
Most CEOs at $5M to $15M ARR can name the headline subscription price on their pricing page and almost nothing else. That is a problem, because the headline price is one of seven distinct kinds of SaaS fees the business actually charges and pays, and the other six are where margin, valuation, and growth ceiling are silently won or lost. SaaS fees, in plain terms, are the recurring and one-time charges a software company collects from customers in exchange for ongoing access to the product, the support around it, and the infrastructure underneath it.
By the end of this guide you will know the seven fee types that show up on a real SaaS P&L, exactly how each one is treated by acquirers when they reprice the business, the gross margin math that turns the same revenue into a 60% margin business or an 85% margin business, and the three pricing levers that move EBITDA without acquiring a single new customer. The companies that win at exit are not the ones with the cleverest pricing page. They are the ones whose CEO understands the fee structure well enough to hold a board-level conversation about each line. This is the conversation.
What “SaaS Fees” Actually Means
SaaS fees are the dollars a software-as-a-service company charges its customers in exchange for access to a cloud-hosted application. The defining characteristic — and the reason “SaaS fees” deserves its own definition separate from “software license fees” — is that the payment is recurring and tied to continued access, not to a one-time purchase of a perpetual license.
That recurrence is the whole reason SaaS businesses trade at the multiples they do. A traditional on-premise software company that sold a $100,000 license once and then collected $20,000 a year in maintenance trades at one set of valuation multiples. A SaaS company that charges the same customer $40,000 a year forever trades at a meaningfully higher one, even when the five-year contracted revenue is identical. The fee structure is the business model.
There are seven distinct fee types you will see across the SaaS market. Most companies use three or four. A few use all seven. Confusing them — especially when reporting Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) to a board or a buyer — is one of the fastest ways to misrepresent the business and lose multiple at exit.
A note on the numbers in this guide. The percentages, multiples, and benchmark ranges below reflect conditions as of mid-2026. They are included to illustrate relative magnitudes — the gap between healthy and unhealthy gross margins, the spread between SMB and enterprise pricing — not as exact current figures. Verify the specific numbers against your latest benchmark source (SaaS Capital, KeyBanc Capital Markets, OpenView) before quoting them in a board deck or investment memo.
The Seven Kinds of SaaS Fees
Every SaaS fee falls into one of seven categories. The first four are recurring. The last three are one-time or variable. Acquirers value the first four very differently from the last three, and the closer your revenue is to category one, the higher your multiple.

1. Subscription Fees (the recurring core)
The base recurring charge a customer pays to access the software. This is what most people mean when they say “SaaS fees.” Usually billed monthly or annually, sometimes quarterly. A flat dollar amount per billing period, or a per-seat amount multiplied by the number of seats.
This is the fee that should be the vast majority of your revenue — ideally 85% or more. Subscription fees are what an acquirer is buying. They are contractually recurring, predictable, and they compound. Every dollar of subscription revenue is worth multiples of a dollar of one-time revenue at exit.
2. Usage Fees (consumption-based recurring)
Charges that scale with how much the customer actually uses the product. API calls, gigabytes processed, minutes of video transcribed, dollars of payments processed, monthly active end-users — the unit varies, but the structure is the same: more usage equals more fees.
Usage fees are recurring but variable, which acquirers treat as a half-grade lower than flat subscription fees. The good news: usage fees naturally expand with customer growth, which is the engine of Net Revenue Retention (NRR) above 100%. The bad news: they also contract when customers cut usage in a downturn, which is the engine of NRR below 100%. Many of the best 2026-era SaaS businesses use a hybrid: a base subscription fee plus metered usage above a threshold.
3. Per-Seat or Per-User Fees (recurring, headcount-based)
A specific form of subscription fee where the price scales with the number of named users at the customer. $50 per user per month times 200 users equals $10,000 per month in recurring fees.
Per-seat is the easiest pricing model for buyers to understand and budget against, which is why it dominates B2B horizontal SaaS. It also has a built-in expansion mechanism: when the customer hires more people who need the product, your revenue grows without any new sales effort. This is the cleanest version of negative net churn.
The downside: it can become a tax on customer growth in a way that buyers come to resent. The CEO of a customer paying $50,000 a year for 100 seats may push hard on the next renewal when headcount hits 250 — not because the value changed, but because the absolute dollar number crossed a procurement threshold.
4. Platform or Access Fees (recurring, separate from seats)
A fixed recurring charge that gives the customer access to the platform itself, separate from any per-seat or usage component. Think of it as a tenancy fee. Often used by enterprise-tier products that bundle a flat platform charge with usage-metered consumption on top.
