Customer LTV: $1,000 ARPA, 75% Margin, 1% Churn
An enterprise SaaS product with $1,000 monthly ARPA, 75% gross margin, and 1% monthly churn delivers a customer LTV of $75,000.
How to use this tool
- Enter the average revenue one customer generates per period.
- Enter your gross margin (or 100% for a revenue-based LTV).
- Enter your churn rate per period, in the same time unit as the revenue.
- Read the lifetime value, average lifespan, and gross margin per period.
Enterprise SaaS with sticky contracts and low churn can achieve extraordinarily high LTV, making it worthwhile to invest heavily in enterprise sales and onboarding.
Frequently asked questions
- Why divide by churn rate?
- The average customer lifespan is approximately the reciprocal of the churn rate. A 5% periodic churn means a customer stays about 1 ÷ 0.05 = 20 periods on average, so multiplying periodic margin by that lifespan gives lifetime value.
- Should I use revenue or gross margin?
- Gross-margin LTV is the more defensible number because it reflects profit you keep after serving the customer. Use revenue (100% margin) only when you specifically want a revenue-based figure, and keep comparisons consistent.
- Does this account for discounting?
- No. This is the simple, undiscounted LTV. For long-lived, high-value customers you may want to discount future periods to present value, which produces a lower, more conservative LTV.