Churn Rate (also called attrition rate or customer churn) is the percentage of customers, subscribers, or users who stop doing business with a company during a given time period. It is one of the most critical metrics in subscription-based businesses, SaaS platforms, telecommunications, banking, and any model that depends on recurring revenue. A high churn rate signals dissatisfaction, poor product-market fit, or competitive pressure — and directly erodes the revenue base that sustains long-term growth.
Churn Rate is the mirror image of Retention Rate. Together, these two metrics define the health of a company’s customer base. While acquisition metrics like Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) measure the cost of growing, churn measures the rate at which that growth is being undone. Reducing churn is almost always more cost-effective than acquiring new customers to replace lost ones.
Core Formula
The standard calculation for customer churn over a given period is:
Churn Rate (%) = (Customers Lost During Period ÷ Customers at Start of Period) × 100
Example
| Variable | Value |
|---|---|
|
Customers at start of month
|
1,000
|
|
Customers lost during month
|
45
|
|
Customers at end of month
|
955
|
|
Monthly Churn Rate
|
4.5%
|
Note: New customers acquired during the period are not counted in the starting base. This avoids distortion when a company is growing rapidly.
Types of Churn
1. Customer Churn (Logo Churn)
Customer churn refers to the number or percentage of individual accounts or subscribers that cancel or do not renew. This is the most straightforward form and is relevant for businesses that count customers as discrete entities — SaaS companies, streaming services, gyms, and insurance providers. It is sometimes called logo churn in B2B contexts, where each account represents a named company.
2. Revenue Churn (MRR Churn)
Revenue churn measures the loss of recurring revenue rather than the loss of customers. A company might retain the same number of customers but still experience revenue churn if customers downgrade their plans, reduce usage, or negotiate lower prices.
Revenue Churn Rate (%) = (MRR Lost During Period ÷ MRR at Start of Period) × 100
3. Gross Revenue Churn vs. Net Revenue Churn
| Metric | Definition | Formula |
|---|---|---|
|
Gross Revenue Churn
|
Revenue lost from cancellations and downgrades only
|
(Churned MRR + Downgrade MRR) ÷ Starting MRR × 100
|
|
Net Revenue Churn
|
Revenue lost after accounting for expansion revenue
|
(Churned MRR + Downgrade MRR − Expansion MRR) ÷ Starting MRR × 100
|
|
Net Revenue Retention (NRR)
|
Revenue retained including expansion; above 100% means existing customers are growing
|
(Starting MRR + Expansion MRR − Churned MRR − Downgrade MRR) ÷ Starting MRR × 100
|
4. Voluntary Churn
Voluntary churn occurs when a customer actively chooses to cancel. This is the most actionable form because it typically reflects dissatisfaction, budget decisions, or competitive switching — all of which can be addressed through product improvements, pricing strategies, or win-back campaigns.
5. Involuntary Churn (Passive Churn)
Involuntary churn occurs when a customer is lost not by choice but due to failed payment processing, expired credit cards, or billing errors. In many subscription businesses, involuntary churn accounts for 20–40% of total churn and is frequently overlooked as a recoverable loss.
Measurement Periods
| Period | Use Case | Annualisation Note |
|---|---|---|
|
Daily
|
High-volume consumer apps, mobile games, freemium tools
|
Annual = (1 − daily churn)^365 − 1
|
|
Monthly
|
Most SaaS, streaming, and subscription businesses
|
Annual ≈ 1 − (1 − monthly churn)^12
|
|
Quarterly
|
Enterprise SaaS with longer contract cycles
|
Annual ≈ 1 − (1 − quarterly churn)^4
|
|
Annual
|
Annual subscription models, insurance, B2B contracts
|
Direct — no annualisation needed
|
Caution: Simply multiplying monthly churn by 12 overstates the true annualised rate. The compounding formula above provides a more accurate conversion.