Platform fees are useful because they create a revenue floor. Even if the customer cuts seats or usage in a slow quarter, the platform fee keeps producing predictable recurring revenue. From a valuation standpoint, platform fees are treated almost identically to subscription fees — fully recurring, fully contractual.
5. Setup or Onboarding Fees (one-time)
A one-time charge billed at the start of the customer relationship to cover implementation, data migration, configuration, training, or integration work. Common at the enterprise tier where deployment is non-trivial.
Here is where many founders quietly destroy their valuation. Setup fees are not ARR. Including them in ARR is one of the most common ARR-inflation mistakes and is the kind of thing a diligence team finds in the first 48 hours. The fee may be revenue. It may even be a healthy fee. But it is not a recurring fee, and acquirers will strip it out of the ARR base before applying a multiple.
The honest treatment: report setup fees on a separate line, recognize them in the period they were earned, and exclude them entirely from any ARR or recurring-revenue number you share with a board or a buyer.
6. Professional Services Fees (variable, project-based)
Charges for consulting, custom development, integration help, or other human-delivered work that sits adjacent to the software. Often a separate professional services team inside the SaaS company, often billed by the hour or by the project.
Professional services fees can be a meaningful revenue line — sometimes 10% to 20% of total revenue at companies serving the enterprise — but they trade at services multiples (typically 1× to 2× revenue), not SaaS multiples (typically 4× to 12× revenue). A company that is 80% SaaS and 20% services will get repriced lower at exit than a company that is 95% SaaS, even when the EBITDA margins look similar.
The CEO question to ask: are professional services a profit center, or a cost of customer acquisition disguised as revenue? If services exist primarily to make subscription customers successful, treat them as a CAC investment, not as a separate revenue stream — and price them accordingly.
7. Overage and Add-On Fees (variable, exception-based)
Charges that kick in when a customer exceeds their plan limits (an “overage” fee) or buys an additional feature, module, or add-on that is not part of their base subscription.
These are valuable because they are pure expansion revenue — every dollar of overage is incremental gross margin, and they require no new customer acquisition. The companies with NRR above 130% almost always have a strong overage-and-add-on motion built into their pricing. The companies with NRR at 95% usually do not.
The risk: overage fees can also be a customer-relationship landmine if the customer feels surprised. The discipline is to make the overage trigger visible and predictable inside the product, so the customer is never surprised by the invoice.
How the Seven Fees Show Up on the P&L
The seven fee types each map to different lines on the income statement, and an acquirer will reconstruct your P&L by fee type before they value the business. Here is the cleaner version you should be reporting internally:
| Fee Type | Revenue Line | Recurring? | Acquirer Multiple Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Subscription Fees | Subscription Revenue | Yes — contractual | Full SaaS multiple |
| Usage Fees | Usage / Consumption Revenue | Yes — variable | Full SaaS multiple, sometimes slight discount |
| Per-Seat Fees | Subscription Revenue | Yes — contractual | Full SaaS multiple |
| Platform Fees | Platform Revenue | Yes — contractual | Full SaaS multiple |
| Setup Fees | Onboarding Revenue | No — one-time | Stripped from ARR; valued at services multiple |
| Professional Services | Services Revenue | No — project-based | Services multiple (1×–2× revenue) |
| Overage / Add-On Fees | Expansion Revenue | Variable but recurring | Full SaaS multiple |
Most founders combine some of these lines on their internal reports because the accounting system was set up before they thought about it. That is fine for tax purposes. It is a problem for valuation conversations. If you cannot, on demand, produce a one-page report showing each of the seven fee types as a separate revenue line for the last 12 months, you cannot have an informed pricing conversation — and you cannot tell a buyer’s diligence team the truth about your business.
The Gross Margin Math: How Fees Become Profit
A subscription fee charged is not a subscription fee earned. The cost of delivering the software — hosting, third-party software, customer support, payment processing — comes out of that fee before any of it is profit. The percentage that survives is gross margin, and it is one of the two or three numbers that most directly drives your valuation multiple.
The basic formula:
Gross Margin % = (Revenue − Cost of Goods Sold) / Revenue
For a SaaS business, Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) typically includes:
- Hosting and infrastructure. AWS, Azure, GCP, dedicated hardware.
- Third-party software embedded in the product. APIs you resell, OEM components.
- Customer support cost. The salaries of the people answering tickets.
- Customer success cost. At least the portion delivering the product, not the portion driving expansion (that’s a sales cost).
- Payment processing fees. Stripe, ACH, credit card interchange (typically 2.0% to 3.5% of every dollar collected).
- Implementation cost when amortized. For paid setup work where the cost exceeds the fee.
