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Revenue

CAC Payback Period

Also known as: Customer Payback Period, Months to Recover CAC

The number of months required to recover the cost of acquiring a customer through their recurring revenue contribution. A shorter payback period means faster return on acquisition investment.

Formula

Customer Acquisition Cost / (Monthly Recurring Revenue × Gross Margin %)

Who Is This Metric For?

VP/Director of CS

Use to justify CS investment — better retention directly shortens payback period.

CRO/CCO

Critical for unit economics and investor reporting — shows sustainability of the growth model.

CEO/Founder

Fundamental health metric — long payback periods signal a business model problem.

Priority by Stage

Crawl low

Not a CS metric at this stage. Focus on retention fundamentals before worrying about unit economics.

Walk low

Awareness only. Understanding CAC payback helps CS leaders make the case for investment in customer retention.

Run medium

Track CAC payback by segment. CS’s impact on retention directly affects payback — shorter churn = faster payback.

Fly high

CAC payback should be optimized cross-functionally. CS should influence sales targeting and customer qualification.

Benchmarks

Segment Good Great World Class
SMB Under 12 months Under 8 months Under 6 months
Mid-Market Under 18 months Under 12 months Under 9 months
Enterprise Under 24 months Under 18 months Under 12 months

Common Mistakes

  • Not including all acquisition costs (marketing, sales, onboarding) in the CAC calculation
  • Ignoring gross margin — revenue ≠ profit, and payback should reflect actual contribution
  • Not segmenting CAC payback — blended payback hides massive segment-level differences
  • Treating CAC payback as purely a finance/sales metric when CS retention directly impacts it

Used in Playbooks

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