, optimizing an existing subscription box, or running a membership site, this calculator helps you price confidently and communicate the value of annual plans to your customers.
Entrepreneurs, finance teams, and small-business owners gain a competitive edge from accurate subscription pricing data when setting prices, forecasting revenue, or managing operational costs. Save this tool and revisit it each quarter to keep your financial plans aligned with current market realities.
Annual plans lock in revenue and reduce churn, but only if the discount is attractive enough to drive adoption. This calculator quantifies the trade-off: how much discount do you need to offer to make the annual plan compelling, and how does that affect your revenue and lifetime value? With clear side-by-side metrics, you can make pricing decisions backed by numbers rather than gut instinct.
Annual Savings = (Monthly Price × 12) − Annual Price Effective Monthly Rate = Annual Price / 12 Annual Discount % = Annual Savings / (Monthly Price × 12) × 100 MRR = Subscribers × Effective Monthly Rate ARR = MRR × 12 LTV (Monthly) = Monthly Price / Monthly Churn Rate LTV (Annual) = Annual Price × (1 / Annual Churn Rate) Where Annual Churn Rate = 1 − (1 − Monthly Churn)^12
Result: $58 annual savings (16.7% discount), MRR $14,500, LTV $580 monthly vs. $774 annual
At $29/month, a full year costs $348. An annual plan at $290 saves the customer $58 (16.7% discount) and gives an effective monthly rate of $24.17. With 5% monthly churn, a monthly subscriber's LTV is $580 ($29/0.05). Annual churn is ~46%, so an annual subscriber's LTV is roughly $774 ($290/0.375). The annual plan produces higher LTV despite the discount because it locks in 12 months of revenue.
Every subscription business faces the same balancing act: monthly plans maximize per-period revenue but expose you to higher churn, while annual plans lock in revenue at a discount. The optimal strategy depends on your product's stickiness, your customer acquisition cost, and how quickly customers realize value.
Even with a 20% discount, annual plans often produce higher lifetime value because they dramatically reduce churn. If your monthly churn is 5%, your expected customer lifespan is 20 months. But an annual customer who renews at even a 50% annual retention rate stays for an expected 2 years — 24 months of revenue at a discounted rate still exceeds 20 months at full price.
The way you present pricing matters as much as the numbers. Show the effective monthly rate for annual plans, use strikethrough pricing to highlight savings, and calculate the exact dollar amount saved per year. Framing annual plans as “2 months free” is psychologically more appealing than “17% off” even though the math is identical.
Most successful SaaS businesses offer 15–20% off for annual billing. This is large enough to motivate switching but small enough to protect revenue. Run this calculator at different levels and look at the LTV trade-off — if annual LTV exceeds monthly LTV at a given discount, the economics work in your favor.
Annual billing eliminates 11 of 12 potential cancellation decision points. A customer paying monthly has 12 opportunities per year to evaluate whether to keep paying. An annual subscriber makes that decision once. This structural advantage typically reduces annualized churn by 30–50% compared to monthly billing.
Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR) is the total predictable revenue your subscription business earns each month. For annual plans, MRR is the annual price divided by 12. MRR is the core metric investors and operators use to track SaaS business health because it normalizes revenue across billing periods.
Yes. Monthly plans lower the barrier to entry and let customers try your product with minimal commitment. Many businesses see 60–80% of new sign-ups start monthly, then convert to annual over time. Eliminating the monthly option can significantly reduce trial conversions.
For monthly subscribers, LTV = Monthly Price / Monthly Churn Rate. For annual subscribers, you first convert monthly churn to annual churn using the formula 1 − (1 − monthly churn)^12, then LTV = Annual Price / Annual Churn Rate. This gives an expected number of periods × revenue per period.
Quarterly billing is a middle ground: less discount than annual, more commitment than monthly. It's popular in B2B where procurement cycles may not align with annual contracts. Typical quarterly discounts are 5–10%. You can use this calculator with a 3-month equivalent to model quarterly plans.