
A 5% monthly churn rate is a crisis if you sell to enterprise buyers and a perfectly normal number if you sell low-priced software to small businesses. That single fact is why most founders misuse a SaaS churn rate benchmark: they compare their number to an industry average that was never built for their segment, then either panic over a healthy number or relax over a dangerous one.
This article is the reference you use to avoid that. It lays out what good and bad churn rates actually look like — by customer segment (SMB, mid-market, enterprise), by business model (B2B vs. B2C), by contract size, and by the two flavors of churn that matter (logo vs. revenue, gross vs. net). Then it shows you how to read your own number against the right benchmark and decide whether you have a real problem.
What this article does not do is re-teach the mechanics. If you need the formulas or a step-by-step plan to bring churn down, those live in dedicated guides — how to calculate your SaaS churn rate, how to reduce SaaS churn, and the broader SaaS churn overview. Here, the job is benchmarking: knowing what number you should be hitting before you spend a dollar trying to move it.
Why a Single Churn Benchmark Is Almost Always Wrong
There is no such thing as “the” SaaS churn benchmark. The number that matters is the benchmark for a company like yours, and “like yours” is defined by three things: who you sell to, how much you charge, and how long your contracts run.
Here is the core idea, and it comes straight from how acquirers and experienced operators think: churn is one of the best numerical measures of product-market fit, but it is always relative to price and segment. A company charging $1,000 a year with 90% retention has product-market fit at that price. The same product at $100,000 a year that loses every customer does not have product-market fit at that price — even though the software didn’t change. Your churn number only means something when it’s read against the segment and price point it was earned at.
That’s why a blended, company-wide churn rate is the least useful number in your business. It averages together segments that behave nothing alike. The right move — covered in depth in how to reduce SaaS churn — is to segment your churn by company size, vertical, and acquisition channel, because 100% of the time there are significant variances across those segments. Benchmarking starts by finding the right comparison group, not by Googling an average.
Churn Rate Benchmarks by Customer Segment
The single largest driver of “normal” churn is the size of the customer you serve. Smaller customers churn more — they’re more price-sensitive, they go out of business more often, and the cost to acquire them is low enough that the business model tolerates it. Larger customers churn less because switching costs are high, contracts are longer, and the software is usually embedded in mission-critical workflows.
Here are the rough monthly logo churn benchmarks by segment for B2B SaaS. “Logo churn” means the percentage of customers (logos) you lose, as opposed to revenue lost — we’ll separate those shortly.
| Segment | Typical ACV | Good Monthly Churn | Acceptable | Warning Sign |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SMB | < $10K | 3–5% | 5–7% | > 7% |
| Mid-Market | $10K–$100K | 1.5–3% | 3–4% | > 4% |
| Enterprise | > $100K | < 1% | 1–1.5% | > 1.5% |
Read this table the right way. If you sell to small businesses and you’re at 4% monthly churn, you are inside the healthy band — chasing it down to 1% may cost more than it returns. If you sell to enterprise and you’re at 3% monthly, you have a serious retention problem hiding behind a number that would be celebrated at an SMB company.
ACV here means Annual Contract Value (ACV) — the recurring revenue a single customer contract is worth per year. It’s the cleanest proxy for which segment you’re in, because it captures both price and customer size in one number.
Why Monthly and Annual Churn Aren’t the Same Number
Before going further, fix the most common math error in churn benchmarking. Monthly churn does not annualize by multiplying by 12. Churn compounds — each month you lose a percentage of who’s left, not of who you started with.
The correct conversion is:
Annual Churn = 1 − (1 − Monthly Churn)^12
The difference is large enough to change decisions:
| Monthly Churn | Naive × 12 (Wrong) | Compounded Annual (Correct) |
|---|---|---|
| 1% | 12% | 11.4% |
| 2% | 24% | 21.5% |
| 3% | 36% | 30.6% |
| 5% | 60% | 46.0% |
| 7% | 84% | 58.1% |
A SaaS company at 5% monthly churn isn’t losing 60% of customers a year — it’s losing 46%. Still painful, but the wrong formula overstates it by 14 points and can send you into a panic that distorts your decisions. Whenever you compare a monthly benchmark to an annual one, convert with the compound formula first.
Logo Churn vs. Revenue Churn: Benchmark the Right One
“Churn rate” is ambiguous until you say which churn you mean. The two that matter are logo churn and revenue churn, and they answer different questions.
- Logo churn (customer churn). The percentage of customers who cancel entirely. Logo Churn Rate = Customers Lost / Starting Customers × 100%. This is the number to watch when each customer is roughly the same size — common in SMB, where you have many small, similar accounts.
- Revenue churn (MRR churn). The percentage of recurring revenue lost from cancellations and downgrades. Revenue Churn Rate = Churned MRR / Starting MRR × 100%, where MRR is Monthly Recurring Revenue. This is the number to watch when customers vary widely in size — common in mid-market and enterprise, where losing one big account hurts far more than losing several small ones.
