Cash Runway: The Essential SaaS CEO Guide to Buying More Time

Cash Runway: The Essential SaaS CEO Guide to Buying More Time - hero image

Your cash run­way is the num­ber of months you have left before the bank account hits zero. It is the sin­gle most impor­tant num­ber a SaaS CEO car­ries in their head, because it con­verts every strate­gic ques­tion — should I hire, should I raise, should I cut — into the same hard cur­ren­cy: time. If you have $2 mil­lion in the bank and you’re los­ing $100,000 a month, your cash run­way is twen­ty months. After that, bar­ring a change, the com­pa­ny is out of mon­ey and out of options.

Most founders can quote their rev­enue growth rate to one dec­i­mal place but go fuzzy when you ask how many months of run­way they have. That’s back­wards. Run­way is the clock that every oth­er deci­sion runs against. A bril­liant prod­uct roadmap is worth­less if you run out of road before you ship it. This guide treats cash run­way as what it actu­al­ly is — not a pas­sive read­out, but a plan­ning instru­ment you active­ly man­age: how to cal­cu­late it cor­rect­ly, the spe­cif­ic month thresh­olds that should trig­ger action, the four levers you can pull to extend it, and how to stress-test it against a bad quar­ter before the bad quar­ter arrives.

Run­way and burn are two sides of the same coin, so I’ll ref­er­ence burn through­out — but if you want the full mechan­ics of gross ver­sus net burn and how to cal­cu­late spend­ing rate from your bank account, that’s cov­ered in depth in the com­pan­ion guide on cash burn rate. This arti­cle is about the run­way itself: the time you have, and how to get more of it.

What Cash Runway Actually Measures

Cash run­way is the amount of time your com­pa­ny can keep oper­at­ing before it exhausts its cash, assum­ing noth­ing changes about how much you’re spend­ing or bring­ing in. It’s expressed in months, and the for­mu­la is delib­er­ate­ly sim­ple:

Cash Run­way (months) = Cash in the Bank ÷ Month­ly Net Burn

Where net burn is the cash you actu­al­ly lose each month after rev­enue — total cash out minus total cash in. (Net burn is the right denom­i­na­tor, not gross spend­ing; the dis­tinc­tion mat­ters enor­mous­ly and is the most com­mon place this cal­cu­la­tion goes wrong. See the cash burn rate guide for why.)

Plug in real num­bers. If you have $2,400,000 in the bank and your net burn is $150,000 a month:

Cash Run­way = $2,400,000 ÷ $150,000 = 16 months

Six­teen months. That’s not an abstrac­tion — it’s a date on the cal­en­dar. You can mark it. And once you’ve marked it, every deci­sion you make either moves that date clos­er or push­es it fur­ther out. That reframe is the entire point. Run­way turns “are we spend­ing too much?” — a ques­tion nobody can answer in the abstract — into “do we have enough time to reach the next mile­stone?”, which is a ques­tion you can actu­al­ly answer.

One refine­ment before we go fur­ther: use a trail­ing three-month aver­age net burn, not a sin­gle month, in the denom­i­na­tor. Any sin­gle month can be dis­tort­ed by an annu­al soft­ware renew­al, a quar­ter­ly tax pay­ment, or a one-time legal bill, and a dis­tort­ed burn num­ber gives you a dis­tort­ed run­way. Aver­ag­ing the last three months smooths the noise and gives you a run­way fig­ure you can plan against.

Runway Thresholds and CEO Decisions — a row of evenly spaced glowing milestone markers along a dar

The Runway Ladder: What Each Threshold Should Trigger

Run­way isn’t a sin­gle trip­wire — it’s a lad­der, and where you sit on it should dic­tate what you do. The mis­take I see most often is treat­ing run­way as a num­ber you only look at when it’s already low. By then your options have col­lapsed. The CEOs who stay in con­trol read the lad­der from the top and act at each rung, not at the bot­tom.

