
Two SaaS companies generate the exact same projected cash flows over the next five years. One is worth $37 million. The other is worth $9 million. The only difference between them is the discount rate for DCF — the single number a buyer plugs into the model to convert your future cash into today’s dollars. Get that number wrong by ten percentage points and you have just argued yourself out of $28 million of enterprise value without changing a thing about your business.
That is not a hypothetical. It is the arithmetic you will live or die by when you sell your company, and I will walk you through it below with real numbers. Most first-time SaaS CEOs treat the discounted cash flow (DCF) model as a black box their banker runs. That is a mistake. The discount rate is the most powerful lever in the entire valuation, it is the most subjective input, and — critically for an early-stage SaaS business — it runs far higher than the textbooks assume. If you do not understand where it comes from, you cannot defend your valuation, and you cannot make the operating decisions that move it.
This guide is written for the SaaS CEO at $5M to $15M in annual recurring revenue (ARR), not for an investment-banking analyst. I will define every term in plain English, show the math twice, and connect the discount rate back to the thing you actually care about: the multiple you get at exit.
What Is a Discount Rate in a DCF, in Plain English
Start with the one idea everything else hangs on: a dollar you receive five years from now is worth less than a dollar in your hand today. This is called the time value of money. Today’s dollar can be invested and earn a return; the future dollar carries risk that it never shows up at all. A DCF model takes every dollar of cash your business is projected to throw off in the future and “discounts” it back to what it is worth right now.
The discount rate for DCF is the rate you use to do that shrinking. Think of it as the annual interest rate running in reverse. If money grows forward at a rate, the discount rate is that same rate applied backward to find today’s value.
Mechanically, the present value of a future cash flow is:
Present Value = Future Cash Flow / (1 + Discount Rate) ^ Number of Years
So a $1 million cash flow arriving in three years, discounted at 30%, is worth $1,000,000 / (1.30)³ = $455,000 today. The further out the cash flow and the higher the rate, the more it shrinks. That is the whole engine.
Two facts about the discount rate matter more than any other, and I want them burned in before we go further:
- A higher discount rate produces a lower valuation. They move in opposite directions. Buyers want a high rate (it lowers the price they pay); you want a low one.
- The discount rate is a risk measure. It is the return an investor demands for taking on the risk of your specific business. Riskier business, higher demanded return, higher discount rate, lower value.
That second point is where the SaaS-specific story lives, and it is why a $10M ARR bootstrapped SaaS gets discounted at a rate two to three times higher than Microsoft does.
Where the Discount Rate Comes From: WACC and Cost of Equity
When a banker or buyer builds a DCF, they do not pull the discount rate out of thin air. They calculate it one of two ways, and which one they use depends on whose money is in the deal.
The most common discount rate is the weighted average cost of capital (WACC) — the blended cost of all the money funding the business, both the money from shareholders (equity) and the money from lenders (debt), weighted by how much of each the company uses. The “weighted average” part just means you mix the cost of equity and the cost of debt in proportion to how much of each is in the capital structure. WACC is the right rate when the model projects cash flows available to everyone who funded the business — both lenders and owners.
The second option is the cost of equity alone — the return shareholders specifically demand. You use this when the model projects only the cash flow left over for owners after lenders are paid. For most bootstrapped SaaS companies that carry little or no debt, the cost of equity and WACC end up nearly identical, because there is almost no debt to blend in. If you have never raised venture debt and your balance sheet is clean, the cost of equity is effectively your discount rate.
Here is the relationship in one table.
| Discount rate | What it represents | When the model uses it |
|---|---|---|
| WACC | Blended cost of equity + debt | Cash flow available to all funders (debt and equity) |
| Cost of equity | Return shareholders demand | Cash flow available only to owners after debt is paid |
The formula for WACC looks intimidating but is just a weighted average:
WACC = (Equity % × Cost of Equity) + (Debt % × After-Tax Cost of Debt)
Two pieces need unpacking. First, cost of debt is your interest rate on borrowed money, but it gets reduced for taxes. Because interest payments are tax-deductible, the real cost to the business is the interest rate multiplied by (1 minus your tax rate). This is called the interest tax shield — the government effectively subsidizes part of your interest bill. Second, the cost of equity is the harder number, and it has its own formula, which we cover next.
A Worked WACC Example
Take a profitable SaaS company funded mostly by equity with a little venture debt: 80% equity, 20% debt. Its cost of equity (we will calculate this in the next section) is 11.65%. Its loan carries a pre-tax interest rate of 8%, and its tax rate is 21%.
