Calculate the net growth rate of your SMS subscriber list after accounting for opt-outs and message failures.
The SMS List Growth Calculator measures the net change in your SMS subscriber list over a period. Unlike email, SMS lists experience higher opt-out rates (around 3–5% per campaign) because of the channel's immediacy and personal nature.
Net growth combines new opt-ins with opt-outs and carrier-level removals (invalid numbers, carrier blocks) to show whether your list is genuinely expanding. A healthy SMS list grows by 5–15% monthly after accounting for churn.
Tracking net list growth helps forecast future campaign reach, identify acquisition/retention imbalances, and plan budget allocation between list building and monetization.
Understanding this metric in precise terms allows marketing professionals to set realistic goals, track progress effectively, and refine their approach based on real performance data. Tracking this metric consistently enables marketing teams to identify campaign performance trends and reallocate budgets to the highest-performing channels before opportunities are lost.
Understanding this metric in precise terms allows marketing professionals to set realistic goals, track progress effectively, and refine their approach based on real performance data.
SMS lists churn faster than email lists due to higher opt-out rates. Tracking net growth ensures your list-building investment outpaces attrition. Without this metric, you might celebrate new subscribers while your net list shrinks. Consistent measurement creates a reliable baseline for evaluating campaign effectiveness and justifying marketing spend to stakeholders and executive leadership teams.
Net Growth = New Opt-Ins − Opt-Outs Growth Rate = (Net Growth ÷ Total Subscribers) × 100
Result: 10.63% net growth (850 net new)
From 8,000 subscribers, 1,200 new opt-ins minus 350 opt-outs gives 850 net new subscribers, a 10.63% growth rate. At this pace, your list will double in about 7 months.
SMS list management requires constant attention because the channel's intimacy leads to faster churn than email. Every campaign sheds a percentage of subscribers, so continuous acquisition is essential.
Diversify acquisition across website popups, checkout opt-in, keyword campaigns, email cross-promotion, and in-store signage. Diversification reduces dependency on any single source and smooths month-to-month growth.
Message relevance and frequency are the primary levers. Segment your list, personalize messages, and set clear expectations during opt-in. Welcome messages that confirm frequency help reduce surprises.
Project future list size using your current net growth rate. At 10% monthly net growth, a 5,000-subscriber list reaches 10,000 in about 7 months. Use these projections for revenue forecasting and budget planning.
A healthy SMS program grows 5–15% monthly. Growth above 15% is excellent and usually indicates strong acquisition efforts. Flat or negative growth means opt-outs and removals are outpacing new sign-ups.
The top reasons are too-frequent messaging, irrelevant content, and messages at inconvenient times. Sending more than 4–6 SMS per month to non-transactional subscribers significantly increases opt-out rates.
SMS opt-out rates per campaign (1–5%) are higher than email unsubscribe rates (0.1–0.5%). However, SMS "soft churn" (going inactive without unsubscribing) is much lower since people tend to read every SMS.
Never. Purchased SMS lists violate TCPA regulations and will result in massive opt-out rates, carrier blocks, and potential legal fines of $500–$1,500 per message. Build your list organically through proper opt-in.
Limit frequency to 2–4 messages per month, segment your list by interest, personalize messages, send at appropriate times, and always provide clear value in every message. Reviewing these factors periodically ensures your analysis stays current as conditions and requirements evolve over time.
Most industries see best results with 2–4 SMS per month. E-commerce can sometimes go higher during sales events. Monitor opt-out rates as you increase frequency—if they spike above 3%, scale back.