
The average churn rate for SaaS companies is one of the most requested benchmarks in the industry and one of the most misleading. The moment you compare your company to a single “industry average,” you’ve already made the mistake that keeps most founders stuck: you’re treating churn as one number when it’s actually five or six different numbers hiding inside a blended figure.
Here’s the short version before we get into the data. Across B2B SaaS, blended monthly revenue churn lands somewhere around 3% to 3.5%, which compounds to roughly 30% to 35% a year. But that “average” is built from companies selling $20/month tools to small businesses sitting in the same dataset as companies selling $250,000/year platforms to the Fortune 500. Those two businesses have almost nothing in common, and neither does their churn. If you anchor on the average, you’ll either panic over a number that’s fine for your segment or feel comfortable about a number that’s quietly killing your valuation.
This article gives you the real benchmarks broken out by segment, the compounding math that makes small churn percentages enormous, and the one number most management teams never calculate — the number that actually tells you whether you have a retention problem.
What “Churn Rate” Actually Means (Two Numbers, Not One)
Before benchmarking anything, you have to be precise about which churn you’re measuring, because the word covers two very different metrics.
Logo churn (also called customer churn) measures how many customers you lost. The formula is straightforward:
Customer Churn Rate = Customers Lost ÷ Starting Customers × 100%
Revenue churn (also called MRR churn) measures how much recurring revenue you lost. MRR stands for monthly recurring revenue — the predictable subscription dollars you bill each month.
Revenue Churn Rate = Churned MRR ÷ Starting MRR × 100%
These two numbers can tell completely different stories. If you lose ten tiny customers and keep your three biggest accounts, your logo churn looks awful while your revenue churn barely moves. If you lose one whale and keep fifty small accounts, the reverse is true. Investors and acquirers care most about revenue churn, because that’s the number that determines whether your recurring revenue base is leaking. When this article quotes a benchmark, I’ll specify which one it is.
There’s a third concept worth defining now because it changes how the benchmarks read. Net revenue retention (NRR) takes your starting revenue, subtracts churn and downgrades, then adds back the expansion revenue from existing customers who upgraded or bought more. A company can have meaningful revenue churn and still post NRR above 100% if its expansion outruns its losses. That’s why you’ll see “average churn” and “average retention” benchmarks that seem to contradict each other — they’re measuring different things. For the full mechanics, see net revenue retention and the net revenue churn formula.
The Compounding Trap: Why 5% Monthly Isn’t 60% Annual
The single most common mistake I see founders make with churn is multiplying the monthly rate by twelve to get the annual rate. It feels right. It’s wrong, and it always makes your churn look worse than it is.
Churn compounds. Each month, you lose a percentage of what’s left after the prior month’s losses, not a percentage of the original base. The correct conversion is:
Annual Churn = 1 − (1 − Monthly Churn)^12
Run the realistic numbers and the gap between the naive estimate and the real figure is large:
| Monthly Churn | Naive (×12) | Actual Annual Churn | What Survives the Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1% | 12% | 11.4% | 88.6% |
| 2% | 24% | 21.5% | 78.5% |
| 3% | 36% | 30.6% | 69.4% |
| 5% | 60% | 46.0% | 54.0% |
| 7% | 84% | 58.1% | 41.9% |
At 5% monthly churn, you don’t lose 60% of your customers in a year — you lose 46%. That’s still a business that has to replace nearly half its base every year just to stand still, but the math matters when you’re modeling LTV or talking to an acquirer. Use the compound formula every time. Never multiply by twelve.
This compounding is also why churn is the silent killer of SaaS valuations. A one-point improvement in monthly churn doesn’t just save you a few customers — it extends the average lifetime of every customer you have, which flows directly into customer lifetime value and, ultimately, your exit multiple.
The Real Benchmarks, Broken Out by Segment
Now the numbers you came for. The table below shows typical B2B SaaS churn and retention ranges by customer segment as of 2026. The segment is defined by who you sell to, which correlates tightly with your average contract value (ACV) — the average annual dollar amount a customer pays you.
| Segment (typical ACV) | Monthly Revenue Churn | Annual Logo Churn | Gross Revenue Retention | Net Revenue Retention |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SMB (under $25K) | 3% – 7% | 31% – 58% | 80% – 88% | 90% – 100% |
| Mid-Market ($25K – $100K) | 1.5% – 3% | 16% – 31% | 88% – 92% | 105% – 110% |
| Enterprise (over $100K) | 0.5% – 1.5% | 6% – 16% | 90% – 95% | 115% – 125% |
| Best-in-class (any segment) | under 1% | under 11% | 92%+ | 120%+ |
A few things to read out of this table:
- Segment explains almost everything. A 4% monthly churn rate is roughly median for an SMB-focused product and a five-alarm fire for an enterprise product. Same number, opposite verdict. This is why a single “average churn rate for SaaS” is close to useless for decision-making.
- Gross retention has a hard ceiling; net retention doesn’t. Gross revenue retention can never exceed 100% because it only counts losses. Net retention can run well above 100% because it adds expansion. Enterprise companies clear 115%+ NRR not because they never lose customers, but because the customers they keep keep spending more.