First, tax-adjust the cost of debt:
After-Tax Cost of Debt = 8% × (1 − 21%) = 6.32%
Then blend the two costs by their weights:
WACC = (80% × 11.65%) + (20% × 6.32%) = 9.32% + 1.26% = 10.6%
So this company’s discount rate is about 10.6%. Notice that adding cheap, tax-advantaged debt pulled the blended rate below the cost of equity alone — that is the entire reason debt exists in a capital structure. But for an early-stage SaaS business that cannot safely carry much debt, this lever barely moves, and the discount rate stays close to the (much higher) cost of equity.

Cost of Equity and CAPM: The Engine Behind the Rate
The cost of equity is the return your shareholders demand for the risk of owning your stock instead of putting their money somewhere safe. The standard way to estimate it is the capital asset pricing model (CAPM) — a formula that builds the required return up from a safe baseline, then adds a premium for risk.
CAPM has three ingredients, and each deserves a plain-English definition.
- Risk-free rate. The return you could earn with essentially zero risk, usually the yield on a U.S. Treasury bond. It is the floor — no investor will accept less than this for a risky bet. As of this writing it sits around 4.5%, but it moves with interest rates.
- Beta. A measure of how much your business’s value swings relative to the overall stock market. A beta of 1.0 means you move in lockstep with the market; a beta above 1.0 means you swing harder (more volatile, more risk); below 1.0 means you are steadier. SaaS companies typically run a beta above 1.0 — software valuations are volatile.
- Equity risk premium. The extra return investors demand for putting money in the stock market at all instead of in risk-free Treasuries. Historically this has run about 4% to 6% in the U.S.
The formula assembles them like this:
Cost of Equity = Risk-Free Rate + (Beta × Equity Risk Premium)
A Worked CAPM Example
Use a risk-free rate of 4.5%, a beta of 1.3 (typical for volatile software), and an equity risk premium of 5.5%:
Cost of Equity = 4.5% + (1.3 × 5.5%) = 4.5% + 7.15% = 11.65%
That 11.65% is the number we dropped into the WACC example above. Read the formula as a story: an investor starts by demanding the 4.5% they could get risk-free, then tacks on 7.15% more because your equity is 1.3 times as jumpy as the broader market. The riskier the business (higher beta), the bigger that add-on, the higher the cost of equity, and the lower your valuation.
A note on the numbers: the rates above are illustrative and reflect conditions at the time of writing. The risk-free rate moves with the broader interest-rate environment, and the equity risk premium is itself an estimate. They are included to show the relative size of each component and how they combine — not as current figures to plug into a live model. Verify the current risk-free rate and a defensible equity risk premium before using a DCF to make a real decision.
Why Early-Stage SaaS Uses a Much Higher Discount Rate
Here is where the generic finance articles fail the SaaS CEO. They will walk you through CAPM, land on a cost of equity around 12%, and stop. That number is roughly right for a large, public, mature software company. It is badly wrong for your $10M ARR private SaaS business — and the gap is the most important thing in this entire guide.
SaaS Capital, which lends specifically to SaaS companies, estimated the long-term cost of equity for public SaaS companies at about 14.9%. But you cannot apply a public-company number to a small private company unchanged. They quantify two distinct discounts that stack on top of each other for private businesses, and their reasoning produces a cost of equity range from roughly 22% to 43% for private SaaS — 22% near the $100M ARR threshold, climbing toward 43% for the smallest companies.
Why does a buyer demand a 30%-plus return to buy your company when they would accept 12% from a public software stock? Three reasons, all of which raise the discount rate:
- Illiquidity. Public shares can be sold in seconds. Your shares cannot. A buyer who gets stuck holding a private SaaS company has no easy exit, so they demand a higher return to compensate — often called a lack-of-marketability discount.
- Size and fragility. A $10M ARR company is more fragile than a $500M one. Less diversified customer base, thinner management bench, more key-person risk, worse economies of scale. More risk means a higher demanded return.
- Execution risk. This is the big one for early-stage SaaS, and it deserves its own framing.
The way I describe risk to the CEOs I work with is this: risk is the difference between the world as it is in your Excel model and the world as it actually plays out. A DCF is built on a five-year projection. For a large, mature company with a seasoned team and proven systems, the projection and reality match almost perfectly — the team says they will hit the plan, and they hit the plan, line by line. That is a low-risk, highly predictable business, and it earns a low discount rate.