Here’s the frame­work I use. The thresh­olds aren’t laws of physics, but the log­ic behind them is durable:

Months of RunwayWhat It MeansWhat to Do
18+ monthsPosition of strengthInvest deliberately; you can fundraise on your terms, not out of need
12–18 monthsHealthy, watch closelyBuild the plan now: line up the next raise or a path to breakeven
6–12 monthsCaution zoneAct, don't wait. Start the raise or begin trimming the cost base
Under 6 monthsDanger zoneEmergency mode: raise on whatever terms you can get, or cut hard and fast

The rea­son these thresh­olds mat­ter is tim­ing lag. The two things that fix a run­way prob­lem — rais­ing mon­ey and cut­ting costs — both take months to work. A fundraise typ­i­cal­ly takes three to six months from first meet­ing to cash in the bank. Mean­ing­ful cost cuts take a full quar­ter to show up in your actu­al bank bal­ance, because sev­er­ance, notice peri­ods, and con­tract wind-downs all delay the sav­ings.

Do the arith­metic on that lag. If you wait until you have four months of run­way left to start react­ing, you can­not fin­ish a nor­mal fundraise before you hit zero, and you can­not cut your way to safe­ty fast enough either. Your only remain­ing options are a forced round — rais­ing on pun­ish­ing terms because you have no lever­age — or lay­offs deep enough to dam­age the busi­ness. Both are avoid­able, but only if you act from the high­er rungs. The whole pur­pose of the lad­der is to make you move while mov­ing is still cheap.

A note on the spe­cif­ic dol­lar fig­ures and month thresh­olds in this arti­cle: they’re illus­tra­tive and reflect typ­i­cal con­di­tions at the time of writ­ing. They show rel­a­tive rela­tion­ships — how run­way responds to a change in burn, how the fundraise lag com­press­es your options — not fixed tar­gets. The right run­way buffer shifts with the fund­ing envi­ron­ment, so ver­i­fy cur­rent norms for your stage before mak­ing deci­sions.

Cash runway decision ladder — months of runway mapped to the recommended CEO action, from a healthy position above eighteen months through caution and danger zones to emergency fundraising or deep cost cuts

The Four Levers That Extend Runway

When you decide you need more run­way, there are exact­ly four ways to get it. Every tac­tic you’ve ever heard of is a ver­sion of one of these. Know­ing the full set keeps you from fix­at­ing on the obvi­ous one (raise mon­ey) while ignor­ing the oth­ers.

The math makes the options clear. Run­way is cash divid­ed by net burn, so you can only extend it by increas­ing the numer­a­tor or shrink­ing the denom­i­na­tor:

  1. Raise more cash (increase the numer­a­tor). New equi­ty or debt direct­ly adds to the bank bal­ance. It’s the most vis­i­ble lever and often the right one — but it’s also the slow­est and the most dilu­tive, and it’s hard­est to pull exact­ly when you need it most. Rais­ing from a posi­tion of strength (high on the lad­der) gets dra­mat­i­cal­ly bet­ter terms than rais­ing in the dan­ger zone. For when debt is the smarter instru­ment than equi­ty, see ven­ture debt and the broad­er options in SaaS debt financ­ing.
  2. Cut costs (shrink the denom­i­na­tor). Reduc­ing your cash oper­at­ing expens­es low­ers net burn, which stretch­es every remain­ing dol­lar fur­ther. This is the fastest lever you con­trol uni­lat­er­al­ly — but it’s also the one with the longest delay between deci­sion and bank-bal­ance impact, and cut­ting too deep can dam­age the growth engine you’re try­ing to fund.
  3. Grow rev­enue faster (shrink the denom­i­na­tor from the oth­er side). Every addi­tion­al dol­lar of month­ly recur­ring rev­enue that drops to cash reduces net burn one-for-one. A com­pa­ny that adds $40,000 of month­ly recur­ring rev­enue has cut its net burn by $40,000 with­out touch­ing a sin­gle expense. This is the health­i­est lever because it extends run­way and builds the busi­ness — but it’s the least reli­able on a short time­line.
  4. Improve cash tim­ing (a hid­den numer­a­tor lever). This is the one founders for­get. Mov­ing cus­tomers from month­ly to annu­al pre­paid con­tracts pulls a full year of cash for­ward into your bank account today. Tight­en­ing col­lec­tions, invoic­ing ear­li­er, and nego­ti­at­ing longer pay­ment terms with your own ven­dors all shift the tim­ing of cash with­out chang­ing the under­ly­ing eco­nom­ics. A sin­gle large annu­al pre­pay can add months of run­way overnight — pure cash-tim­ing, no dilu­tion, no cuts.

