You spent $4,000 on ads last month and got 12 new customers. Good month? Bad month? You have no idea until you know your customer acquisition cost.
CAC is one of those metrics every investor asks about. It's also one that most first-time founders either track badly or skip entirely until something breaks. When the numbers finally catch up, you find out you've been paying $400 to acquire a customer worth $180. That math doesn't work, and no amount of fundraising fixes it.
This guide walks through the real math on customer acquisition cost. What it is, how to calculate it, what number is actually good, and the moves that pull it down without torching your growth.
What is customer acquisition cost (CAC)?
Customer acquisition cost is the total amount you spend to land one new paying customer. It includes marketing spend, sales salaries, software tools, and any other cost tied to bringing a customer in the door. If you spent $10,000 to acquire 50 customers, your CAC is $200.
That's the short answer. The longer version matters more, because most founders miscount the inputs.
Some people count only ad spend. That's wrong. Others count their entire payroll. That's also wrong. The right frame is: every dollar you would not have spent if you weren't trying to acquire customers.
So Facebook ads? Yes. The content marketer's salary? Yes. The Zapier subscription? If it's running your lead flow, yes. The accountant who files your taxes? No. Your office rent? No.
The test is simple: would you still be paying this if you weren't trying to grow? If the answer is no, it's part of CAC.
How do you calculate CAC?
The formula is: total sales and marketing costs over a period, divided by the number of new customers acquired in that same period. If you spent $15,000 on sales and marketing in Q1 and got 75 new customers, your CAC is $200.
Here's how it usually looks in a real spreadsheet:
Paid ads (Google, Meta, LinkedIn) $6,000
Content marketing (writer + tools) $2,500
Sales team salaries (fully loaded) $4,500
Sales tools (CRM, outreach, calling) $800
Affiliate commissions paid $700
Conferences/events $500
TOTAL ACQUISITION SPEND $15,000
New customers acquired 75
CAC = $15,000 / 75 $200
Calculate this monthly at minimum. Weekly if you're running paid campaigns. Quarterly is too slow to catch problems.
One note. "Fully loaded" means salary plus benefits plus taxes plus whatever percentage of overhead you assign. A $100K sales rep usually costs the company about $130K all in. Use that number, not the base.
What's a good CAC for a startup?
There's no universal good CAC number. What matters is your CAC relative to your customer lifetime value. The rule of thumb most investors use: LTV should be at least 3x your CAC. If your LTV is $900 and your CAC is $300, you're in a healthy zone.
Here's a cheat sheet by business type:
| Business type | Typical healthy CAC range | Typical LTV:CAC |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS (SMB) | $200 to $800 | 3:1 to 5:1 |
| SaaS (enterprise) | $5,000 to $50,000+ | 3:1 to 7:1 |
| DTC / ecommerce | $20 to $80 | 3:1 |
| Marketplace | $30 to $150 | 3:1 to 4:1 |
| Consumer apps | $1 to $25 | 3:1+ |
These are rough bands, not laws. A dog food subscription might look great at $40 CAC. A niche B2B tool might be fine at $2,000.
The real question isn't "is my CAC low?" It's "is my CAC payback reasonable and is my LTV:CAC ratio at least 3:1?"
CAC payback is how many months of customer revenue it takes to cover what you spent to acquire them. Under 12 months is good for SaaS. Under 24 months is survivable. Over 24 months means you're burning cash fast and praying retention holds up. Most of the time, it doesn't.
What's the LTV to CAC ratio and why does it matter?
LTV to CAC ratio is the dollar value a customer brings over their lifetime, divided by what it cost to acquire them. If you spend $200 to get a customer who pays you $1,000 over time, your ratio is 5:1. Higher is better, but above 5:1 often means you're underinvesting in growth.
Think of it this way. A 1:1 ratio means you're breaking even on every customer before counting hosting, support, product costs, and your own salary. A 2:1 ratio is still tight once you add those in. A 3:1 ratio gives you room to fund the next round of growth. A 5:1 ratio is great but raises a question: if the economics are that good, why aren't you spending more to grow faster?
A few things to get right when you calculate LTV:
- Use gross margin, not revenue. If you charge $50/month but it costs you $10/month to deliver, your LTV uses the $40, not the $50.
- Account for churn realistically. If 5% of customers cancel each month, the average customer stays 20 months. Don't assume forever.
- Discount the future if you want to be precise. A dollar in year three is worth less than a dollar today.
A real example. A SaaS company charges $99/month, has 4% monthly churn, and 75% gross margin. Average lifetime is 25 months. LTV is $99 × 0.75 × 25, which equals $1,856. If their CAC is $400, the ratio is 4.6:1. That's a healthy business.
What costs should you include in your CAC calculation?
Include every dollar tied to generating and converting new customers. That means all paid advertising, content creation, sales team salaries (fully loaded), sales tools, marketing software, affiliate fees, event and conference spend, and any agency or freelancer fees for growth work. Leave out product development, customer support for existing users, and general overhead like rent.
Here's a more complete checklist:
Always include:
- Paid media (Google, Meta, LinkedIn, TikTok, etc.)
- SEO tools and content production costs
- Salaries for marketers and salespeople (with benefits and taxes)
- Marketing automation tools (HubSpot, Mailchimp, etc.)