A young SaaS company is the opposite. The projection is a hope. The team is unproven at scale, the systems are immature, and the gap between the spreadsheet and reality is wide. The buyer prices that gap directly into the discount rate. Every percentage point of uncertainty about whether you will actually hit your plan shows up as a higher rate and a lower valuation.
This reframes the discount rate from an abstract finance input into an operating scorecard. The work you do to make your business more predictable — documenting processes, reducing customer concentration, removing yourself as the single point of failure, building a sales engine that produces results without heroics — is the same work that lowers your discount rate and raises your valuation. A more detailed treatment of how risk and predictability drive your exit multiple lives in our guide to SaaS company valuation.
A Full DCF Worked Example for a $10M ARR SaaS Company
Let me put the whole machine together so you can see how the discount rate drives the answer. We will value a $10M ARR SaaS company with a clean balance sheet (no meaningful debt, so cost of equity is the discount rate), projecting free cash flow — the cash left over after running and growing the business — for five years.
Here are the projected free cash flows and what each is worth today at a 30% discount rate, the kind of rate a buyer would apply to a small, growing private SaaS business.
| Year | Projected Free Cash Flow | Discount Factor (at 30%) | Present Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $1.0M | 0.769 | $0.8M |
| 2 | $1.5M | 0.592 | $0.9M |
| 3 | $2.2M | 0.455 | $1.0M |
| 4 | $3.0M | 0.350 | $1.1M |
| 5 | $4.0M | 0.269 | $1.1M |
| Sum of discounted cash flows | $4.8M |
Notice what the discount rate does to year 5. The business throws off $4.0M of cash that year — four times the year‑1 figure — but discounted back at 30%, it is worth only $1.1M today, barely more than the year‑1 cash flow. At a high discount rate, distant cash is nearly worthless in present terms. That is why high-discount-rate businesses are valued almost entirely on the near years.
But a DCF does not stop at year 5. The business keeps generating cash after the projection window, and we capture that with a terminal value — the estimated value of all cash flows beyond the final projected year, collapsed into a single number. The standard way to compute it is the Gordon Growth Model, which assumes cash flows grow at a steady modest rate forever:
Terminal Value = (Final Year Cash Flow × (1 + Growth Rate)) / (Discount Rate − Growth Rate)
Using a 4% perpetual growth rate:
Terminal Value = ($4.0M × 1.04) / (30% − 4%) = $4.16M / 0.26 = $16.0M
That $16.0M is the value as of the end of year 5, so we discount it back to today at the same 30% rate over five years:
Present Value of Terminal Value = $16.0M / (1.30)⁵ = $16.0M × 0.269 = $4.3M
Now add the two pieces to get the enterprise value:
Enterprise Value = Discounted Cash Flows + Discounted Terminal Value = $4.8M + $4.3M = $9.1M
So at a 30% discount rate, this $10M ARR business is worth about $9.1M — roughly 0.9× ARR. That feels low, and it is. Now watch what happens when we change only the discount rate.
The Whole Point: The Discount Rate Drives the Multiple
Keep every projected cash flow identical. Keep the 4% terminal growth rate identical. Change only the discount rate from 30% to 12% — the rate you would apply to a large, mature, predictable software company.
| Discount rate | Enterprise value | Implied ARR multiple |
|---|---|---|
| 30% (small private SaaS) | $9.1M | 0.9× |
| 12% (mature, predictable) | $37.3M | 3.7× |
Same business. Same cash flows. The valuation swings from $9.1M to $37.3M — a $28.2 million difference — purely on the discount rate. The implied revenue multiple goes from 0.9× ARR to 3.7× ARR. This is the most important thing a SaaS CEO can understand about valuation: the discount rate is not a footnote in the model, it is the model’s verdict on how risky and predictable your business is, and it dwarfs almost every other input.
This is also why the work of de-risking your business is the highest-return work you can do before a sale. Every reduction in risk — more contractually recurring revenue, lower customer concentration, a management team that runs the company without you, a sales process that hits plan quarter after quarter — pulls your discount rate down from the 30%-plus range toward the low-20s or better. And as the table above shows, a few points of discount rate is worth millions. The drivers that move your multiple are covered in depth in our breakdown of SaaS valuation multiples and the SaaS revenue multiples buyers actually pay.