The gap between the two tells you something. If your revenue churn is lower than your logo churn, you’re losing small accounts but keeping the big ones — often a healthy sign. If revenue churn is higher than logo churn, you’re losing your most valuable customers, which is the more dangerous pattern even if the logo number looks fine.
Benchmark whichever one reflects how your revenue is actually distributed. A founder who watches only logo churn in an enterprise business can miss a slow bleed of high-value accounts entirely.
Gross vs. Net Revenue Retention: The Benchmark That Predicts Your Ceiling
Churn rate measures what you lose. Retention measures what you keep — and one retention metric, Net Revenue Retention, is the single number that determines whether your existing customer base can grow on its own. These two are the inverse framing of churn, and acquirers care about them more than the raw churn rate.
Gross Revenue Retention (GRR) measures how much recurring revenue you keep before any expansion:
GRR = (Starting MRR − Contraction MRR − Churned MRR) / Starting MRR × 100%
GRR can never exceed 100% — it’s pure leakage. Contraction here means revenue lost when a customer downgrades but stays (distinct from churn, where they leave entirely).
Net Revenue Retention (NRR) adds expansion revenue from existing customers back in:
NRR = (Starting MRR + Expansion MRR − Contraction MRR − Churned MRR) / Starting MRR × 100%
NRR can exceed 100%. When it does, your existing base grows without acquiring a single new customer. Below 100%, you’re in exponential decay — you must acquire new customers just to stand still.
Here are the benchmark bands for both:
| Metric | < 80% | 80–90% | 90–95% | 95–100% | 100–110% | 110–130% | > 130% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GRR | Retention problem | Below average | Good | Excellent | — | — | — |
| NRR | Leaky bucket | Net contraction | Stable, no organic growth | Stable | Healthy — base grows | Strong expansion | Elite |
By segment, the GRR targets track the churn benchmarks. For SMB-focused SaaS, an annual GRR in the low-to-mid 80s (roughly 82–85%) is a reasonable sign of product-market fit. For enterprise SaaS selling to large companies, you should be shooting for GRR in the very high 90s — 98% to 100%. If you sell enterprise and your GRR is sitting in the 80s, that’s not a benchmark you’ve met; it’s a flashing warning that the product isn’t sticky enough for the price you’re charging.
For the full mechanics and worked examples, see the dedicated guides on gross revenue retention and net revenue retention.
B2B vs. B2C Churn Benchmarks
Most of the numbers above assume B2B SaaS. B2C SaaS plays by different rules and needs different benchmarks.
| Dimension | B2B SaaS | B2C SaaS |
|---|---|---|
| Typical monthly logo churn | 1–5% (by segment) | 5–10%+ |
| Contract structure | Annual or multi-year common | Mostly monthly, easy to cancel |
| What drives churn | Wrong ICP, weak onboarding, low usage | Price sensitivity, novelty wearing off, seasonality |
| Healthy expectation | NRR can exceed 100% via seat/usage expansion | NRR rarely exceeds 100%; focus on slowing decay |
B2C churn looks alarming next to B2B because consumer subscriptions are easy to cancel and rarely have switching costs. A consumer app at 6% monthly churn may be performing normally for its category, while a B2B platform at 6% monthly is in trouble. Don’t import a B2B benchmark into a B2C business or vice versa — the comparison is meaningless.
Churn Benchmarks by Contract Length
Contract length is the lever hiding inside every segment benchmark. The reason enterprise churn is low isn’t only that the customers are big — it’s that they sign annual and multi-year contracts that simply can’t churn mid-term. A monthly-billed customer can leave in 30 days; an annual customer is locked in for a year regardless of how they feel in month three.
| Contract Term | Effect on Measured Churn | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly | Highest | Customers can cancel any month; churn shows up immediately |
| Annual | Lower | Churn can only occur at renewal — once per year per customer |
| Multi-year | Lowest | Churn deferred 2–3 years; revenue contractually locked |
This is why two companies with the same underlying customer happiness can post very different churn numbers — one bills monthly, the other annually. When you benchmark, account for your contract mix. Moving customers from monthly to annual billing is one of the most reliable ways to lower measured churn, and it improves the quality of your revenue in the eyes of an acquirer, who pays the highest multiples for revenue that is contractually recurring and hard to cancel.
When Customers Churn: The First-90-Days Benchmark
There’s a timing benchmark that matters as much as the rate: a large share of churn happens early. A common pattern is that roughly 70% of churn occurs in the first 90 days after signup — before the customer ever reaches the value they were promised.
This connects to a metric more predictive than churn itself: the percentage of customers who hit their value milestone. Every sales and marketing pitch promises an outcome — save 20% of your time, increase sales 15% within 90 days. The value milestone is whether the customer actually achieves that promised outcome within the promised window. If you don’t know what percentage of your customers hit it, you can’t explain your churn, because customers who never reach the milestone are the ones who leave. You’re not in the software business; you’re in the outcome-delivery business that happens to use software.
