Calculate your email list churn rate from unsubscribes, bounces, and complaints. Identify retention problems quickly.
The Email List Churn Rate Calculator measures the percentage of subscribers you lose over a given period through unsubscribes, bounces, and spam complaints combined. Understanding churn is essential for long-term email marketing sustainability.
Every email list experiences natural churn. People change jobs, switch email providers, lose interest, or simply forget they signed up. The question isn't whether you'll lose subscribers—it's how fast you're losing them and whether your acquisition can keep up.
By tracking churn rate monthly, you can identify when retention is deteriorating and take corrective action before your list erodes. This calculator breaks down churn by cause so you know exactly where the losses are coming from.
Tracking this metric consistently enables marketing teams to identify campaign performance trends and reallocate budgets to the highest-performing channels before opportunities are lost. This measurement provides a critical foundation for marketing budget allocation, helping teams invest where they will achieve the greatest impact on brand awareness and revenue growth.
Churn rate is the flip side of list growth. Even if you're adding subscribers, high churn can negate your efforts. This calculator helps you quantify total subscriber loss and benchmark it against industry norms so you can prioritize retention alongside acquisition. This quantitative approach replaces gut-feel decisions with data-backed insights, enabling marketers to optimize budgets and maximize return on every dollar invested in campaigns.
Churn Rate = ((Unsubscribes + Bounces + Complaints) ÷ Total List Size) × 100
Result: 0.84% monthly churn
With 150 unsubscribes, 50 bounces, and 10 complaints on a 25,000-subscriber list, your monthly churn rate is 0.84%. Annualized, this means roughly 10% of your list will turn over in a year, which is well below the 25–30% industry average.
Churn rate captures the total rate of subscriber loss from all causes: voluntary unsubscribes, hard bounces, and spam complaints. It's the comprehensive measure of how fast your list is shrinking.
Monthly churn of 1% might seem small, but it compounds to about 11.4% annual loss. Add in natural email decay (addresses going inactive without formally unsubscribing) and total annual attrition can reach 25–30%.
Never make unsubscribing difficult—that just converts unsubscribes to spam complaints, which are far worse. Instead, offer frequency preferences, improve content relevance through segmentation, and provide value in every email.
Track churn rate per segment, not just overall. New subscribers in their first 30 days churn at 2–3× the rate of established subscribers. Understanding segment-level churn helps you target retention efforts where they matter most.
Monthly churn of 0.5–1.0% is considered normal. This translates to 6–12% annual churn from explicit actions. Including natural email address decay, total annual list attrition is typically 25–30%.
Unsubscribe rate only counts people who clicked the unsubscribe link. Churn rate includes unsubscribes plus bounces and spam complaints—all the ways you lose subscribers. It's a more complete picture of list loss.
No. Some churn is natural and healthy—people leave when your content no longer serves them. Trying to eliminate churn entirely (e.g., by making unsubscribing difficult) backfires with spam complaints.
Too-frequent emails, irrelevant content, poor list segmentation, not meeting subscriber expectations set at signup, and aggressive sales messaging all drive higher churn. Keeping detailed records of these calculations will streamline future planning and make it easier to track changes over time.
Only count permanent removals in churn. If your ESP retries soft bounces and they eventually deliver, those aren't churn. Only addresses permanently removed from your list (hard bounces, repeated soft bounces) count.
Each churned subscriber represents lost future revenue. If your average subscriber generates $5/month, losing 100 subscribers monthly costs $500/month in future revenue. Reducing churn by even 0.2% can have a significant financial impact.