A worked exam­ple ties the levers togeth­er. Take our 16-month com­pa­ny — $2,400,000 in the bank, $150,000 month­ly net burn. Sup­pose you trim $30,000 of month­ly costs and con­vert two cus­tomers to annu­al pre­pay, adding $200,000 of cash up front. New net burn is $120,000; new cash is $2,600,000:

Extend­ed Run­way = $2,600,000 ÷ $120,000 = 21.7 months

Two mod­er­ate levers, nei­ther of them a fundraise, turned 16 months of run­way into near­ly 22 — almost six extra months bought with­out rais­ing a dol­lar of new equi­ty. That’s the kind of option­al­i­ty that keeps you off the bot­tom rungs of the lad­der.

The Levers That Extend Runway — four glowing vertical streams of light of differing brightne

Runway and the Fundraising Calendar

The most expen­sive mis­take in all of start­up finance is rais­ing mon­ey when you’re almost out of it. The cure is to treat your run­way as a fundrais­ing cal­en­dar, work­ing back­ward from the wall.

Here’s the log­ic. A fundraise takes three to six months. Investors can smell des­per­a­tion, and des­per­a­tion craters your terms — when a VC knows you have nine­ty days of cash left, they hold all the lever­age on price, board seats, and liq­ui­da­tion pref­er­ences. The way to avoid that is to start your raise while you still have lever­age, which means start­ing from a high rung on the lad­der, not a low one.

Work the time­line back­ward:

If you want to close a round with…Start the raise when runway hits…Why
Comfortable buffer~18 monthsA 3–6 month raise still leaves you 12+ months if it slips
Acceptable buffer~12 monthsWorkable, but a slow raise eats into your safety margin
No buffer (avoid)~6 monthsYou're now negotiating from weakness; terms suffer

The pat­tern is the same one under­neath the run­way lad­der: act from strength. Eigh­teen months of run­way means you can walk away from a bad term sheet, run a com­pet­i­tive process, and close when the terms are right — because you don’t need the mon­ey yet. Six months of run­way means you take what you’re offered. The dif­fer­ence between those two posi­tions is often the dif­fer­ence between a clean round and giv­ing away an out­sized chunk of your com­pa­ny.

This is also why the boot­strapped or light­ly fund­ed CEO this arti­cle is writ­ten for has a struc­tur­al advan­tage. If you’re cap­i­tal-effi­cient and close to breakeven, you may nev­er have to raise — which means when you do raise, it’s a choice made from max­i­mum strength. Run­way, in that case, isn’t a count­down to a forced deci­sion. It’s a war chest that lets you fundraise only when it’s clear­ly worth it. The met­rics that prove that effi­cien­cy to investors — burn mul­ti­ple, LTV/CAC ratio, and the rest of your SaaS unit eco­nom­ics — are what turn a long run­way into a strong nego­ti­at­ing posi­tion.

Default Alive vs Default Dead: The Runway Question Underneath

There’s a reframe that cuts through every run­way cal­cu­la­tion, and it’s worth run­ning on your own com­pa­ny today. Ask one ques­tion: on your cur­rent tra­jec­to­ry — cur­rent burn, cur­rent growth rate, no new fund­ing — do you reach cash-flow breakeven before your run­way runs out?

If yes, you’re default alive. Your exist­ing momen­tum car­ries you to safe­ty even if you nev­er raise anoth­er dol­lar. Your run­way isn’t a count­down to a cri­sis; it’s a buffer that gives you choic­es. You can raise to grow faster, but you don’t have to.

If no, you’re default dead. On your cur­rent path, your run­way runs out before you reach breakeven, which means your sur­vival depends on some­thing out­side your con­trol — anoth­er round, an acqui­si­tion, or a change in tra­jec­to­ry you haven’t engi­neered yet. You can still be a great com­pa­ny. But you are not in con­trol of your own fate, and the most dan­ger­ous thing you can do is not know it.

