What is CAC payback period?
CAC payback period is the number of months it takes to recover the cost of acquiring a customer — the point at which a customer’s cumulative gross margin contribution equals what it cost to acquire them. It’s the answer to the question: how long until this customer starts generating profit?
Formula: CAC Payback = CAC ÷ (MRR per customer × Gross Margin %)
Example: If it costs $12,000 to acquire a customer, their ACV is $24,000 ($2,000/month MRR), and your gross margin is 75% — CAC payback = $12,000 ÷ ($2,000 × 0.75) = 8 months.
Why gross margin matters in the formula
Most companies calculate payback incorrectly by dividing CAC by MRR without accounting for gross margin. This overstates efficiency. If your gross margin is 70%, only 70 cents of every revenue dollar is actually available to recover the acquisition cost. A company with 60% gross margins needs nearly twice as long to recover the same CAC as a company with 85% margins — even with identical revenue. Always use gross margin-adjusted MRR.
2026 benchmarks by stage and segment
Acceptable range for early-stage. High CAC from unproven channels is normal; focus on finding the channel with the shortest payback, not absolute numbers.
Investors expect evidence of channel efficiency. Payback trending down quarter-over-quarter is as important as the absolute number.
Benchmark for efficient growth. Board and investors will scrutinise this closely. Above 18 months at this stage signals a structural unit economics problem.
Top-quartile companies target sub-6-month payback. Best-in-class PLG companies with strong viral loops often see 3–4 months.
Source: OpenView SaaS Benchmarks 2025, Bessemer Venture Partners Efficiency Benchmarks, KeyBanc Capital Markets SaaS Survey.
By acquisition channel: the payback gap is huge
The single most valuable insight CAC payback provides is channel-level comparison. In our experience across B2B SaaS engagements, typical payback periods by channel look like this:
- Content SEO + inbound: 4–8 months (best channel for long-term unit economics, but slow to build)
- Referral / partner: 3–6 months (typically the most efficient channel when it’s working)
- LinkedIn ABM: 8–14 months (higher CAC offset by higher win rates and ACV)
- Outbound / SDR: 10–18 months (highest CAC but scales predictably)
- Paid search (Google): 12–20 months (deteriorating efficiency as CPC rises in most B2B categories)
- Events / conferences: 14–24 months (difficult to attribute, often the worst-measured channel)
What to do with the number
CAC payback is most useful as a capital allocation tool. Once you have payback by channel, the decision framework is straightforward: channels under 12 months get more budget; channels over 18 months either get cut or get a specific intervention to improve conversion rates. The goal is to keep your blended CAC payback trending toward your stage benchmark while growing volume.
Warning: don’t optimise payback at the expense of LTV
A common mistake: optimising hard for short payback periods by shifting budget to SMB (lower ACV, faster close) at the expense of enterprise deals (higher ACV, longer payback, but much higher LTV and lower churn). Short payback is only valuable if LTV:CAC is also healthy. Always look at both metrics together. Target: CAC payback under 18 months AND LTV:CAC above 3:1.
How to improve CAC payback
Three levers, in order of impact: 1. Improve conversion rates — the fastest lever. A 20% improvement in SQL-to-close rate reduces CAC by 20% without changing spend. 2. Shift channel mix toward lower-CAC channels (content, referral, community). 3. Increase ACV — move upmarket, add packages, reduce discounting. A 15% ACV increase reduces payback proportionally.
