Predict Customer Lifetime Value using AOV, purchase frequency, and lifespan. Forecast NPV of future customer margins for marketing budget decisions.
Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) prediction estimates the total revenue or profit a customer will generate over their entire relationship with your business. It's the most important metric for determining how much you can afford to spend acquiring customers.
This calculator supports two common CLV models: the simple formula (AOV × purchase frequency × customer lifespan) and the NPV model that discounts future cash flows to present value. The NPV approach is more accurate because a dollar received in 3 years is worth less than a dollar received today.
Accurate CLV prediction transforms marketing from a cost center into an investment decision. When you know that a customer is worth $2,400 over their lifetime, spending $300 to acquire them is a clear win — even if the first transaction is unprofitable.
Tracking this metric consistently enables marketing teams to identify campaign performance trends and reallocate budgets to the highest-performing channels before opportunities are lost.
CLV prediction determines your maximum customer acquisition cost, channel profitability, and retention investment budget. Without it, you either over-spend on unprofitable customers or under-invest in high-value acquisition channels. Precise quantification supports A/B testing and performance benchmarking, ensuring that optimization efforts are grounded in statistical evidence rather than anecdotal observations alone.
Simple CLV = AOV × Purchase Frequency × Lifespan Margin CLV = Simple CLV × Gross Margin % NPV CLV = Σ (Annual Margin / (1 + r)^t) for t = 1 to Lifespan Max CAC = Margin CLV × Target CLV:CAC Ratio
Result: Simple CLV: $1,600 | Margin CLV: $640 | NPV CLV: $484 | Max CAC: $161
Annual revenue = $80 × 4 = $320. Over 5 years = $1,600. At 40% margin = $640 total margin. Discounted at 10% annually: $128/(1.1) + $128/(1.21) + $128/(1.331) + $128/(1.4641) + $128/(1.6105) = $484 NPV. Max CAC (at 3:1 CLV:CAC) = $484/3 = $161.
CLV is the north star for data-driven marketing. It connects acquisition spending, retention investment, and pricing decisions into a single framework. Companies that maximize CLV — not just short-term revenue — build sustainable competitive advantages through profitable customer relationships.
Average CLV masks important variation. Segment CLV by acquisition channel, product line, geography, or customer demographics. You may find that customers from organic search have 3x the CLV of social media customers, fundamentally changing how you allocate your acquisition budget.
Three levers: increase AOV (through upselling, cross-selling, and pricing), increase purchase frequency (through retention marketing, loyalty programs, and product extensions), and increase lifespan (through customer success, satisfaction, and switching costs). Even small improvements in each lever compound to dramatically increase CLV.
Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) is the total net profit expected from a customer over the entire duration of their relationship with your business. It combines transaction value, frequency, retention, and margin to produce a single value representing a customer's worth.
Simple CLV adds up all future revenue without discounting. But a dollar received in year 5 is worth less than a dollar today (due to inflation, opportunity cost, risk). NPV discounts future cash flows, giving a more accurate present-day valuation of the customer.
Use your company's weighted average cost of capital (WACC) or a rate reflecting the risk of losing the customer. 8–15% is typical for most businesses. Higher risk businesses (high churn) should use higher discount rates.
CLV determines your maximum customer acquisition cost (CAC). If CLV = $500 and your target CLV:CAC ratio is 3:1, your max CAC is $167. Channels that can acquire customers at or below this cost are profitable over the customer's lifetime.
A ratio of 3:1 or higher is considered healthy — the customer generates 3x their acquisition cost in lifetime profit. Below 1:1, you're losing money. Between 1:1 and 3:1 may be acceptable depending on growth strategy and margin.
Analyze your customer retention data. If your annual retention rate is 80%, average lifespan is approximately 1 / (1 − 0.80) = 5 years. For subscription businesses, track cohort survival curves. For transactional businesses, define "active" and measure time until churn.
Margin-based CLV is more useful for budget decisions because it reflects actual profit. Revenue-based CLV overstates how much you can spend on acquisition. Always use margin (after COGS) to determine your acquisition budget.