The rea­son this mat­ters for run­way specif­i­cal­ly: default-dead com­pa­nies expe­ri­ence run­way as a dead­line, while default-alive com­pa­nies expe­ri­ence it as a buffer. Same num­ber of months, com­plete­ly dif­fer­ent mean­ing. Most founders nev­er run the cal­cu­la­tion, which is exact­ly how they end up sur­prised when the wall arrives faster than the breakeven date.

If you run it and find you’re default dead, you have pre­cise­ly two levers — the same two from the run­way-exten­sion frame­work, viewed through this lens. Either grow faster (raise net new recur­ring rev­enue enough to bend the line to breakeven before the wall) or burn less (cut the cost base to push the wall out past your breakeven date). Know­ing which lever you’re pulling, and start­ing ear­ly enough that the lag does­n’t kill you, is most of the job. For the cap­i­tal-effi­cient CEO build­ing toward a $25M–$100M exit rather than a bil­lion-dol­lar moon­shot, default alive should almost always be the goal.

Stress-Test Your Runway Before You Need To

The run­way num­ber on your dash­board today is a best-case num­ber. It assumes rev­enue holds and noth­ing breaks. The CEOs who get blind­sided are the ones who only ever look at the base case. The fix is to run a down­side sce­nario now, while you have time to act on what it tells you.

The exer­cise is sim­ple. Take your cur­rent run­way and ask: what hap­pens to it if rev­enue drops 30% in a down­turn? Because when rev­enue falls, your net burn ris­es — the cash that was off­set­ting your spend­ing shrinks, so you lose more each month, and your run­way col­laps­es faster than the rev­enue drop alone would sug­gest.

Walk through two com­pa­nies, both show­ing 16 months of run­way today, both with $2,400,000 in the bank:

Company A (lean cost base)Company B (heavy cost base)
Monthly cash in (revenue)$90,000$300,000
Monthly cash out (gross spend)$240,000$450,000
Net burn today$150,000$150,000
Runway today16 months16 months
Revenue after a 30% drop$63,000$210,000
New net burn after the drop$177,000$240,000
Runway after the drop~13.6 months~10 months

On today’s dash­board, these two com­pa­nies look iden­ti­cal — same net burn, same run­way. But Com­pa­ny B’s heav­ier reliance on rev­enue to off­set a big­ger cost base makes its run­way far more frag­ile. The same 30% rev­enue dip costs Com­pa­ny A about two and a half months of run­way and costs Com­pa­ny B a full six months.

The les­son isn’t that one com­pa­ny is doomed — it’s that the run­way num­ber alone hides your fragili­ty. The big­ger your gross spend­ing rel­a­tive to your rev­enue, the more vio­lent­ly your run­way swings when rev­enue moves against you. Run the down­side sce­nario on your own num­bers. If a sur­viv­able-look­ing 16 months turns into a scary 10 under a mod­er­ate rev­enue drop, you want to know that while you still have 16 months to do some­thing about it — not after the drop has already hap­pened. (This same gross-ver­sus-net dynam­ic is the core of how you read your over­all SaaS finan­cial mod­el.)

Common Cash Runway Mistakes

The same hand­ful of errors show up over and over. Each one is avoid­able once you’ve seen it named.

  1. Cal­cu­lat­ing run­way off gross spend instead of net burn. Using total expens­es instead of net burn (expens­es minus rev­enue) under­states your run­way and leads to pan­ic cuts that weren’t nec­es­sary. Use net burn in the denom­i­na­tor.
  2. Using a sin­gle dis­tort­ed month. One month with an annu­al renew­al or a tax pay­ment can make your burn — and there­fore your run­way — look far worse or bet­ter than real­i­ty. Always use a trail­ing three-month aver­age.
  3. Only check­ing run­way when it’s already low. Run­way is a top-of-the-lad­der tool. If the first time you look hard at it is at six months, your good options are already gone. Read it from 18 months out.
  4. For­get­ting the fundraise lag. A raise takes three to six months. Start­ing it at four months of run­way math­e­mat­i­cal­ly guar­an­tees a forced round. Back the start date off the wall, not off your opti­mism.
  5. Ignor­ing cash-tim­ing levers. Founders fix­ate on “raise or cut” and for­get that annu­al pre­pays, tighter col­lec­tions, and longer ven­dor terms can buy months of run­way with no dilu­tion and no lay­offs.
  6. Nev­er stress-test­ing the down­side. The run­way on your dash­board is the best case. If you haven’t mod­eled what a rev­enue drop does to it, you don’t actu­al­ly know how much mar­gin of safe­ty you have.
  7. Nev­er run­ning the default-alive check. If you don’t know whether your cur­rent tra­jec­to­ry reach­es breakeven before your run­way ends, you don’t know whether your com­pa­ny con­trols its own sur­vival.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is cash runway?

