Calculate customer lifetime value (CLV/LTV) using ARPU, gross margin, and churn rate. Compare simple vs contractual CLV models for SaaS and subscriptions.
Customer Lifetime Value (CLV or LTV) represents the total net revenue a business expects to earn from a single customer over the entire duration of their relationship. It is one of the most important metrics in modern business, directly influencing marketing budgets, sales strategies, product development, and investor valuations.
The simplest CLV model divides average revenue per user (ARPU) by the churn rate, then multiplies by gross margin. More sophisticated models account for discount rates, retention curves, and expansion revenue. Whether you run a SaaS platform, e-commerce store, or service business, knowing your CLV tells you exactly how much you can afford to spend acquiring each customer while maintaining profitability.
This calculator supports both the simple CLV formula and the discounted contractual model. It shows how changes in ARPU, churn, and margin affect lifetime value, giving you actionable levers to grow your most important metric. Pair it with the Customer Acquisition Cost and LTV:CAC Ratio calculators for a complete unit economics dashboard.
CLV is the north star for sustainable growth. It determines your maximum affordable CAC, informs retention program investments, and helps you segment customers by value tier. Companies with high CLV can outspend competitors on acquisition, knowing each customer will generate more revenue over time. This calculator makes the math transparent so you can model scenarios, justify budgets, and align your team around the metric that matters most.
Simple CLV = (ARPU × Gross Margin %) ÷ Monthly Churn Rate Average Customer Lifespan = 1 ÷ Monthly Churn Rate Discounted CLV = ARPU × Gross Margin % × (1 ÷ (Churn Rate + Discount Rate)) Where ARPU = Average Revenue Per User per month, Gross Margin % is expressed as a decimal, and Churn Rate is the monthly probability of losing a customer.
Result: CLV = $5,333.33
With $200 monthly ARPU, 80% gross margin, and 3% monthly churn: CLV = ($200 × 0.80) ÷ 0.03 = $160 ÷ 0.03 = $5,333.33. The average customer lifespan is 1 ÷ 0.03 = 33.3 months (about 2.8 years). If CAC is $1,500, the LTV:CAC ratio would be 3.6:1.
The simple CLV model assumes a constant churn rate and infinite time horizon. It works well for subscription businesses with relatively stable retention curves. The contractual model applies when customers have fixed-term contracts (annual subscriptions, multi-year deals) and churn is concentrated at renewal points rather than distributed uniformly.
Because CLV equals margin divided by churn, the relationship between churn reduction and CLV increase is nonlinear. Reducing monthly churn from 10% to 5% doubles CLV. Reducing from 5% to 2.5% doubles it again. This compounding effect makes retention the most powerful lever in unit economics, especially for businesses with already-low churn where further reductions create outsized value.
Forward-looking companies track CLV by acquisition cohort to understand how customer quality changes over time. If recent cohorts show lower CLV than earlier ones, it may indicate that you are expanding into less suitable market segments, campaign quality is declining, or product-market fit is weakening. Cohort-based CLV is a leading indicator of business health.
Once you know your CLV by customer segment, you can set maximum allowable CAC targets per segment. High-CLV enterprise segments may justify expensive outbound sales teams, while low-CLV self-serve segments need automated, low-touch acquisition funnels. This CLV-based budgeting ensures efficient capital allocation across your growth portfolio.
CLV (Customer Lifetime Value) and LTV (Lifetime Value) are the same metric with different abbreviations. Both represent the total expected revenue from a customer over their relationship with your business. LTV is more commonly used in SaaS and startup contexts, while CLV is standard in academic and traditional business literature.
Churn rate has an inverse relationship with CLV. If you cut your monthly churn from 5% to 2.5%, you double your CLV. This is why retention is often the highest-leverage growth strategy — even small improvements in churn create large gains in customer lifetime value.
Simple CLV is useful for quick comparisons and benchmarking. Discounted CLV accounts for the time value of money and is more appropriate for financial planning, investor presentations, and long-term strategic decisions. The discounted model yields a lower, more conservative value.
Use your gross margin after cost of goods sold (COGS) or cost of revenue. For SaaS, this typically includes hosting costs, support team expenses, and payment processing fees. Most SaaS companies have 70-85% gross margins. For e-commerce, margins range from 20-60%.
Calculate CLV separately for each segment by using segment-specific ARPU, churn rate, and gross margin. Enterprise customers might have higher ARPU and lower churn than SMB customers, resulting in dramatically different CLVs. This segmentation helps you allocate acquisition budgets appropriately.
There is no universal benchmark for CLV since it depends on your business model, market, and pricing. The important comparison is CLV relative to CAC. A healthy business typically has CLV at least 3 times CAC. SaaS companies with strong retention often achieve 5:1 or higher ratios.
The three main levers for increasing CLV are: reducing churn (strongest impact due to inverse relationship), increasing ARPU through pricing optimization or upsells, and improving gross margin through operational efficiency. Most companies see the fastest CLV gains from retention improvements.
The basic CLV formula uses a static ARPU. To account for expansion revenue (upsells, cross-sells), use net revenue ARPU that includes average expansion amounts. Alternatively, use the net revenue retention rate instead of simple retention in more advanced models.