Calculate annual recurring revenue (ARR) from MRR or subscription data. Track ARR growth, components, and project future ARR milestones for SaaS.
Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) is the annualized value of your recurring subscription revenue. Calculated as MRR multiplied by 12, ARR is the headline metric that defines SaaS company scale and is the primary input for valuation multiples, growth benchmarking, and strategic planning.
ARR strips away one-time revenues down to the predictable, contractually committed subscription base. This clarity makes it invaluable for board reporting, fundraising conversations, and long-range financial modeling. When investors evaluate SaaS companies, they look at ARR growth rate, ARR per employee, and revenue multiples based on ARR.
This calculator converts your monthly recurring revenue into ARR, breaks down growth components, and projects when you'll hit key ARR milestones. Use it alongside the MRR calculator for detailed monthly analysis.
Entrepreneurs, finance teams, and small-business owners gain a competitive edge from accurate annual recurring revenue (arr) 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.
ARR is the standard yardstick for measuring subscription business size and trajectory. This calculator gives you instant ARR from your MRR data, shows growth velocity, and helps you plan toward ARR milestones like $1M, $10M, or $100M. It's essential for investor reporting, compensation planning, and strategic goal-setting. Instant recalculation lets you test different assumptions side by side, giving you the confidence to act on data rather than gut instinct.
ARR = MRR × 12 ARR Growth Rate = ((Current MRR − Prior MRR) ÷ Prior MRR) × 12 × 100 Months to Milestone = ln(Target ARR ÷ Current ARR) ÷ ln(1 + Monthly Growth Rate)
Result: ARR = $1,020,000
With $85,000 current MRR, ARR = $85,000 × 12 = $1,020,000. Month-over-month MRR growth is ($85,000 − $78,000) ÷ $78,000 = 8.97%. Annualized, this implies approximately 107.7% year-over-year growth if sustained. At this rate, $10M ARR would be reached in approximately 26 months.
For SaaS companies, ARR is the single most important metric. It determines valuation, benchmarks against peers, and frames strategic planning. Public SaaS companies report ARR prominently in quarterly earnings, and private companies lead with ARR in board decks and fundraising materials.
The Rule of 40 states that a SaaS company's growth rate plus profit margin should equal or exceed 40%. For ARR, this means if you're growing at 60% year-over-year, you can sustain a -20% profit margin and still be considered healthy. If growth slows to 20%, you need at least 20% margins. This framework helps balance growth investment against profitability.
Beyond growth rate, investors evaluate ARR efficiency: How much net new ARR do you generate per dollar of sales and marketing spend? The benchmark is $1 of net new ARR per $1.50 spent (a 0.67 efficiency ratio). Best-in-class companies achieve $1 of ARR per $1 spent. This burn multiple reveals whether your growth is efficient or wasteful.
Each ARR milestone represents a phase transition for the company. At $1M ARR, focus shifts from finding product-market fit to repeatable sales. At $10M, specialization begins in sales, marketing, and customer success. At $50M, the company prepares for potential IPO-track operations. Understanding which milestone is next helps prioritize the right investments.
ARR measures only recurring subscription revenue annualized from MRR. Annual revenue includes all revenue sources: subscriptions, one-time fees, professional services, and consulting. ARR is a cleaner metric for SaaS because it represents predictable, ongoing revenue.
ARR is a point-in-time metric based on current MRR. If your MRR changes mid-year due to new customers or churn, your ARR changes immediately. It's not an annual total; it's the annualized value of your current monthly run rate.
Key milestones include $1M ARR (initial product-market fit), $5M ARR (scalable growth), $10M ARR (category relevance), $50M ARR (market leader potential), and $100M ARR (centaur status). Each milestone typically unlocks different fundraising and strategic opportunities.
T2D3 stands for Triple, Triple, Double, Double, Double. It describes the ideal SaaS growth trajectory: triple ARR in year 1 and 2, then double it in years 3, 4, and 5. Starting from $1M ARR, T2D3 produces $72M ARR in five years.
Yes, include the actual amount the customer pays annualized. If a customer signs a 3-year deal at $90K total (effectively $30K/year with a discount from $36K/year), their ARR contribution is $30K. This reflects the real recurring revenue commitment.
ARR per employee divides total ARR by headcount and measures capital efficiency. The median for SaaS companies is around $100K-$150K per employee. Top performers exceed $200K-$300K. This metric helps investors assess how efficiently a company translates people costs into revenue.
SaaS companies are often valued as a multiple of ARR. Public SaaS multiples range from 5x to 25x ARR depending on growth rate, margins, and market conditions. High-growth companies (50%+ year-over-year) command higher multiples. ARR growth rate is the single strongest predictor of valuation multiples.
Most SaaS companies track both simultaneously. MRR is better for operational decisions and monthly reporting. ARR becomes the primary external metric once a company reaches meaningful scale (usually around $1M+ ARR) and begins communicating with investors, board members, and potential acquirers.