Note that point 5 alone — payment processing — eats 2% to 3.5% of every subscription fee before any other cost is touched. On a $40,000-per-year contract, that is $800 to $1,400 a year, every year, gone before you start paying for hosting. Many founders never think about this until they look at the gross margin line and wonder why it is lower than the competitor benchmark.
What good looks like
| ARR Range | Healthy Gross Margin | Concerning Below |
|---|---|---|
| <$1M ARR | 65%–75% | 50% |
| $1M–$10M ARR | 75%–82% | 60% |
| $10M–$50M ARR | 78%–85% | 70% |
| $50M+ ARR | 80%–90% | 75% |
If you are sitting at 60% gross margin at $8M ARR, the conversation is not “should I raise prices.” The conversation is “which two of the six COGS lines are eating my margin, and which one am I going to fix first.” Almost always the answer is hosting (over-provisioned infrastructure that has not been right-sized in eighteen months) or support cost (a head count of people answering questions the product should be answering itself). Pricing is rarely the issue at the gross margin line — pricing shows up at the EBITDA line, which we will get to in a moment.
The Worked Example: A $5M ARR Business by Fee Type
Take a B2B SaaS company at $5M ARR. Here is how the same revenue looks under two different fee structures.

Company A — clean subscription business
| Fee Type | Annual Revenue | % of Total |
|---|---|---|
| Subscription Fees | $4,650,000 | 93% |
| Usage Fees | $200,000 | 4% |
| Setup Fees | $50,000 | 1% |
| Professional Services | $100,000 | 2% |
| Total Revenue | $5,000,000 | 100% |
Acquirer’s reconstructed ARR: $4,850,000 (subscription + usage). Setup and services stripped out and valued separately at a services multiple.
If the company also has 80% gross margin and is growing 40% a year, the SaaS multiple it commands might be 6× to 8× ARR — call it 7×. Services and setup at 1.5×. Combined indicative enterprise value: roughly $34M to $36M.
Company B — services-heavy “SaaS” business
| Fee Type | Annual Revenue | % of Total |
|---|---|---|
| Subscription Fees | $3,000,000 | 60% |
| Setup Fees | $400,000 | 8% |
| Professional Services | $1,500,000 | 30% |
| Overage / Add-On Fees | $100,000 | 2% |
| Total Revenue | $5,000,000 | 100% |
Acquirer’s reconstructed ARR: $3,100,000 (subscription + add-ons). Setup and services stripped out.
Even at the same 80% gross margin and 40% growth, the SaaS portion of this business is much smaller. At a 7× multiple on $3.1M of ARR, the SaaS side is worth roughly $22M. The services side at 1.5× on $1.9M is worth roughly $2.9M. Combined indicative enterprise value: roughly $25M.
Same headline revenue. Same growth rate. Same gross margin. About $10M of valuation gap, entirely driven by the fee mix.
This is what acquirers mean when they say they “look through” revenue to recurring revenue. They are doing the table above, in their head, before they offer a multiple. The founder who does not understand the seven fee types cannot have an informed conversation about why the offer came in where it did.
The Three Pricing Levers Most Founders Leave on the Table
You can change the EBITDA margin of a SaaS business without acquiring a single new customer. The three levers are pricing, packaging, and overage discipline. Each is a different way to extract more dollars per existing customer.

Lever 1 — Raise prices on new customers
The lowest-risk version of a pricing change. A 10% price increase taken only on new customers does not touch any existing renewal, does not generate any pricing-driven churn, and lands directly on the gross margin line for every customer who signs after the increase. If those customers have an average lifespan of 36 months, the 10% price increase compounds into roughly a 10% lift on the LTV of the entire new-customer cohort.
Most companies at $5M to $15M ARR have not raised prices in three years. The 10% they leave on the table per year compounds into something close to a 35% pricing gap relative to where they should be at the four-year mark. That is real EBITDA, and it is real valuation.
Lever 2 — Raise prices on existing customers at renewal
Higher-friction, but where the bigger dollar number lives. The discipline is to take a small annual price increase — somewhere in the 3% to 7% range — at every renewal as a matter of policy, not as an exception. The 5% middle of that range is below the threshold where most customers will negotiate, especially if the product has continued to ship improvements.
The companies that take a 5% annual escalator from year one onward have a built-in negative net revenue retention floor before any expansion or contraction. Five percent of $4M of subscription revenue is $200,000 a year in incremental high-margin recurring revenue, on top of any growth from new customers or seat expansion. That is real money.