Industry Benchmarks
| Industry / Segment | Typical Monthly Churn | Typical Annual Churn |
|---|---|---|
|
SaaS — SMB-focused
|
3% – 7%
|
31% – 58%
|
|
SaaS — Mid-market
|
1% – 3%
|
11% – 31%
|
|
SaaS — Enterprise
|
0.5% – 1.5%
|
6% – 17%
|
|
Streaming / Media (B2C)
|
5% – 10%
|
46% – 72%
|
|
Telecommunications
|
1.5% – 3%
|
17% – 31%
|
|
Financial Services / Insurance
|
0.5% – 1.5%
|
6% – 17%
|
|
E-commerce Subscriptions
|
7% – 12%
|
58% – 78%
|
|
Fitness / Health Apps
|
8% – 15%
|
64% – 86%
|
|
Banking (current accounts)
|
<0.5%
|
<5%
|
Churn Rate and Customer Lifetime Value (CLV / LTV)
Churn Rate and Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) are inversely and mathematically linked. As churn rises, lifetime value falls — often dramatically. The standard LTV formula using churn rate is:
| Monthly Churn Rate | Implied Customer Lifetime | LTV (at $100/month ARPU) |
|---|---|---|
|
1%
|
100 months (~8.3 years)
|
$10,000
|
|
2%
|
50 months (~4.2 years)
|
$5,000
|
|
5%
|
20 months (~1.7 years)
|
$2,000
|
|
10%
|
10 months
|
$1,000
|
|
15%
|
~6.7 months
|
$667
|
Churn Rate and MRR
In SaaS and subscription businesses, churn is most directly felt through its impact on Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR). The fundamental MRR growth equation is:
Ending MRR = Starting MRR + New MRR + Expansion MRR − Churned MRR − Contraction MRR
This makes churn one of the four key levers of MRR growth alongside new customer acquisition, upsell/cross-sell, and price increases. A business growing at 10% new MRR per month but experiencing 8% MRR churn achieves only 2% net growth — far below what the top-line acquisition number alone might suggest.
Cohort Analysis for Churn
Aggregate churn rates can obscure important patterns. Cohort analysis — tracking groups of customers who started at the same time — reveals how churn evolves over a customer’s lifecycle and whether product improvements are genuinely improving retention over time.
| Cohort (Start Month) | Month 1 | Month 3 | Month 6 | Month 12 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
January 2023
|
95% retained
|
82% retained
|
71% retained
|
58% retained
|
|
April 2023
|
96% retained
|
85% retained
|
74% retained
|
62% retained
|
|
July 2023
|
97% retained
|
87% retained
|
77% retained
|
65% retained
|
|
October 2023
|
98% retained
|
89% retained
|
80% retained
|
—
|
Common Causes of Churn
| Category | Common Causes |
|---|---|
|
Product Fit
|
Product does not solve the core problem; missing features; poor UX; bugs or reliability issues
|
|
Onboarding Failure
|
Customer never reaches the “aha moment”; poor activation; insufficient training or support
|
|
Value Erosion
|
Competitor offers better value; ROI not demonstrated; customer needs have changed
|
|
Pricing / Budget
|
Cost reduction initiatives; economic downturn; perceived poor value relative to price
|
|
Customer Success Failure
|
Slow support response; unresolved tickets; health scores not monitored proactively
|
|
Involuntary
|
Failed payment; expired card; billing system errors
|
|
External Factors
|
Customer acquisition, bankruptcy, or strategic pivot; regulatory changes
|
Strategies to Reduce Churn
1. Improve Onboarding
The highest-risk period for churn in most SaaS businesses is the first 30–90 days. Customers who do not experience the core value of a product quickly — reaching the time-to-value milestone — are far more likely to churn. Investing in guided onboarding flows, in-app tooltips, dedicated onboarding calls, and success milestones dramatically reduces early churn.
2. Proactive Customer Success
Rather than waiting for customers to submit cancellation requests, proactive Customer Success Management (CSM) uses health scores — composite metrics tracking login frequency, feature adoption, support ticket volume, and usage depth — to identify at-risk accounts before they churn. This allows CSMs to intervene with training, business reviews, or commercial concessions while there is still time to reverse course.
3. Product Stickiness and Integrations
Products that integrate deeply into a customer’s workflow become progressively harder to replace. The more data, custom configurations, and integrations a customer builds within a platform, the higher the perceived cost of switching and the lower the churn risk.
4. Dunning Management for Involuntary Churn
Involuntary churn from failed payments can be addressed through dunning — automated retry logic, pre-expiry card update reminders, and grace periods. Smart retry schedules and automated email sequences prompting customers to update their payment details can recover 1–3% of MRR that would otherwise be silently lost.
5. Pause Instead of Cancel
Offering customers the option to pause their subscription rather than cancel outright is particularly effective in B2C contexts. A paused customer has not closed the relationship and many will reactivate, especially for businesses with seasonal usage patterns.
6. Win-Back Campaigns
Former customers represent a uniquely qualified audience for re-engagement. They already understand the product, have a track record with the company, and may have churned for reasons that have since been resolved. Win-back campaigns with personalised messaging, feature highlights, and introductory pricing can reactivate a meaningful percentage of churned customers at a fraction of new acquisition cost.