- The benchmarks have drifted down. Independent data backs this up. SaaS Capital’s annual survey of more than 1,000 private B2B SaaS companies found median net revenue retention sliding from roughly 105% in 2021 to about 101% in 2024, with median gross retention near 88% — and they note that benchmarking by contract size is far more meaningful than any overall average (SaaS Capital, 2025 retention benchmarks). The macro environment tightened budgets, and retention felt it.
A note on these numbers: the ranges above are illustrative of conditions at the time of writing and are meant to show the relative differences between segments, not to serve as precise current figures. Retention benchmarks move with the economy. Verify against a recent survey before you set internal targets or board commitments.
Why Your Blended Average Is Lying to You
Here’s the part most founders skip, and it’s the part that actually moves the needle.
Most companies look at churn overall — one company-wide number — and that’s the wrong way to look at it. Your blended churn rate is an average of segments that behave nothing alike, and the average hides the truth in both directions.
Work through a simple example. Say you have 100 customers split into two groups:
- Your core fit (60 customers). These are the customers you were built to serve. They churn at 1% monthly.
- Your bad fit (40 customers). These are customers you sold to because the deal was there, but the product doesn’t quite fit their use case. They churn at 6% monthly.
Your blended monthly logo churn is (0.60 × 1%) + (0.40 × 6%) = 0.6% + 2.4% = 3.0%. On its annual compound that’s about 30.6%, and it looks like a mediocre, generic SaaS churn problem.
But there is no “3% problem” to solve. There are two completely different businesses inside that average. Your core churns at 1% monthly (11.4% annual) — that’s a fantastic, enterprise-grade retention profile. Your bad-fit segment churns at 6% monthly (52.4% annual) — that’s a bucket with a hole in the bottom. If you try to “fix your 3% churn” with company-wide initiatives, you’ll waste effort improving customers who were never going to stay while diluting the experience for the ones who love you.
You need to look at churn by segment — by company size if you sell B2B, by vertical if you sell across industries, and by behavioral profile. The goal is to find the segment that naturally churns the least: the customers who sign up and essentially never quit. Those are the customers you orient the entire business around — in your product roadmap, your marketing, and your sales targeting. The fastest way to fix churn is to find the customer who isn’t churning and go get more of them.
The One Number to Track: Core Churn
If you take one idea from this article, take this one. Calculate your core churn — the churn rate of just your core, ideal-fit segment, tracked separately from everything else.
When a company has two parts — a healthy go-forward business and a legacy book it’s moving away from — the blended number is meaningless. The legacy customers are going to leave regardless; within a couple of years they’re gone anyway. What you want to know is whether the part of the business you’re actually building is retaining well. So you track churn for the new ideal customer profile separately. Some management teams call this core churn.
The discipline is simple: define your core segment narrowly, measure its churn on its own, and judge the health of the business on that number. If your core is holding 90%+ gross revenue retention and 100%+ net retention, the business is fundamentally healthy even if the blended number looks ugly because of a legacy tail that’s burning off. Conversely, if your blended number looks acceptable but your core is leaking, you have a much bigger problem than the average suggests — the part you’re betting the company on isn’t sticking.
This is also the number to put in front of an acquirer. A buyer who understands SaaS will discount your blended churn the moment they see a legacy segment dragging it down — but only if you’ve done the segmentation work to show them the core is strong. If you hand them one blended number, they’ll assume the worst.
What Churn Does to Valuation and LTV
Churn isn’t a customer-success metric. It’s a valuation metric, because it sets a hard ceiling on customer lifetime value — the total revenue you earn from a customer before they leave.
The relationship is direct. Average customer lifespan is the inverse of your monthly churn rate, and lifetime value is that lifespan multiplied by what each customer pays you per month (their ARPA, or average revenue per account):
Average Customer Lifespan (months) = 1 ÷ Monthly Churn Rate
LTV = ARPA ÷ Monthly Churn Rate
Plug in realistic numbers. Say each customer pays you $1,000 per month:
- At 3% monthly churn: lifespan = 1 ÷ 0.03 = 33.3 months. LTV = $1,000 × 33.3 = $33,333.
- At 2% monthly churn: lifespan = 1 ÷ 0.02 = 50 months. LTV = $1,000 × 50 = $50,000.
Cutting monthly churn from 3% to 2% — a single percentage point — lifts lifetime value from $33,333 to $50,000, a 50% increase, without acquiring a single new customer or raising prices. That improvement flows straight into your LTV-to-CAC ratio (lifetime value divided by what it costs to acquire a customer), which is one of the first things an investor checks, and it compounds into a higher revenue growth rate because you’re refilling a smaller hole each year. Retention is the leaky-bucket problem: the higher your retention, the less new revenue you have to win just to stand still, so more of every new sale becomes net growth. That’s why churn improvements show up in both your Rule of 40 and your exit multiple.

How to Actually Move Your Churn Rate
Benchmarks tell you where you stand. They don’t tell you what to do. Here’s the sequence that actually works, in priority order.
