SaaS Founder Guide

SaaS Margin: The Complete Guide for Indie Founders

What Is SaaS Margin — and Why Does It Matter?

SaaS margin is the percentage of your revenue left over after covering the direct costs to deliver your software. Unlike a physical product, software costs don't scale 1:1 with customers — which is exactly what makes it such an attractive business model.

Most SaaS businesses target a gross margin between 70% and 85%. If yours is below 60%, you're likely spending too much on hosting, support, or third-party APIs relative to your revenue. If you're above 85%, you're in excellent shape to reinvest into growth.

The margin number alone doesn't tell the whole story though. You need to look at it alongside MRR growth, churn, and your LTV:CAC ratio to understand whether your business is actually healthy — or just looking good on paper.

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MRR Explained: Your Most Important Number

Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR) is the predictable revenue your business generates each month from active subscriptions. It's not total revenue — it's the recurring slice that you can count on, plan around, and project forward.

For a multi-tier SaaS product, MRR is simply the sum of each tier:

MRR = (Plan A price x Plan A customers) + (Plan B price x Plan B customers) + ...

ARR (Annual Recurring Revenue) is just MRR x 12. It's used more often by investors and in sales conversations, but for day-to-day operations, MRR is what you should be watching weekly.

What makes MRR move?

MRR grows when you add new customers (New MRR), when existing customers upgrade (Expansion MRR), and shrinks when customers cancel (Churned MRR) or downgrade (Contraction MRR). Net New MRR is the one that tells you whether you're actually growing: it's New + Expansion minus Churned and Contraction.

$10K
MRR milestone most solopreneurs target first
x12
Multiply MRR by 12 to get your ARR run rate
3-5%
Healthy monthly MoM growth for early-stage SaaS
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The Real Cost of Churn

Churn is the percentage of customers who cancel in a given month. A 5% monthly churn rate sounds manageable — but compound it over a year and you've lost more than 46% of your base. That means just to stay flat, you need to replace nearly half your customers every year.

MRR Lost / Month = Current MRR x Monthly Churn Rate
Customer Lifespan = 1 / Monthly Churn Rate

At 2% monthly churn, the average customer stays 50 months. At 5%, they're gone in 20 months. That gap has massive downstream effects on LTV and profitability.

How to reduce churn

The most effective churn-reduction tactics for early-stage SaaS are: improving onboarding so users hit their "aha moment" faster, adding usage-based email nudges that bring people back before they go dormant, and conducting cancellation interviews to identify the top 3 reasons people leave.

See how your churn rate affects MRR over 12 months.

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LTV:CAC Ratio — The Health Score of Your Business

LTV (Lifetime Value) tells you how much gross profit you expect to earn from a single customer over their entire relationship with you. CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost) tells you how much it cost to acquire them. The ratio of LTV to CAC is one of the clearest indicators of whether your business model is sustainable.

LTV = (ARPU x Gross Margin%) / Monthly Churn Rate
LTV:CAC = LTV / CAC
CAC Payback = CAC / (ARPU x Gross Margin%)

What's a good LTV:CAC ratio?

The industry benchmark is 3:1 or higher. Below 1:1 means you're losing money on every customer acquired. Between 1-3x, you're marginal — the business works but doesn't leave much room for error. Above 5x, you're in elite territory but you might actually be underinvesting in growth.

CAC Payback Period is equally important: most healthy SaaS businesses recover their acquisition costs within 12-18 months. Longer than 24 months creates serious cash flow risk.

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SaaS Pricing Strategy: Find Your Number

Pricing is the fastest lever in your business. A 10% price increase with the same customer count equals a 10% MRR increase — with zero additional acquisition cost. Yet most indie founders underprice significantly out of fear of rejection.

The 3-tier model

The most reliable structure for indie SaaS is three tiers: a low entry tier that lowers the barrier and drives signups, a mid tier that becomes the workhorse of your MRR, and a top tier that exists primarily as anchor pricing. Most of your revenue will come from the middle tier — target 60-70% of customers landing there.

Value-based vs. cost-plus pricing

Cost-plus pricing (calculate your costs, add a margin) is how most founders start — but it often leads to chronic underpricing. Value-based pricing starts from the question: how much value does this tool create for my customer? If your SaaS saves a user 5 hours per month and their time is worth $50/hour, the tool creates $250/month in value. Charging $49/month is a no-brainer purchase for them.

Not sure what to charge? Find your ideal price point.

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SaaS Benchmarks for Indie Founders

These are the numbers healthy bootstrapped SaaS products tend to hit at different growth stages. Use them as rough targets, not hard rules — your niche and model will affect what's realistic.

70-85%
Target gross margin
<3%
Monthly churn rate to aim for
3x+
Minimum healthy LTV:CAC
<18 mo
Target CAC payback period

The best way to use these benchmarks is to calculate your own numbers first, then identify the one metric that's furthest from the target. That's where you focus for the next 90 days — not on five things at once.

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FAQ

Common SaaS Margin Questions

How is SaaS margin calculated?

Gross margin = (Revenue - COGS) / Revenue x 100. For SaaS, COGS includes hosting, third-party APIs, and direct support. Target: 70–85%.

What is a good LTV:CAC ratio for SaaS?

3:1 or higher. Below 1:1 is unprofitable. Above 5:1 is excellent but may mean you're underinvesting in growth.

What is MRR in SaaS?

Monthly Recurring Revenue — predictable monthly subscription income. Calculated as: sum of (price x customers) across all active plans.

What is a good monthly churn rate?

Under 2–3% monthly. At 5% churn the average customer is gone in 20 months. At 2% they stay 50 months — a massive LTV difference.

How do I calculate CAC payback period?

CAC Payback = CAC / (ARPU x Gross Margin%). Example: $150 CAC, $49 ARPU, 80% GM = 3.8 months payback. Target: under 18 months.

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