Guide · CAC

How to Calculate CAC
— Formula & Benchmarks

CAC is not just ad spend divided by conversions. Done correctly, it includes every dollar spent to acquire a customer — and it tells you whether your business can actually scale.

Updated May 2026 · SaaS, ecommerce & B2B benchmarks
SaaS target LTV:CAC
3:1
Industry standard floor
SaaS payback target
<12 mo
Strong; 18mo = acceptable
Ecommerce LTV:CAC
2–3:1
Typical healthy range
Most common mistake
Ad-only
Ignoring sales & overhead

The CAC Formula

The basic formula is simple. The hard part is what counts as an acquisition cost.

Blended CAC (Full)
CAC = (Marketing Spend + Sales Spend) ÷ New Customers
Marketing Spend: ad spend, agency fees, content costs, tool subscriptions, events. Sales Spend: sales team salaries, commissions, CRM, sales tools, demos. New Customers: customers who made their first purchase or signed their first contract in the period.
Marketing-Only CAC (Channel Analysis)
Marketing CAC = Marketing Spend ÷ New Customers
Useful for channel-level benchmarking and paid campaign analysis. Does not reflect true business economics — always use blended CAC for profitability decisions.

Most companies understate their CAC by only counting paid ad spend. A complete picture includes: headcount costs for anyone in marketing or sales, tool and software subscriptions, agency fees, content production, events and trade shows, and a proportional share of office/ops overhead.

The hidden CAC multiplier

For B2B companies with an inside sales team, true blended CAC is often 2–4x what the marketing-only number suggests. If your marketing CAC is $200 but you have 5 sales reps at $80k/year closing 400 deals annually, that's $1,000 of sales cost per deal — bringing true CAC to $1,200. Use the CAC calculator to enter all cost inputs and see the true number.

LTV:CAC Ratio — What It Means and What's Good

LTV:CAC is the most important profitability signal for any recurring revenue or repeat purchase business. It answers: for every dollar spent acquiring a customer, how many dollars do you get back over their lifetime?

LTV:CAC Ratio
LTV:CAC = Customer Lifetime Value ÷ CAC
LTV = Average Revenue Per Customer × Gross Margin % × Average Customer Lifetime (months or years). For SaaS: LTV = MRR × Gross Margin ÷ Monthly Churn Rate.
Danger
Below 2:1
Business is unlikely to be profitable at scale. Review pricing, CAC inputs, or churn rate urgently.
Acceptable
2:1 – 3:1
Margin exists but is thin. Sustainable if payback period is short and churn is low.
Healthy
3:1 – 5:1
Industry benchmark for SaaS and subscription. Scale with confidence. Room to invest in growth.

A ratio above 5:1 often indicates underinvestment in growth — the business could afford to spend more on acquisition. It can also indicate the LTV calculation is too optimistic (long lifespan assumptions, high predicted AOV).

CAC Payback Period

LTV:CAC tells you the long-run economics. Payback period tells you how long until you recoup the acquisition cost — which is a cash flow question, not just a profitability one.

CAC Payback Period
Payback (months) = CAC ÷ (MRR × Gross Margin %)
Example: $1,200 CAC ÷ ($100 MRR × 70% margin) = 17.1 months payback. During those 17 months, the company is cash-flow negative on that customer. Shorter payback = less cash required to fund growth.
Business Type Strong Payback Acceptable Concern Note
SaaS (SMB) <6 months 6–12 months 18+ months High churn risk makes long payback dangerous
SaaS (Enterprise) <12 months 12–24 months 30+ months Lower churn justifies longer payback
Ecommerce 1st order 1–3 months 6+ months Repeat purchase rate determines LTV viability
B2B / Lead Gen <12 months 12–18 months 24+ months Depends heavily on contract length
Payback vs. LTV:CAC

A company can have excellent LTV:CAC (4:1) but dangerous payback periods (30 months). This is common in enterprise SaaS — the lifetime economics work, but the company burns cash while waiting to recoup each customer. This is why Series A SaaS investors look at both metrics separately, not just LTV:CAC.

CAC Benchmarks by Industry — 2026

These are blended CAC benchmarks including marketing and sales costs. Marketing-only CAC will typically be 40–70% of these figures depending on how sales-heavy the model is.