Refine your ICP before anything else
The highest-leverage churn fix is the one almost nobody talks about: tighten your ideal customer profile. Look at every type of customer you have, calculate churn for each, find the segment that churns the least, and make that segment the focal point of your product, sales, and marketing. You’re not trying to retain everyone — you’re trying to acquire more of the customers who already don’t leave. This single move usually beats every retention tactic combined, because it stops the bleeding at the source instead of patching it downstream. For the full playbook, see how to reduce SaaS churn.
Find the behavioral driver
Once your ICP is tight, churn differences become behavioral rather than demographic. Form a hypothesis about what usage pattern predicts retention, then track churn by that behavior. One client suspected that login frequency predicted retention, so they tracked churn across three buckets — customers logging in fewer than 5 times a month, 5 to 10 times, and 10-plus times — and found dramatically different churn rates between them. Another found that customers who adopted one specific module churned far less than everyone else, because that module was the one their own customers depended on, which made the product mission-critical and painful to rip out.
The pattern is always specific to your business, which is why you have to do the analysis before you act. Once you find the behavior that drives retention, you reorganize onboarding and customer success to push every new customer toward it.
Engineer the sticky behavior into onboarding
The behavioral insight is only useful if you can manufacture the behavior. One well-known example: a marketing-automation company found that customers who went live on their first campaign churned dramatically less. So they added a setup fee — roughly $3,000 — specifically to fund the consulting that got each new customer to launch that first campaign. Customers happily paid it because once the first campaign was running, the product delivered obvious value through leads coming in by email and phone. The setup fee wasn’t a revenue play; it was a churn play disguised as a fee. They engineered the activation behavior that retention depended on, and it worked well enough to support a major growth round.
This is also why the first 90 days matter disproportionately — a large share of churn happens early, before the customer ever reaches the behavior that makes them stick. Strong onboarding that drives fast time-to-value is one of the most reliable churn reducers there is. For more on catching at-risk accounts early, see the early warning signs of churn and the customer success metrics worth tracking.
What Counts as a “Good” Churn Rate for Your Stage
Pulling it together, here’s how to judge your own number instead of comparing to a meaningless average:
- Identify your segment by ACV. Are you SMB (under $25K), mid-market ($25K–$100K), or enterprise (over $100K)? Use the segment row in the benchmark table, not the blended average.
- Measure revenue churn, not just logo churn. Acquirers price your recurring revenue base. A 90%+ gross revenue retention on your core segment is the threshold most buyers want to see.
- Calculate core churn separately. Strip out the legacy or bad-fit customers and look at the segment you’re actually building on. That number is the real verdict.
- Translate to annual with the compound formula. Use 1 − (1 − monthly)^12, never monthly × 12.
- Connect it to LTV and growth. A percentage point of monthly churn is worth far more than it looks — model it against customer lifetime value and your growth rate before deciding it’s “fine.”
If your core segment is retaining at SMB-median while you’re selling an enterprise-priced product, you don’t have an average — you have an opportunity, because your unit economics have room to improve dramatically without spending a dollar more on acquisition.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a good monthly churn rate for SaaS?
It depends entirely on your segment. For SMB-focused products, 3% to 5% monthly revenue churn is roughly normal and under 3% is strong. For mid-market, aim for 1.5% to 3%. For enterprise, anything above 1.5% monthly is a problem and best-in-class is under 1%. There is no single “good” number across all of SaaS — judge it against your average contract value, not the blended industry average.
Is 5% monthly churn bad?
For an enterprise SaaS company, 5% monthly churn is a serious problem — it compounds to 46% annual churn, meaning you replace nearly half your customer base every year. For an SMB-focused product selling low-priced subscriptions, 5% is on the high side of normal but survivable if your acquisition cost is low and payback is fast. The question isn’t whether 5% is “bad” in the abstract; it’s whether your unit economics work at 5% for your specific segment.
How do I convert monthly churn to annual churn?
Use the compound formula: Annual Churn = 1 − (1 − Monthly Churn)^12. Do not multiply the monthly rate by twelve — that overstates your churn because churn compounds on the shrinking base that remains each month. For example, 2% monthly is 21.5% annual, not 24%, and 5% monthly is 46% annual, not 60%.
What’s the difference between logo churn and revenue churn?
Logo churn counts how many customers you lost; revenue churn counts how many recurring dollars you lost. They diverge when your customers vary in size. Losing many small accounts spikes logo churn while barely moving revenue churn; losing one large account does the opposite. Investors weight revenue churn more heavily, and net revenue retention — which adds expansion revenue back in — is the metric most buyers ultimately price on.
Why is my churn higher than the benchmark?
Usually one of three reasons: you’re comparing against a blended average that includes companies in a different segment than yours, your ideal customer profile is too broad so you’re acquiring customers who were never going to stay, or you have a legacy or bad-fit segment dragging down an otherwise healthy core. Segment your churn first — by company size, vertical, and behavior — before concluding you have a company-wide retention problem. More often than not, the “problem” is concentrated in one segment you can simply stop selling to.