Churn Rate in Investor Analysis
For investors evaluating SaaS and subscription businesses, churn rate is one of the most scrutinised non-GAAP metrics. It sits at the intersection of growth quality, customer satisfaction, and long-term revenue visibility. Businesses with demonstrably low churn and high NRR command significantly higher Enterprise Value / Revenue multiples than structurally similar businesses with high churn.
| Company | Ticker | Disclosed Retention Metric |
|---|---|---|
|
Salesforce
|
CRM
|
Attrition rate disclosed in annual reports
|
|
Snowflake
|
SNOW
|
Net Revenue Retention Rate (NRR) — consistently 120–160%+
|
|
Datadog
|
DDOG
|
Net Revenue Retention Rate — consistently 120–130%+
|
|
HubSpot
|
HUBS
|
Customer retention and churn disclosed in 10-K
|
|
Netflix
|
NFLX
|
Subscriber additions and cancellations by region
|
|
Spotify
|
SPOT
|
Monthly Active Users and Premium subscriber churn trends
|
Churn Rate vs. Retention Rate
| Metric | Definition | Relationship |
|---|---|---|
|
Churn Rate
|
% of customers lost in a period
|
|
|
Retention Rate
|
% of customers retained in a period
|
|
|
Gross Revenue Retention (GRR)
|
Revenue retained excluding expansion; max = 100%
|
GRR = 100% − Gross Revenue Churn Rate
|
|
Net Revenue Retention (NRR)
|
Revenue retained including expansion; can exceed 100%
|
NRR = GRR + Expansion Revenue Rate
|
Churn Across the SaaS Metrics Stack
| Metric | Relationship to Churn |
|---|---|
|
MRR
|
|
|
CAC
|
High churn means CAC must be recovered in a shorter window; degrades unit economics
|
|
LTV / CLV
|
LTV = ARPU ÷ Churn Rate; churn is the denominator of LTV
|
|
LTV:CAC Ratio
|
Deteriorates as churn rises; below 1:1 means every customer acquired destroys value
|
|
NRR
|
Shows whether expansion revenue offsets churn losses
|
|
CAC Payback Period
|
Must be shorter than average customer lifetime (= 1 ÷ Churn Rate) for positive unit economics
|
|
Conversion Rate
|
High acquisition with high churn simply fills a leaky bucket; churn constrains sustainable growth
|
Tools for Measuring and Managing Churn
| Tool | Category | Primary Use |
|---|---|---|
|
Customer Success Platform
|
Health scoring, CSM workflows, churn prediction
|
|
|
Customer Success Platform
|
Segmented health scores, renewal tracking
|
|
|
SaaS Analytics
|
MRR tracking, cohort analysis, churn reporting
|
|
|
SaaS Analytics
|
Subscription metrics dashboard, churn forecasting
|
|
|
Subscription Intelligence
|
Churn tracking and involuntary churn recovery
|
|
|
Product Analytics
|
Behavioural cohort analysis, feature adoption vs. churn
|
|
|
Product Analytics
|
Retention curves, event-based cohort analysis
|
Related Terms
- Retention Rate — Inverse of churn; percentage of customers retained in a period
- Net Revenue Retention (NRR) — Revenue retained including upsell/expansion; can exceed 100%
- Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR) — Normalised monthly revenue from subscriptions; directly impacted by churn
- Customer Lifetime Value (CLV / LTV) — Total revenue expected from a customer; inversely related to churn rate
- Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) — Cost to acquire one customer; effectiveness depends on churn-adjusted LTV
- Customer Health Score — Composite metric used to predict churn risk proactively
- Dunning — Automated billing retry and communication process to recover involuntary churn
- Cohort Analysis — Tracking groups of customers over time to understand retention behaviour
- LTV:CAC Ratio — Key unit economics ratio; deteriorates as churn increases
- Rule of 40 — SaaS benchmark combining growth rate and profit margin; impacted by churn’s effect on net growth
- ARPU — Average Revenue Per User; combined with churn rate to calculate LTV
- Time-to-Value (TTV) — Speed at which a new customer reaches their first success milestone; strongly predictive of early churn
External Resources
- SaaStr — Churn Articles and Benchmarks
- OpenView Partners — SaaS Benchmarks Report
- Bain & Company — The Value of Keeping the Right Customers
- ProfitWell — Churn Rate:
 The Complete Guide - Gainsight — The Essential Guide to Customer Churn
Disclaimer
The information provided on this page is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or business advice. Churn rate benchmarks and formulas are generalised and may not reflect the specific circumstances of any individual company or industry segment. Always consult qualified financial, business, or technical advisors before making decisions based on metrics analysis.