Home Business SaaS Metrics MRR & ARR Calculator
Subscription Tiers
Plan Name Customers Price / mo
Growth & Settings
Expected MRR growth rate per month
Percentage of MRR lost monthly
Monthly Recurring Revenue
ARR: —
ARR
ARPU
Total Customers
0
Net MRR Growth
MRR Churn $
Yr-End MRR (proj.)
MRR = Σ(Customers × Price) ARR = MRR × 12 ARPU = MRR ÷ Customers
Revenue by Tier
ARR over M — Unicorn territory! Strong product-market fit.
MRR growth rate exceeds churn — healthy net revenue retention.
Churn rate above 5% MoM. Focus on retention to protect MRR.
Single tier detected. Consider tiered pricing to maximize ARPU.
ARPU under 0/mo. Usage-based or seat-based expansion could help.
Churn exceeds growth — MRR is declining. Retention is urgent.
Tier Breakdown
PlanCustomersPriceMRR% of Total
Growth Scenarios (12 Months)
Bear Case
ARR: —
Growth: 3%/mo
Base Case
ARR: —
Growth: 10%/mo
Bull Case
ARR: —
Growth: 20%/mo
MRR Sensitivity — Growth Rate vs Churn Rate

12-month projected MRR by growth and churn combination

MRR Growth Trajectories
24-Month Revenue Projection
Month-by-Month Projection
MonthMRRARRGrowth ($)Churn ($)Net New MRR

How to Use This Calculator

1

Enter Subscription Data

Input your active subscribers by plan tier with their monthly or annual pricing.

2

Account for Changes

Add new MRR, churned MRR, expansion MRR (upgrades), and contraction MRR (downgrades) for the period.

3

Track Growth

See your total MRR, ARR, net new MRR, growth rate, and MRR breakdown by component.

Formula & Methodology

MRR

MRR = ∑ (Active Subscribers × Monthly Price) for each plan

Sum of all recurring monthly subscription revenue.

ARR

ARR = MRR × 12

Annualized recurring revenue, assuming current MRR remains constant.

Net New MRR

Net New MRR = New MRR + Expansion MRR − Churned MRR − Contraction MRR

The total change in MRR during the period.

Key Terms

MRR
Monthly Recurring Revenue — predictable monthly income from active subscriptions.
ARR
Annual Recurring Revenue — MRR × 12, used for annual planning and valuation.
Net New MRR
The net change in MRR including new, expansion, contraction, and churned components.
Expansion MRR
Additional revenue from existing customers via upgrades, add-ons, or seat increases.
Contraction MRR
Revenue lost from existing customers who downgrade plans or reduce seats.

Real-World Examples

Example 1

Early-Stage SaaS

50 Basic ($29/mo) + 20 Pro ($79/mo) + 5 Enterprise ($299/mo)

MRR: $4,525. ARR: $54,300. With $800 new + $200 expansion − $350 churn = $650 net new MRR.

Example 2

Growth SaaS

800 subscribers, avg $120/mo. New: $12,000, Expansion: $5,000, Churn: $6,500, Contraction: $1,200

MRR: $96,000. Net new: $9,300 (9.7% MoM growth). ARR: $1,152,000.

MRR Growth Rate Benchmarks

ARR RangeGood MoM GrowthGreat MoM GrowthTop Decile
$0-$1M10-15%15-25%> 25%
$1M-$5M8-12%12-18%> 18%
$5M-$20M5-8%8-12%> 12%
$20M-$50M3-5%5-8%> 8%
$50M+2-4%4-6%> 6%

MRR: The Heartbeat of SaaS

Why MRR Matters More Than Revenue

MRR isolates the predictable, recurring portion of your business. One-time fees, setup charges, and professional services revenue should be tracked separately because they do not compound. Investors value MRR because it represents the baseline revenue the business will generate even with zero new sales. A $100K MRR business is typically valued at 8-15× ARR ($9.6M-$18M).

The MRR Waterfall

Break MRR into five components each month: beginning MRR, plus new MRR and expansion MRR, minus contraction MRR and churned MRR, equals ending MRR. The healthiest SaaS companies see expansion MRR exceed churned MRR (negative net revenue churn), meaning the business grows even without acquiring a single new customer.