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LTV:CAC Ratio: What It Is and Why 3:1 Is the Minimum

The LTV:CAC ratio is the most important measure of SaaS unit economics. Learn what it means, why 3:1 is the minimum threshold, and how to improve your ratio.

If you could only track one metric to understand the health of your SaaS business, the LTV:CAC ratio would be a strong contender. It captures the fundamental economics of your business model: what it costs to acquire a customer versus how much revenue that customer generates over their lifetime.

What Is LTV:CAC?

The LTV:CAC ratio compares Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) to Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC). It tells you whether each dollar spent on acquisition generates enough long-term revenue to build a profitable business.

The formula is:

LTV:CAC = Customer Lifetime Value / Customer Acquisition Cost

Calculate your LTV with our LTV calculator and your CAC with our CAC calculator.

Why 3:1 Is the Minimum

Industry benchmarks consistently point to 3:1 as the minimum healthy LTV:CAC ratio. Here's why:

  • Below 3:1: Your unit economics are fragile. Any increase in churn, drop in pricing, or rise in acquisition costs puts you in negative territory
  • 3:1 to 5:1: Healthy range. You're generating good returns on acquisition spend
  • Above 5:1: You may be under-investing in growth. Consider spending more on acquisition to capture market share

The 3:1 minimum accounts for overhead costs not included in CAC (G&A, R&D, facilities) and provides a buffer for market fluctuations.

How to Calculate LTV

Customer Lifetime Value depends on three inputs:

LTV = ARPU × Gross Margin / Churn Rate

For example, if your ARPU is $100/month, gross margin is 80%, and monthly churn is 5%:

LTV = $100 × 0.80 / 0.05 = $1,600

If your CAC is $400, your LTV:CAC ratio is 4:1 — a healthy business.

Use our LTV calculator for your specific numbers.

How to Improve Your Ratio

Increase LTV

  • Reduce churn: Every point of churn reduction significantly increases LTV. Track churn with our churn calculator
  • Increase ARPU: Raise prices, encourage upgrades, or add usage-based components
  • Improve gross margin: Optimize infrastructure costs and delivery efficiency

Decrease CAC

  • Focus on high-conversion channels: Double down on organic and referral channels
  • Improve sales efficiency: Shorten sales cycles and reduce wasted prospecting
  • Product-led growth: Let virality and word-of-mouth reduce acquisition costs

The Complete Picture

The LTV:CAC ratio is most powerful when tracked alongside other metrics. Use our SaaS Metrics Dashboard to see how changes in churn, pricing, or acquisition costs affect your LTV:CAC ratio in real time.

Track your LTV:CAC ratio with our LTV calculator and CAC calculator.