Industry Typical CAC LTV:CAC Target Payback Target Note
SaaS (SMB) $200–$800 3:1+ 6–12 mo High churn makes fast payback essential
SaaS (Enterprise) $5k–$50k+ 3:1+ 12–24 mo Long sales cycle; low churn offsets high CAC
Ecommerce $15–$80 2–3:1 1st order Repeat purchase rate is the key variable
Finance / Insurance $300–$1,200 5:1+ 6–18 mo High LTV justifies premium CAC
Healthcare $200–$600 3:1+ 12–18 mo Regulatory constraints limit channels
Education / EdTech $50–$500 2–3:1 3–12 mo Highly seasonal; depends on course vs. subscription

How to Reduce CAC

Improve conversion rate

CAC is a function of the entire funnel, not just acquisition cost. A landing page that converts at 3% instead of 1.5% cuts CAC in half from the same ad spend. CRO investment typically produces a better CAC ROI than additional media spend in mature campaigns. Model the impact with the ROAS calculator — improving CVR shows up directly in the output.

Increase average deal size or AOV

CAC is a fixed cost per customer — but its impact on LTV:CAC improves dramatically when you close larger deals or increase order value. An ecommerce brand that increases AOV from $60 to $80 improves LTV:CAC by 33% without touching acquisition costs. For B2B SaaS, moving upmarket (higher ACV) is often the fastest path to improving unit economics.

Invest in organic and referral channels

SEO, content, and referral programs have near-zero marginal CAC per acquired customer once built. Blended CAC improves automatically as the organic mix grows. A B2B company where 40% of leads come from organic search has structurally lower CAC than a competitor relying 100% on paid — even if their paid CAC is identical.

The retention lever

LTV:CAC improves when either LTV rises or CAC falls. Reducing churn by 2 percentage points has the same effect on LTV as reducing CAC by 20–30% in many SaaS models. Retention investment is often underweighted relative to acquisition spend — model your churn sensitivity in the CAC calculator to see the LTV impact.

Calculate your blended CAC and LTV:CAC ratio

Enter marketing spend, sales spend, and customers — get CAC, LTV:CAC, and payback instantly.

Open CAC Calculator →

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between CAC and CPA?

CPA (cost per acquisition) typically refers to the cost of a specific conversion event — a purchase, a lead form, a trial signup — measured at the campaign or channel level using only the ad spend for that campaign. CAC (customer acquisition cost) is a business-level metric that includes all sales and marketing costs divided by new customers. CPA is a media buying metric; CAC is a business health metric. They often differ significantly. A CPA of $30 might correspond to a CAC of $90 when sales team costs are included.

Should I include salaries in my CAC calculation?

Yes — for an accurate blended CAC, include proportional salaries for anyone whose primary job is acquisition: performance marketers, content marketers, SDRs, account executives, and sales managers. For part-time contributors, include the proportion of their time spent on acquisition activities. Excluding salaries systematically understates CAC and creates false confidence in unit economics.

What time period should I use to calculate CAC?

Monthly CAC is noisy due to campaign timing and sales cycle lag. Quarterly CAC smooths the variation and is the most commonly used period for SaaS and B2B businesses. For ecommerce with shorter purchase cycles, monthly CAC is often sufficient. Avoid comparing CAC across periods without accounting for seasonality — Q4 ecommerce CAC is structurally lower due to higher purchase intent and holiday volume.

How do I calculate CAC for a B2B company with a long sales cycle?

The timing challenge is the key problem: costs are incurred months before the customer closes. The most accurate approach is cohort-based: track all costs associated with a lead cohort from first touch through close, then divide by the customers who convert from that cohort. This correctly attributes the full acquisition cost regardless of the lag between spend and revenue. Simpler approaches (monthly spend ÷ monthly customers) will be noisy and should only be used for directional benchmarking.

Is a lower CAC always better?

Not necessarily. An extremely low CAC can indicate the business is underinvesting in growth — passing up profitable customers because it's spending too little. The right target is the highest CAC that still produces an acceptable LTV:CAC ratio and payback period. A company with 5:1 LTV:CAC and 6-month payback can usually afford to increase CAC by 30–50% and generate more total profit, even though each customer costs more to acquire.

Related Tools & Benchmarks