Unit Economics 101: LTV, CAC, and What the Numbers Actually Mean
LTV and CAC are the two numbers that tell you whether your business model works. Here is what they mean, how to calculate them, and what to do when the ratio is wrong.
Unit economics is the practice of understanding the economics of a single customer — what it costs to acquire them, how much they spend over their relationship with you, and how those two numbers relate. When the ratio is healthy, adding more customers makes the business better. When it is not, adding more customers just accelerates the loss.
These numbers matter at every stage, but they matter most in the early stages when founders are making decisions about pricing, marketing spend, and product investment based on patterns they are only beginning to observe. Getting the calculations right — and understanding what they do and do not tell you — is one of the most valuable things a small team can do before they scale.
Customer Acquisition Cost: what it is and how to calculate it
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) is the total amount you spend to acquire one new customer. It includes all sales and marketing costs — salaries, advertising spend, agency fees, tools, events — divided by the number of new customers acquired in the same period.
The most common mistake in CAC calculation is using only advertising spend and ignoring people costs. If your marketing team costs $15,000 per month and your advertising spend is $5,000, your total cost base for marketing is $20,000 — not $5,000. Using only ad spend produces a number that looks good but does not reflect the actual cost of acquiring a customer.
The second most common mistake is mixing blended and channel-specific CAC. Blended CAC is your total acquisition cost divided by all new customers. Channel-specific CAC is the cost per customer from a single channel — paid search, content, referrals, etc. Both are useful, but for different purposes. Blended CAC tells you overall efficiency. Channel-specific CAC tells you which channels are working and which to cut.
Customer Lifetime Value: what it is and how to calculate it
Customer Lifetime Value (LTV, sometimes CLV) is the total gross profit you expect to generate from a customer over their entire relationship with you. It is an estimate, not a certainty — it requires assumptions about how long customers stay and what they spend — but it is a useful estimate, and the assumptions it requires force you to think carefully about retention.
The critical detail in LTV calculation is that the relevant figure is gross profit, not revenue. A customer who generates $1,000 of revenue at 30% gross margin contributes $300 to your business. A customer who generates $1,000 of revenue at 80% gross margin contributes $800. Using revenue instead of gross profit overstates LTV dramatically for businesses with high cost of goods sold.
LTV is not what customers pay you. It is what customers pay you, minus what it costs you to serve them. The distinction is everything for a business model that depends on retention.
The ratio that tells you whether the model works
The relationship between LTV and CAC — the LTV:CAC ratio — is one of the most widely cited metrics in startup finance, and for good reason. It tells you, in a single number, whether your business can profitably grow: whether the value you generate from a customer exceeds what you spend to acquire them by a meaningful margin.
The 3:1 ratio as a benchmark originated in SaaS and has spread broadly, but it is a heuristic, not a law. The right ratio for your business depends on your capital efficiency goals, your payback period tolerance, and your industry. A business with a twelve-month payback period and strong retention can justify a lower ratio than one with a thirty-six-month payback and high churn.
Payback period: the metric that tells you when the math starts working
LTV:CAC tells you whether you will eventually make money from a customer. Payback period tells you when. It is simply the number of months it takes to recover your CAC from a customer's gross profit contribution.
| Payback Period | What it suggests | Typical context |
|---|---|---|
| Under 12 months | Capital-efficient — you recoup acquisition costs quickly | Strong SMB SaaS, high-volume ecommerce |
| 12–18 months | Acceptable — requires working capital to fund growth | Mid-market SaaS, subscription consumer products |
| 18–36 months | Requires significant capital; viable with strong retention | Enterprise SaaS with high contract values |
| Over 36 months | Capital-intensive; depends entirely on retention to work | Only viable at scale with very low churn |
What to do when the numbers are bad
There are only four levers in the unit economics equation: CAC (reduce it), LTV (increase it), gross margin (improve it), or churn (reduce it, which increases LTV). Each has different tactics and different timelines.
To reduce CAC: improve the conversion rate from marketing spend to customer (better targeting, better messaging, better landing pages), shift spend toward lower-cost channels (content, referrals, partnerships), or improve the efficiency of your sales process (shorter cycles, higher close rates). Many teams focus only on "spend less" and miss the higher-leverage lever of "convert better."
To increase LTV: raise prices (the highest-leverage lever if you have pricing power), increase purchase frequency, introduce higher-value products or tiers, and reduce churn. Of these, churn reduction often has the most impact because its effect compounds — every customer retained is both continued revenue and reduced need for replacement acquisition.
Unit economics tells you about average customer economics. It does not tell you about customer heterogeneity — the fact that your top 20% of customers may generate 80% of your LTV, while your bottom 20% actually cost you money to serve. Segment your unit economics by customer type, acquisition channel, and contract size before making major allocation decisions. The blended average hides the variation that drives strategy.
Understanding your unit economics is not a one-time exercise — it is a discipline that requires pulling data from different parts of the business (marketing spend, revenue, churn, gross margin) and making sense of it together on a regular basis. In FabricLoop, finance and operations teams often use a shared group to centralise this: a recurring task for monthly unit economics review, notes from each review capturing what changed and why, and a thread where the team discusses what the numbers mean for hiring and spend decisions. When the analysis is visible, the decisions that follow from it are better understood by everyone who acts on them.
