MARKETING GLOSSARY

Customer Lifetime Value (LTV): Formula & How to Use It

DIRECT ANSWER

Customer lifetime value (LTV or CLV) is the total net revenue a business expects to earn from a customer over the entire relationship. The simplest SaaS formula is average MRR per customer ÷ monthly churn rate. LTV is most useful when compared to customer acquisition cost (CAC) — a healthy LTV:CAC ratio for SaaS is generally 3:1 or higher.

LTV Formulas and What They Tell You

The basic SaaS formula — LTV = ARPU ÷ churn rate — gives a useful approximation. A product with $200 average MRR and 2% monthly churn has an LTV of roughly $10,000 per customer. The more precise version incorporates gross margin: LTV = (ARPU × gross margin %) ÷ churn rate, which better reflects the economics available to reinvest in growth. For businesses with variable contract values and expansion revenue, cohort-based LTV calculations that track actual cumulative revenue over 12–36 months are more reliable than the formula approximation.

The LTV:CAC ratio is the ratio that most investors and operators use to evaluate channel efficiency. At 3:1, the business returns $3 in lifetime value for every $1 spent acquiring a customer — generally the minimum threshold for sustainable unit economics. Above 5:1 sometimes indicates under-investment in acquisition; below 2:1 is a structural warning. CAC payback period (months to recoup acquisition cost) is the companion metric: under 12 months is strong; over 18 months creates cash-flow pressure in high-growth phases.

LTV as a Segmentation and Targeting Tool

Aggregate LTV is a planning number; segmented LTV is an acquisition tool. When you calculate LTV separately by acquisition channel, company size, industry, or persona, the differences are often large enough to restructure where you spend. A segment with $15,000 LTV that you acquire for $3,000 justifies more budget than a segment with $5,000 LTV acquired for $2,000, even though the latter looks cheaper in isolation.

Autonomous marketing systems can operationalize this continuously. Rather than running a quarterly LTV analysis and adjusting budgets manually, a system with access to cohort data can weight bid strategies, channel allocation, and creative targeting in real time toward the segments that have demonstrated the highest downstream value — not just the highest conversion rate at the top of the funnel.

FAQ

Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) — common questions

What is a good LTV:CAC ratio?

3:1 is the commonly cited floor for SaaS viability. Top-quartile B2B SaaS companies often operate at 4:1–6:1. Below 2:1 means acquisition costs are consuming most of the value the customer generates, leaving little margin for operations or reinvestment.

How does churn rate affect LTV?

Directly and proportionally. Since LTV = ARPU ÷ churn rate, cutting monthly churn from 4% to 2% doubles LTV with no change in pricing or expansion revenue. Churn reduction is often the highest-leverage LTV lever available to an established product.

Should LTV include expansion revenue?

Yes, if expansion is predictable. Include upsell and cross-sell in your ARPU trajectory when your data shows consistent expansion patterns. If expansion is sporadic, model it separately to avoid overstating baseline LTV in acquisition decisions.

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