How the Discount Rate Connects to the Metrics You Already Track
You do not need to run a DCF every quarter. But the inputs to your discount rate are things you should already be managing, because the same levers that improve your operating metrics lower your cost of capital.
- Growth and profitability balance. A buyer’s confidence in your projection — and therefore the discount rate they apply — improves dramatically when you are visibly efficient. The Rule of 40 (growth rate plus profit margin clearing 40%) is the single fastest signal that your growth is real and fundable, not bought with reckless burn.
- Capital efficiency. How much cash you torch to produce growth feeds directly into perceived risk. A tight burn multiple and a healthy cash runway tell a buyer your projection is achievable without a desperate raise, which lowers the discount rate.
- Unit economics. A strong LTV/CAC ratio means your growth model works and is repeatable — the opposite of execution risk. Predictable unit economics are predictable cash flows, and predictable cash flows earn a lower rate.
- Retention. Contractually recurring revenue with low churn is the most predictable cash flow that exists, and predictability is exactly what the discount rate prices. High net revenue retention compresses the gap between your model and reality.
Every one of these is, in the end, a statement about how closely your future will track your forecast. That is the only question the discount rate is really asking.
Common Mistakes SaaS CEOs Make With the Discount Rate
After watching many founders walk into valuation conversations unprepared, here are the errors that cost the most money.
- Using a textbook 10% rate for a small private company. The generic 8% to 12% discount rate you will find in most online tutorials is a public-company number. Applying it to your $10M ARR private SaaS business will overstate your value by 2x to 4x and set you up for a brutal surprise in due diligence. Your real rate is far more likely to start with a 2 or a 3.
- Ignoring the discount rate entirely and fixating on the multiple. Founders love to debate whether they will get 5× or 6× ARR. But the multiple is an output of the discount rate and the growth assumptions, not an input you negotiate directly. Understand the rate and the multiple follows.
- Treating the projection as fact. The more aggressive your five-year plan, the more a buyer discounts it — sometimes by raising the discount rate, sometimes by haircutting the cash flows directly. A credible, defensible projection at a moderate rate often produces a higher value than a hockey-stick projection a buyer refuses to believe.
- Not connecting operating decisions to the rate. The CEO who understands that reducing customer concentration or building a self-running sales team lowers the discount rate makes different decisions than the one who sees those as soft, non-financial chores. They are among the most financial decisions you will make.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a typical discount rate for a SaaS DCF?
For a large, public, mature SaaS company, roughly 10% to 15%. For a small private SaaS business in the $5M to $15M ARR range, expect a substantially higher rate — commonly 25% to 40% — reflecting illiquidity, smaller size, and the wider gap between projection and reality. The smaller and earlier-stage the company, the higher the rate.
Should I use WACC or cost of equity as my discount rate?
Use WACC when your DCF projects cash flows available to all funders (debt and equity). Use cost of equity when it projects only the cash left for owners after debt is paid. For most bootstrapped SaaS companies with little or no debt, the two are nearly identical, so the distinction rarely changes the answer.
Why does a higher discount rate lower my valuation?
Because the discount rate shrinks future cash flows back to present value, and a higher rate shrinks them more aggressively. A high rate also signals that an investor demands a larger return to compensate for the risk of your business — and a larger required return mathematically means they will pay less for the same future cash. Higher rate, lower value, every time.
How do I lower the discount rate buyers apply to my company?
Reduce risk and increase predictability. Move more revenue to contractually recurring contracts, cut customer concentration, build management depth so the company does not depend on you, document your processes, and demonstrate that your team hits its plan consistently. Each of these narrows the gap between your forecast and reality, which is precisely what the discount rate measures.
Is the discount rate the same as the multiple?
No, but they are tightly linked. The discount rate (along with your growth assumptions) produces the implied valuation multiple in a DCF. A lower discount rate yields a higher multiple, and vice versa. Think of the multiple as the visible output and the discount rate as the hidden engine driving it.
The Bottom Line
The discount rate for DCF is the most consequential and most misunderstood number in your company’s valuation. It is a direct measure of how risky and predictable a buyer believes your business to be, it runs far higher for early-stage private SaaS than any textbook will tell you — typically 25% to 40% rather than 10% — and it swings your enterprise value by millions on its own.
You do not control the risk-free rate or the equity risk premium. But you control the execution risk, the customer concentration, the recurring-revenue mix, and the management depth that determine where in that 25%-to-40% range your rate actually lands. That is the work that lowers your cost of capital and raises your exit. The discount rate is just the scoreboard.