The benchmarking implication: if your early-life churn is high, the problem isn’t a retention tactic you’re missing — it’s that customers aren’t reaching value fast enough. That’s an onboarding and product-fit issue. The fix lives in reducing SaaS churn and in tightening your ideal customer profile so you stop signing customers who were never going to succeed.
How to Read Your Number Against the Benchmark
Here’s the four-step process to turn a benchmark from trivia into a decision.
- Identify your real segment. Use your ACV, not your aspiration. If your average contract is $6,000 a year, you’re an SMB-segment company for benchmarking purposes even if you’d like to be enterprise. Compare against the SMB band.
- Pick the right churn metric. Many similar-sized accounts → watch logo churn. Wide range of account sizes → watch revenue churn and NRR. Selling on stickiness and expansion → NRR is your headline number.
- Convert to a common time basis. If your benchmark is annual and your number is monthly, use the compound formula — never multiply by 12.
- Segment before you conclude. Your blended number can sit inside the benchmark while a specific segment, vertical, or channel quietly bleeds. Find the segment that churns the least and the one that churns the most. The best customers you already have define the ideal customer profile you should orient acquisition around.
Only after these four steps does “we’re above benchmark” or “below benchmark” mean anything actionable.
What to Do When You’re Worse Than the Benchmark
Being above your segment’s churn benchmark isn’t automatically a marketing or customer-success problem. The root cause is usually one of three things, in this order of likelihood:
- Weak product-market fit at your price point. The product doesn’t deliver enough value for what you charge. Customers reach the end of the honeymoon and don’t see the outcome.
- The wrong customer segment. You’re acquiring customers who were never a fit. Their churn is a targeting problem, not a retention problem — and no amount of customer-success effort fixes a customer who shouldn’t have been sold to.
- A retention execution gap. Onboarding, support, or account management isn’t getting customers to value fast enough.
Notice that two of the three are acquisition and product problems, not retention tactics. That’s why “hire more customer-success managers” so often fails to move churn — it treats a fit problem as a coverage problem. The benchmark tells you whether you have a gap; diagnosing which of these three causes it is the work covered in the SaaS churn reduction guide.
Why Churn Benchmarks Matter for Valuation
For a founder building toward an exit, churn isn’t just an operating metric — it’s a valuation input. Churn caps your growth ceiling: if a large segment of customers leaves every year, all your sales effort goes toward replacing lost customers instead of growing. You can sell brilliantly and still flatline, because outflow matches inflow. That’s the ceiling on Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR), and it’s the first thing churn does to enterprise value.
Acquirers read churn as a proxy for risk and durability. Low churn and high NRR signal recurring revenue that will still be there in five years — exactly the revenue that earns the highest revenue multiples. A company hitting or beating its segment’s churn benchmark, with NRR above 100%, tells a buyer the base compounds on its own. A company above benchmark tells them every future dollar depends on a sales machine that has to keep running just to stand still. Same revenue today, very different multiple at exit.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a good SaaS churn rate benchmark?
It depends entirely on your segment. For B2B SaaS: good monthly logo churn is roughly 3–5% for SMB-focused products, 1.5–3% for mid-market, and under 1% for enterprise. There is no single “good” number — a 4% monthly churn rate is healthy for SMB and alarming for enterprise. Always benchmark against your own ACV tier.
How do I convert monthly churn to an annual churn rate?
Use the compound formula: Annual Churn = 1 − (1 − Monthly Churn)^12. Do not multiply monthly churn by 12 — churn compounds on the customers who remain, so the linear estimate overstates annual churn. For example, 2% monthly churn equals 21.5% annual churn, not 24%.
Should I benchmark logo churn or revenue churn?
Benchmark the metric that reflects how your revenue is distributed. If your accounts are roughly the same size (typical in SMB), logo churn is fine. If account sizes vary widely (typical in mid-market and enterprise), watch revenue churn and Net Revenue Retention (NRR), because losing one large account matters far more than losing several small ones.
What’s the difference between gross and net revenue retention benchmarks?
Gross Revenue Retention (GRR) measures only what you keep — it caps at 100% and good B2B targets range from low-80s (SMB) to high-90s (enterprise). Net Revenue Retention (NRR) adds expansion revenue and can exceed 100%; above 100% means your base grows on its own, and 110%+ is strong. GRR tells you about leakage; NRR tells you about growth potential.
Is B2C SaaS churn always higher than B2B?
Generally, yes. B2C subscriptions are easy to cancel and rarely carry switching costs, so monthly churn of 5–10% can be normal for a consumer app, while the same number signals trouble in B2B. Never apply a B2B benchmark to a B2C business — they’re different categories with different healthy ranges.
The Bottom Line
A churn benchmark is only useful once it’s matched to your segment, your churn metric, and your contract structure. Find your real ACV tier, pick logo or revenue churn based on how your revenue is distributed, convert everything to a common time basis with the compound formula, and segment before you draw a conclusion. Then the benchmark stops being a number you Googled and becomes a verdict on whether your product earns the price you charge — which is the same verdict an acquirer will reach when they price your company.