- Sales tools (CRM, calling, outreach software)
- Referral program payouts
- Conferences and events
- Design and creative production tied to marketing
- Agency fees for growth or paid media
- Landing page tools, A/B testing tools
Usually don't include:
- Product engineering salaries
- Customer success for retention (arguably belongs in a separate "retention cost" bucket)
- General management overhead
- Office rent and utilities
- Finance, HR, legal staff
- Existing customer support
Gray zone (decide and be consistent):
- Founder time spent on sales (include if significant and ongoing)
- PR and brand work (include the portion targeting acquisition, not pure brand halo)
- Partnership development (include if you're paying for reach)
Whatever you decide, write it down. Six months from now, when you're revisiting the number, you want to know exactly what's in it. Inconsistency turns CAC into a vanity metric you can't trust.
How do you lower your CAC without killing growth?
The highest-leverage moves to lower CAC are improving conversion rates on what you already have, investing in channels with compounding returns (SEO, referrals, content), and being ruthless about killing underperforming paid campaigns. Cutting spend alone usually tanks growth. Cutting waste doesn't.
Some specific tactics that actually move the number:
Fix conversion before buying more traffic. If your landing page converts at 1.5% and the best in your category does 4%, doubling your ad budget before you fix the page is lighting money on fire. Run a week of user testing. Watch 10 people try to sign up. Fix what's broken.
Build content and SEO assets. A blog post that ranks on Google keeps bringing you customers for years after you write it. The upfront cost looks brutal. The long-run CAC approaches zero. Tools like Foundra, Notion, or a simple editorial calendar help you run this as an actual system instead of a scattered effort.
Referral loops. Existing customers acquiring new customers is often the cheapest channel you have. Dropbox grew from 100K to 4M users in 15 months largely off a referral program. A well-designed referral offer can pull CAC down 30% or more.
Kill bottom-quartile campaigns weekly. Most paid budgets have 20% of campaigns delivering 80% of the customers. The other 80% is noise or waste. If you're not reviewing weekly and cutting, you're overpaying.
Negotiate tool stacks. Annual contracts, startup discounts, bundled pricing. Most SaaS companies will give you 20% to 40% off if you ask once a year. Stack that across five tools and you've bought back meaningful CAC.
Expand retention to lift LTV. This doesn't lower CAC directly but it fixes the LTV:CAC ratio, which is what actually matters. Onboarding improvements, product stickiness, customer success motions. A 1% monthly churn reduction can add years to average customer lifetime.
When should founders start tracking CAC?
Track CAC the moment you have any repeatable acquisition spend. If you're running even $500/month in ads or paying a contractor to write content, start tracking. You don't need perfect data at $5K in total spend. You need a habit. The metric gets more useful as your sample size grows.
Founders often put off CAC tracking because early numbers are volatile and embarrassing. One month shows $2,400 CAC, the next shows $180. That's normal when you have 8 customers.
But the habit matters more than the precision. Three months of rough CAC data is worth more than a perfect number you calculate for the first time at Series A. You build intuition for what's working. You spot trends in time to act. You stop making decisions based on vibes.
If staring at a blank spreadsheet feels like a chore, planning tools like Foundra, LivePlan, or even a well-organized Google Sheet can give you a structure to plug numbers into. The point isn't the tool. The point is making the calculation routine instead of rare.
Key Takeaways
- CAC is total sales and marketing spend divided by new customers in the same period. Include everything tied to growth, including fully loaded salaries.
- A good CAC depends on your LTV. The common benchmark is LTV:CAC of at least 3:1, with CAC payback under 12 months for SaaS.
- Calculate CAC monthly, not quarterly. Volatility is normal early on, but the habit builds pattern recognition.
- Lower CAC by fixing conversion, doubling down on compounding channels (SEO, referrals, content), and killing bottom-performing campaigns.
- Use gross margin when calculating LTV, not revenue. Account for churn realistically.
- Consistency in what you include matters more than perfection. Document your methodology.
- Foundra, spreadsheet templates, or planning tools all work. Pick one and make CAC tracking part of your monthly routine.
FAQ
What's the difference between CAC and CPA?
CPA (cost per acquisition) usually refers to the cost of a conversion action like a signup or a lead, measured at the campaign level. CAC is the cost of acquiring a paying customer, measured across all acquisition spend. You can have a $20 CPA for trial signups and a $200 CAC for paid customers. They're related but not the same.
Should I include organic traffic in my CAC?
If organic traffic is truly free (someone found you through word of mouth), no. But if you're spending on SEO content, those salaries and tools should be in your CAC. The content isn't free to produce, even if the click is.
How often should I recalculate CAC?
Monthly for most startups. Weekly if you're running heavy paid campaigns and need to react fast. Quarterly is too slow to catch problems before they burn through a lot of cash.
What's a good CAC payback period?
Under 12 months is good for SaaS. Under 18 months is acceptable. Over 24 months is a red flag unless you have unusually high retention and strong margins to back it up. For ecommerce, CAC payback should usually happen on the first order.
Is CAC the same as marketing spend?
No. Marketing spend is one input. CAC includes marketing plus sales team costs, sales tools, referral payouts, and other acquisition-related expenses. Founders who equate the two tend to underestimate their true cost to acquire.
Can CAC be too low?
Yes. If your CAC is way below industry benchmarks and your LTV:CAC is 8:1 or higher, you're probably under-investing in growth. That's leaving money on the table. Competitors with the guts to spend more will take market share from you.
How does CAC change as a startup grows?
Usually up. Your earliest customers are often friends, network, and low-hanging fruit. As you scale, you have to buy attention from people who've never heard of you. Plan for CAC to rise 2x to 5x from year one to year three, then stabilize or improve once you find your efficient channels.
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