The pricing-power test is Buffett’s: can you raise prices and keep your customers? If yes, you have pricing power. If no, you have a customer-acquisition problem you are masking as a pricing problem. Pricing power is one of the easiest levers to improve EBITDA without acquiring new customers, and one of the strongest signals of a durable competitive advantage in the eyes of a buyer. The OpenView 2023 SaaS Benchmarks Report on pricing maturity is one of the better third-party reads on how the highest-performing companies operate this lever; the OpenView SaaS pricing benchmarks walk through the data.
Lever 3 — Capture the overage and add-on revenue you are already entitled to
Most usage-based SaaS contracts have built-in overage clauses that the customer success team is not enforcing. The customer is over their plan limit by a meaningful percentage. The product is generating the value the contract paid for. The fee was earned. The invoice was never sent.
This is one of the most concentrated forms of leverage available to a CEO. You are not selling anything new. You are not raising prices. You are not even renegotiating a contract. You are simply collecting fees the contract already says are owed.
The discipline is operational: a quarterly review of every customer above 90% of their plan limit, an automated overage notification at 100% so the customer is never surprised by the invoice, and a customer success team that is incented to enforce overages in the same conversation where they pitch the next-tier upgrade. Done well, this is a category of revenue that produces 95%-plus gross margin and grows entirely from inside the existing customer base.
Setup and Implementation Fees: When to Charge, When to Eat
The question of whether to charge setup fees at all is one of the more contested pricing questions in B2B SaaS. The honest answer depends on the customer segment and on what the setup fee is actually doing.
Charge the setup fee when:
- Implementation requires real human work that costs you real money — typically more than $5,000 of internal cost
- Charging it does not measurably lower your win rate against competitors
- Free implementation would unlock customer behavior that is bad for retention (e.g., customers who never deploy because they had no skin in the game)
Eat the setup fee when:
- You sell to SMB and the friction of a setup invoice costs you more than the fee captures
- The competitive set does not charge setup fees and matching them is a deal-breaker
- Implementation is mostly automated and the marginal cost to you is near zero
The most common mistake is the middle ground: charging a $2,500 setup fee that the customer resists, that the sales team always discounts to win the deal, and that ends up at $0 in two-thirds of contracts. That fee is doing nothing except adding friction to the sales cycle. Either price it at a level that reflects actual implementation cost ($10,000+ for genuine enterprise deployments), or zero it out and roll the dollars into the first year’s subscription fee instead.
For founders selling exclusively to SMB at sub-$2,000 ACV, setup fees are almost always a mistake. The customer expectation is self-serve onboarding, and any setup fee is a tax on the trial-to-paid conversion that will quietly kill your top-of-funnel economics without your noticing.
How Fees Affect Valuation: The Recurring Revenue Premium
The strategic point underneath all of this is straightforward: SaaS multiples are paid for contractually recurring revenue. Every fee type that meets that test is worth multiples of every fee type that does not.
The 2026 mid-market private-SaaS multiple ranges, roughly:
| Revenue Type | Typical Multiple | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Contractual Subscription | 6×–12× ARR | Predictable, compounding, defensible |
| Variable Usage (with contract floor) | 5×–10× ARR | Predictable enough; floor matters |
| Per-Seat (B2B) | 6×–12× ARR | Predictable + auto-expanding |
| Platform / Access | 6×–12× ARR | Predictable, recurring, defensible |
| Setup / Onboarding | 1×–2× revenue | One-time, services-like |
| Professional Services | 1×–2× revenue | Project-based, labor-driven |
| Overage / Add-On | 5×–10× ARR | Recurring but variable |
The single most leveraged thing a CEO can do over a 24-month exit window is maximize the share of revenue that is contractually recurring (subscription, per-seat, platform, overage) and minimize the share that is one-time (setup) or labor-based (professional services). The same company, shifting its mix from 70% recurring to 90% recurring over two years, can pick up two to four turns of multiple at exit — sometimes more than the value of the underlying growth itself.
For a deeper walkthrough of the math that drives this, see the guide to SaaS unit economics and the breakdown of cost of goods sold for SaaS. For a side-by-side view of the pricing models that produce each fee type, the SaaS pricing models guide walks through the implementation tradeoffs.
Common Mistakes in How CEOs Talk About SaaS Fees
A handful of fee-related mistakes show up repeatedly in board decks, investor pitches, and acquirer conversations. Each one is the kind of thing a diligence team flags in a memo back to their investment committee.
- Reporting one-time setup fees as ARR. This is the single most common ARR inflation pattern. A customer signs a $50,000 deal that includes $40,000 of annual subscription plus a $10,000 setup fee, and the company books $50,000 of ARR. The correct ARR is $40,000. The $10,000 is one-time revenue. Buyers always reconstruct this; the CEO who reports it incorrectly loses credibility before losing valuation.
