Calculate how many months it takes to recover customer acquisition cost through gross-margin-adjusted revenue. Target under 12 months for SaaS.
The CAC payback period measures how many months it takes for a customer to generate enough gross margin to recover the cost of acquiring them. It's a critical SaaS metric that bridges customer acquisition cost (CAC) and unit economics, answering the fundamental question: how quickly does your investment in acquiring a customer pay for itself?
A shorter payback period means faster capital recovery, better cash flow, and more capital available for reinvestment in growth. SaaS companies targeting a payback period under 12 months are generally considered efficient, while those under 6 months are exceptional. Payback periods above 18 months strain cash reserves and increase the risk that customers churn before the investment is recovered.
This calculator computes your CAC payback period from acquisition cost, average revenue per user, and gross margin. It shows the break-even timeline, compares your result to benchmarks, and models how changes to each input affect payback speed.
Knowing your CAC payback period tells you how long capital is "locked up" in customer acquisition. This calculator shows exactly when customers become profitable, benchmarks your efficiency against industry standards, and reveals which levers (CAC reduction, ARPU increase, or margin improvement) would have the biggest impact on payback speed. Instant recalculation lets you test different assumptions side by side, giving you the confidence to act on data rather than gut instinct.
CAC Payback Period (months) = CAC ÷ (Monthly ARPU × Gross Margin %) Monthly Gross Margin per Customer = ARPU × Gross Margin Annualized Payback = CAC Payback ÷ 12 (years)
Result: CAC Payback = 12.5 months
With $5,000 CAC, $500/mo ARPU, and 80% gross margin, the monthly gross margin per customer is $500 × 0.80 = $400. Payback = $5,000 ÷ $400 = 12.5 months. This is right at the target threshold — reducing CAC by 20% would bring payback to 10 months, well within the healthy range.
Visualize CAC payback as a timeline. Month 0 starts with a negative balance equal to your CAC. Each month, gross margin per customer reduces that balance. The break-even point is where cumulative gross margin equals CAC. Months beyond break-even represent pure profit contribution from that customer.
Different acquisition channels have dramatically different payback periods. Organic and referral channels often show 3–6 month payback because CAC is near zero. Paid search might show 12–18 months. Outbound enterprise sales can take 18–24 months. Analyzing payback by channel helps you allocate budget to the most efficient channels.
CAC payback directly impacts cash management. If average payback is 12 months and you acquire 100 customers per month at $5K CAC, you have $6M in "unrecovered" acquisition cost on your books at any time. Shortening payback to 6 months cuts that working capital requirement in half, freeing cash for other investments.
For SaaS, under 12 months is the standard target. Under 6 months is excellent and suggests room to invest more in acquisition. 12–18 months is acceptable for enterprise SaaS with high contract values. Above 18 months is a warning sign, especially if your average customer lifetime is under 3 years.
Not all revenue is available to "pay back" acquisition costs — some goes to hosting, support, and delivery. Gross margin represents the portion of revenue that actually contributes to recovering CAC and generating profit. Using raw revenue overstates how quickly you recover your investment.
CAC payback measures timing (when you break even), while LTV/CAC measures magnitude (total return on investment). A 6-month payback with 4-year customer lifetime gives an LTV/CAC of about 8:1. Both metrics are important: payback affects cash flow management, LTV/CAC affects overall investment returns.
Both. Blended payback gives an overall view, but segmented analysis (by plan tier, acquisition channel, or customer size) reveals which segments are most efficient. You might find that self-serve customers have 3-month payback while enterprise customers take 18 months, guiding resource allocation.
Three levers: reduce CAC (better targeting, content marketing, referrals), increase ARPU (upsells, price increases, premium tiers), or improve gross margin (infrastructure optimization, support automation). Often the easiest win is reducing low-performing acquisition spend rather than increasing ARPU.
They serve different purposes. In cash-constrained startups, payback period is crucial because it determines how quickly capital recycles. For well-funded companies, LTV/CAC matters more because it measures total return. Most investors look at both metrics together to understand both timing and magnitude of returns.