What is retention rate?

Retention rate is the percentage of customers (or revenue) a business retains over a defined period — the inverse of churn. In SaaS and subscription businesses, retention is the single highest-leverage metric: small improvements compound dramatically over time, and high retention is the primary driver of LTV and capital efficiency.

Formulas

Customer retention over a period:

Customer Retention = (Customers at End − New Customers Added) ÷ Customers at Start

Gross revenue retention (GRR):

GRR = (Start Revenue − Churn Revenue − Contraction Revenue) ÷ Start Revenue

Net revenue retention (NRR):

NRR = (Start Revenue − Churn − Contraction + Expansion) ÷ Start Revenue

Retention vs. related metrics

  • Customer retention vs. revenue retention: a customer churn while others expand may show flat GRR but falling customer retention — a hidden risk.
  • GRR vs. NRR: GRR caps at 100% (no expansion credit); NRR can exceed 100% if expansion outpaces churn. Best-in-class SaaS prints NRR > 120%.
  • Logo retention vs. dollar retention: logo counts customers regardless of size; dollar weights by revenue.

SaaS benchmarks (2025)

  • SMB SaaS: GRR 85–90%, NRR 100–110%.
  • Mid-market SaaS: GRR 90–95%, NRR 110–125%.
  • Enterprise SaaS: GRR 95%+, NRR 120–140% in top quartile.
  • Consumer subscriptions: 70–85% monthly retention varies dramatically by category.

Why retention is the highest leverage

A 5% improvement in retention compounds to 25%+ improvement in profit over time (Bain study), because retained customers have lower service cost, higher expansion likelihood and zero acquisition cost amortisation. The fastest-growing public SaaS companies are those with the best NRR — not those with the lowest CAC.

Do: build a cohort retention table at month 1, 3, 6, 12 and beyond; treat the steepest drop-off as a product or fit problem to solve.
Don’t: mask retention problems with aggressive acquisition — the leaky bucket eventually overwhelms even unlimited spend.