- Mixing professional services revenue into the subscription line. If a customer’s contract bundles $60,000 of annual subscription with $30,000 of implementation services in the first year, splitting them on the P&L is harder, but it must be done. The diligence team will do it for you, less generously than you would have.
- Counting overage fees as one-time revenue. Overage fees that recur from the same customer month after month are part of NRR, part of expansion, and valued at a SaaS multiple. They are not non-recurring revenue. Many companies underreport their effective ARR by misclassifying overage as variable one-time charges.
- Failing to disclose price escalators in contracts. A 5% annual escalator embedded in every customer contract is a meaningful piece of forward revenue. Acquirers value businesses with contractual escalators meaningfully higher than those without. If you have them, document them clearly; if you do not, start adding them at the next renewal.
- Treating a discount as a separate “discount line” instead of a price reduction. A subscription fee of $50,000 with a $10,000 discount is a $40,000 fee. Reporting the gross $50,000 as ARR and the discount as a contra-revenue item is the kind of presentation choice that makes buyers suspicious of the rest of the numbers.
The unifying theme: report the fees the way the buyer will reconstruct them. If your internal P&L and the buyer’s reconstructed P&L look the same, every conversation about valuation starts on solid ground. If they look different, every conversation starts with you defending the difference.
Frequently Asked Questions About SaaS Fees
Are SaaS fees tax-deductible for the customer?
For the business customer, yes — recurring SaaS fees are typically treated as operating expenses (OpEx) and are fully deductible in the year incurred, in contrast to traditional software licenses that were sometimes capitalized and depreciated over multiple years. This OpEx treatment is one of the underrated drivers of the broad shift from perpetual licenses to SaaS subscriptions over the last fifteen years.
How do SaaS fees affect Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR)?
Only the recurring fee types — subscription fees, per-seat fees, platform fees, usage fees with a contractual floor, and overage fees that recur — count toward ARR. One-time setup fees and project-based professional services revenue are excluded from ARR even though they are revenue. The cleanest mental model: if the customer canceled tomorrow, would the fee continue next month? If yes, it is ARR. If no, it is not.
What is the difference between SaaS fees and licensing fees?
A traditional software license fee is a one-time charge in exchange for a perpetual right to use a specific version of the software, usually paired with an annual maintenance fee. A SaaS fee is a recurring charge in exchange for ongoing access to the software, including all updates, infrastructure, and support. The two business models look superficially similar but have very different unit economics — and very different exit multiples.
Are SaaS setup fees worth charging?
Sometimes. The answer depends on your customer segment, the actual cost of implementation, and the competitive set’s standard practice. For enterprise deployments with significant human labor cost, yes — typically priced at $10,000 or more so the fee reflects real cost. For SMB self-serve products, almost never — the friction at the trial-to-paid conversion costs more than the fee captures. The middle ground (a small fee that always gets discounted away in negotiation) is almost always a mistake.
How often should SaaS companies raise their fees?
A small annual price escalator — typically 3% to 7%, with 5% as the common middle — at every renewal is a low-risk, high-value default. Larger price increases (15% or more) should be tied to a packaging or product change so the customer perceives proportional value. Most $5M to $15M ARR companies have not raised prices in two to three years and are leaving meaningful EBITDA and valuation on the table.
What is a “platform fee” in a SaaS contract?
A platform fee is a fixed recurring charge for access to the platform itself, separate from any per-seat, usage, or per-feature charge. It functions as a revenue floor — the platform fee continues even if the customer cuts seats or usage. Platform fees are common in enterprise SaaS and are treated by acquirers as fully recurring, fully contractual revenue.
What to Do This Week
If you read this guide and you cannot, on your own, produce a one-page report showing the seven fee types as separate revenue lines for the last 12 months, that is the first project. Most accounting systems can produce this with one configuration change to how revenue is categorized. The CEO who does not have this report cannot have an informed pricing conversation.
Three specific moves to consider in the next 90 days:
- Audit your overage enforcement. Pull a list of every customer at or above 90% of their plan limit. Count how many of them are being billed for the overage they are generating. The gap between “earned” and “collected” is, in most companies, between 5% and 20% of total revenue.
- Decide your annual escalator policy. If you do not have a 3% to 7% annual price escalator built into every new contract, add it starting with the next deal. The cost is zero. The compounding effect over the next exit window is meaningful.
- Strip setup fees out of ARR in your internal reporting. If your dashboard shows ARR including setup fees, the number is wrong. Acquirers will strip them out. So should you.
None of these moves require new customers. None require new product. All three move EBITDA and valuation. That is what serious work on SaaS fees looks like.

