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MER tracks how well your marketing investments convert into sales.

It represents how much money your company is losing over time once revenue is factored in.

Elevate Your eCommerce Game with Free Tools!

Maximize Ad Profits! Break Even with Our ROAS Calculator.

Boost Growth! Use our Profit Margin Calculator.

Simplify Ad Metrics: Free ACoS ↔ ROAS Calculators

MER tracks how well your marketing investments convert into sales.

It represents how much money your company is losing over time once revenue is factored in.

Elevate Your eCommerce Game with Free Tools!
Definition: Calculate how much it costs to acquire each new customer, and evaluate the sustainability of your sales and marketing strategies. This metric is critical for understanding growth, profitability, and how efficiently your company is scaling. Whether you’re running a SaaS startup, an e-commerce store, or a professional services business, knowing your CAC empowers better decision-making.
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) represents the average amount you spend to acquire a new customer. It provides a single figure that blends marketing campaigns, advertising spend, sales team costs, and overhead into a clear per-customer cost. By tracking CAC, businesses can evaluate how much they’re paying to grow their customer base and whether the return justifies the investment.
Formula:
CAC = Total Sales & Marketing Expenses ÷ Number of New Customers Acquired
For example, if you spend $50,000 in a quarter and gain 1,000 new customers, CAC = $50 per customer.
There are two primary approaches to calculating CAC:
Fully loaded CAC gives a truer picture of acquisition cost, especially for long-term strategy, while simple CAC is useful for evaluating campaign-specific efficiency.
CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost) and CPA (Cost Per Acquisition) are related but distinct:
CAC is always tied to acquiring paying customers, whereas CPA might measure earlier funnel actions. Confusing the two can cause companies to overestimate marketing effectiveness.
Example 1: E-commerce Brand
Example 2: SaaS Startup
If average annual revenue per user (ARPU) = $1,000, then LTV:CAC = 5:1 (a strong ratio).
Example 3: Agency Business
Interpretation: While high, this could still be profitable if each client pays $10,000+ annually.
CAC should always be interpreted alongside Customer Lifetime Value (LTV). The LTV:CAC ratio shows how much revenue a customer generates compared to acquisition cost.
For SaaS companies, an LTV:CAC ratio of 3:1 to 4:1 is often considered ideal.
CAC benchmarks vary across industries:
Comparing CAC without context can be misleading. Always benchmark against your industry and pair with margins and retention.
Ignoring salaries and overhead, which underestimates true acquisition costs.
Treating CAC as static—CAC often rises over time as markets saturate.
Confusing leads with customers—ensure only paying customers are included.
Ignoring retention and churn when evaluating profitability.
Not revisiting CAC frequently—costs can shift monthly as campaigns evolve.
Discounts affect revenue, not acquisition cost. Account for them in LTV rather than CAC.
Compare it to LTV and payback period. A CAC that’s sustainable with a 3:1 LTV:CAC ratio and fast payback is acceptable, even if high.
It shows how much room you have for discounts while still covering fixed costs.
Ready to measure the true cost of growth? Use the Customer Acquisition Cost Calculator today to track CAC, compare it with LTV, and optimize marketing spend.