Cash run­way is the num­ber of months your com­pa­ny can keep oper­at­ing before it runs out of cash, assum­ing your spend­ing and rev­enue stay rough­ly con­stant. You cal­cu­late it by divid­ing the cash in your bank account by your month­ly net burn (cash out minus cash in). If you have $2 mil­lion in the bank and lose $100,000 a month, your cash run­way is 20 months. It’s the clock every oth­er strate­gic deci­sion runs against.

How do I calculate cash runway?

Divide cash in the bank by month­ly net burn: Cash Run­way = Cash ÷ Net Burn. For exam­ple, $2,400,000 in the bank ÷ $150,000 month­ly net burn = 16 months. Use a trail­ing three-month aver­age for net burn rather than a sin­gle month, which can be dis­tort­ed by one-time pay­ments like annu­al renewals or quar­ter­ly tax­es. Net burn — not gross spend­ing — is the cor­rect denom­i­na­tor.

How much cash runway should a SaaS company have?

The durable rule of thumb is to keep at least 12 months of run­way at all times and ide­al­ly 18 to 24 months, espe­cial­ly before any move that spikes burn. The rea­son is tim­ing: a fundraise takes three to six months and cost cuts take a quar­ter to show up in the bank. Eigh­teen-plus months lets you fundraise from strength rather than des­per­a­tion, which is often the dif­fer­ence between a clean round and a forced one.

What’s the difference between cash runway and burn rate?

Burn rate is how fast you spend mon­ey — dol­lars per month. Cash run­way is how long that spend­ing can con­tin­ue before you run out — months remain­ing. Run­way is sim­ply your cash bal­ance divid­ed by your net burn rate, so the two are direct­ly linked: a high­er burn rate short­ens your run­way, and a low­er one extends it. Burn mea­sures speed; run­way mea­sures the dis­tance to the wall.

How can I extend my cash runway?

There are four levers: raise more cash, cut costs to low­er net burn, grow rev­enue to low­er net burn from the oth­er side, and improve cash tim­ing by mov­ing cus­tomers to annu­al pre­paid con­tracts and tight­en­ing col­lec­tions. The cash-tim­ing lever is the most over­looked — a sin­gle large annu­al pre­pay can add months of run­way with no dilu­tion and no lay­offs. Often the best move com­bines a mod­est cost trim with a cash-tim­ing improve­ment rather than rush­ing to raise.

When should I start fundraising based on my runway?

Start your raise while you still have lever­age — ide­al­ly around 18 months of run­way, and no lat­er than 12. A fundraise takes three to six months, so begin­ning at six months or less forces you to nego­ti­ate from weak­ness, which craters your terms. Start­ing from a strong run­way posi­tion lets you run a com­pet­i­tive process and walk away from bad term sheets, because you don’t yet need the mon­ey.


Cash run­way is the num­ber that turns every strate­gic ques­tion into a ques­tion about time. Cal­cu­late it cor­rect­ly off net burn, read the lad­der from the top so you act while act­ing is still cheap, know all four levers you can pull to extend it, and stress-test it against a bad quar­ter before the bad quar­ter arrives. Above all, run the default-alive check: is your run­way a count­down to a forced deci­sion, or a buffer that gives you choic­es? The CEOs who can answer that — clear­ly, and ear­ly — are the ones who nev­er get sur­prised by the wall.

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author avatar
Vic­tor Cheng
Author of Extreme Rev­enue Growth, Exec­u­tive coach, inde­pen­dent board mem­ber, and investor in SaaS com­pa­nies.

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