SaaS

What is Churn Rate?

Churn Rate measures the percentage of customers who stop using a product or service over a given period. It helps identify retention and satisfaction issues.

Full FormChurn Rate
CategorySaaS
UnitPercentage (%)
Higher IsWorse
FORMULA

How to Calculate Churn Rate

Churn Rate measures how many customers stop using a product or service. It highlights retention and satisfaction issues. A high churn rate signals product or experience problems, making it critical for subscription businesses. Reducing churn improves long-term revenue.

Churn Rate Formula
Churn Rate=
Customers Lost
Total Customers
× 100

Simple Example

If 90 out of 1,500 customers canceled this month:

Churn Rate = (90 ÷ 1,500) × 100 = 6%
1,500
Customers
90
Lost
6%
Churn

Marketing Platforms that supports Churn Rate

These platforms provide the data needed to measure or calculate Churn Rate in Two Minute Reports.

Frequently Asked Questions

Churn rate measures the percentage of customers who cancel or stop using your service during a given period, calculated as: (Customers Lost / Total Customers at Start) × 100. If you start with 1,000 customers and lose 50 in a month, your monthly churn is 5%. This metric is critical for subscription businesses because it directly impacts revenue sustainability and growth capacity. High churn means you're constantly replacing lost customers rather than growing. Even small churn differences compound dramatically—5% monthly churn means losing 46% of customers annually, while 2% churn loses only 21%. Retention is typically 5-25x cheaper than acquisition, making churn reduction highly profitable.
High churn stems from multiple issues across the customer journey. Poor onboarding fails to help customers realize value quickly, leading to early abandonment. Product doesn't solve promised problems or match expectations set during sales. Lack of ongoing engagement means customers forget your value. Poor customer support frustrates users who need help. Better competitive alternatives emerge offering superior features or pricing. Price sensitivity—customers can't justify ongoing cost. Technical issues or poor reliability create frustration. Feature gaps prevent customers from achieving goals. Lack of product updates signals stagnation. Organizational changes at customer companies eliminate need. Analyze churn reasons through exit surveys and usage data to identify patterns requiring attention.
Acceptable churn rates vary by market segment and customer type. B2B SaaS companies should target under 5% annual churn (0.42% monthly). Consumer subscription services average 5-7% monthly churn. Enterprise SaaS often achieves under 2% monthly churn due to longer contracts and higher switching costs. SMB-focused SaaS typically sees 3-7% monthly churn. Negative churn (expansion revenue exceeds churn) is the gold standard. Churn under 1% monthly suggests strong product-market fit. Above 5-7% monthly indicates serious retention issues requiring immediate attention. Early-stage companies often have higher churn as they refine product-market fit. Focus on improving your baseline rather than fixating on benchmarks.
Reducing churn requires proactive engagement throughout the customer lifecycle. Improve onboarding with clear value milestones and early success indicators. Implement customer success programs that ensure ongoing value realization. Monitor usage patterns to identify at-risk customers showing declining engagement before they churn. Provide exceptional, proactive customer support that anticipates needs. Regularly gather feedback and act on it to improve product fit. Create switching costs through integrations, data investment, and workflow dependencies. Offer flexible pricing or pause options rather than full cancellation. Build community fostering emotional connection beyond product features. Continuously innovate to stay ahead of competition. Focus retention efforts on high-value customers with greatest revenue impact. Small churn improvements dramatically impact long-term growth.