Calculate the average revenue each email subscriber generates. Optimize your list for maximum per-subscriber revenue.
The Revenue per Subscriber (RPS) Calculator measures the average revenue each active subscriber generates over a given period. Unlike revenue per email, which measures efficiency per send, RPS measures the overall monetization of each person on your list.
RPS is a critical metric for setting acceptable subscriber acquisition costs. If each subscriber generates $3 per month, you can justify spending up to $9–12 on acquisition (3–4 months payback). It's also useful for comparing segments and identifying which subscriber cohorts are most valuable.
Tracking RPS monthly helps you detect monetization trends—whether your email program is getting better at converting subscribers to buyers or losing its effectiveness over time.
Integrating this calculation into regular reporting cycles ensures that strategic marketing decisions are grounded in measurable outcomes rather than intuition or anecdotal evidence. Precise measurement of this value supports data-driven marketing decisions and helps teams demonstrate clear return on investment to stakeholders and executive leadership.
Revenue per subscriber tells you how well you're monetizing your email audience. It directly informs how much you should spend to acquire each new subscriber and helps you evaluate the quality of different acquisition channels. Data-driven tracking enables proactive campaign management, allowing teams to scale successful tactics and cut underperforming initiatives before budgets are depleted unnecessarily.
Revenue per Subscriber = Email Revenue ÷ Active Subscribers
Result: $3.00 per subscriber
With $30,000 in email-attributed revenue from 10,000 active subscribers, your RPS is $3.00 per month. Over a 24-month average lifespan, each subscriber is worth approximately $72 in lifetime value.
Revenue per subscriber measures the average amount of revenue each active email subscriber generates over a specific time period, usually monthly. It's the subscriber-level equivalent of revenue per email.
Knowing your RPS helps you set rational subscriber acquisition budgets. If a subscriber is worth $3/month with a 24-month lifespan ($72 LTV), spending $15–25 on acquisition makes economic sense.
Not all subscribers are equal. VIP subscribers might generate $20/month while casual browsers generate $0.50. Segmenting RPS reveals where your revenue really comes from and where to focus retention efforts.
The three levers are: increasing purchase frequency, increasing average order value, and improving conversion rate from email to purchase. Personalization, lifecycle marketing, and smart product recommendations move all three.
RPS measures revenue per subscriber over a period (usually monthly). It includes subscribers who haven't purchased. Customer LTV measures total revenue from actual customers. RPS is typically lower because not all subscribers buy.
It varies enormously by industry. E-commerce sees $1–$5/month, SaaS $2–$10/month, and info products $0.50–$3/month. Your specific number depends on product pricing, purchase frequency, and email engagement.
No. Only include active subscribers who were on your list and receiving emails during the period. Including churned subscribers dilutes the metric and understates your monetization efficiency.
Better segmentation, personalized product recommendations, optimized email frequency, lifecycle-based campaigns, and improved conversion rate all increase RPS. Focus on sending the right offer to the right person at the right time.
Multiply RPS by average subscriber lifespan to get subscriber lifetime value. Then set your max acquisition cost at 25–33% of that LTV to maintain profitability while still investing in growth.
Yes. Compare promotional emails, automated sequences, and newsletters. You may find that automated flows generate 3–5× the RPS of broadcast campaigns, justifying more investment in automation.