The complete guide to CLV calculation covering the basic formula, SaaS and e-commerce variations, industry benchmarks, and how to use CLV to make better marketing budget decisions.
Last updated: March 2026 · 11 min read
CLV = Average Purchase Value x Average Purchase Frequency x Average Customer Lifespan. If a customer spends $50 per order, orders 4 times per year, and stays for 3 years, CLV = $600.
This guide covers three CLV formulas (basic, historical, and predictive), shows you how to calculate each input, provides benchmarks by industry, and explains how to use CLV to set acquisition budgets and evaluate marketing ROI.“Every budget argument gets easier when you know your CLV. If a customer is worth $2,400 over 3 years, spending $300 to acquire them isn’t expensive. It’s an 8:1 return. Without CLV, every acquisition cost feels like a gamble. With it, you’re making a calculated investment.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
CLV answers the question: “How much is a customer worth?” That number determines how much you can spend to acquire them, which channels are profitable, and where to invest in retention vs. acquisition. Three reasons CLV matters more than any single-transaction metric:Definition: Customer lifetime value (CLV or LTV) is the total revenue a business can expect from a single customer account over the full duration of their relationship.
Here’s what each component means and how to calculate it:CLV = Average Purchase Value x Average Purchase Frequency x Average Customer Lifespan
| Business Model | CLV Formula | Key Input |
|---|---|---|
| E-Commerce | Avg. Order Value x Purchase Frequency x Customer Lifespan | Purchase frequency (varies widely) |
| SaaS | ARPU x Gross Margin / Monthly Churn Rate | Churn rate (defines lifespan) |
| Subscription (Non-SaaS) | Monthly Subscription x Gross Margin x (1 / Churn Rate) | Churn rate |
| Professional Services | Avg. Project Value x Projects per Year x Client Lifespan | Client lifespan (often 2-5 years) |
| Marketplace | Avg. Transaction Fee x Transaction Frequency x Lifespan | Transaction frequency |
| Average Order Value | $65 |
| Purchases per Year | 3.2 |
| Average Customer Lifespan | 2.5 years |
| Gross Margin | 72% |
Example 2: B2B SaaS Product
| Monthly ARPU | $150 |
| Gross Margin | 85% |
| Monthly Churn Rate | 1.8% |
Example 3: Professional Services Firm
| Average Project Value | $25,000 |
| Projects per Year | 1.5 |
| Client Lifespan | 3 years |
| Gross Margin | 55% |
| Industry | Typical CLV Range | Avg. CAC | Target CLV:CAC |
|---|---|---|---|
| E-Commerce (General) | $100-$300 | $70 | 3:1 |
| B2B SaaS | $3,000-$10,000+ | $702 | 3:1 to 5:1 |
| Fintech | $5,000-$15,000 | $1,450 | 3:1 |
| Insurance | $4,000-$12,000 | $1,280 | 3:1 |
| Professional Services | $50,000-$500,000+ | Varies | 5:1+ |
| Arts & Entertainment | $50-$200 | $21 | 3:1 |
Customers acquired through organic search often have higher CLV than customers from paid ads, because they found you through intent-driven research. Segment your CLV by channel and invest more in high-CLV sources.
Most customer churn happens in the first 60 days. If a customer makes a second purchase within 60 days, their probability of becoming a long-term customer increases 3-4x. Onboarding sequences, post-purchase emails, and second-purchase incentives have the highest ROI of any retention tactic.
Customers engaging through multiple channels (web, email, social, in-store) have 30% higher lifetime value than single-channel customers (Source: SAP Emarsys, 2026). Each additional channel touchpoint deepens the relationship and raises switching costs.
CLV isn’t a set-once number. Product changes, pricing updates, and market shifts change the inputs. Recalculate quarterly using rolling 12-month data. Compare trends: rising CLV means your retention and monetization are improving. Declining CLV is an early warning signal.
CLV is a key input in the advanced marketing ROI formula. Our ROI guide shows you how to use CLV to measure true campaign profitability over the customer lifetime. Read Guide →
Set acquisition budgets by channel using your CLV as the ceiling. Our template includes budget vs. actual tracking and ROI calculations. Get Template →
Model revenue forecasts using CLV x projected customer count. Our projections template includes scenario planning with best/base/worst cases. Get Template →
We build CLV models, set up cohort tracking, and connect the numbers to your acquisition strategy. Free diagnostic for qualified brands. Get Your Free Analytics Diagnostic →
A 3:1 ratio is the minimum benchmark, meaning your customer lifetime value should be at least three times your customer acquisition cost. Below 3:1, margins are typically too thin after operational costs. Between 3:1 and 5:1 is healthy. Above 5:1 suggests you may have room to invest more aggressively in growth.
CLV (Customer Lifetime Value) and LTV (Lifetime Value) mean the same thing and are used interchangeably. Some companies use CLTV as a third abbreviation. All three refer to the total revenue or profit expected from a customer over their entire relationship with your business.
For subscription businesses, use CLV = ARPU x Gross Margin / Monthly Churn Rate. If your average revenue per user is $100/month, gross margin is 80%, and monthly churn rate is 2%, your CLV is $100 x 0.80 / 0.02 = $4,000. This formula assumes a constant churn rate.
Recalculate quarterly using rolling 12-month data. Product changes, pricing updates, new retention programs, and market shifts all affect the inputs. Track the trend over time: rising CLV signals improving unit economics; declining CLV is an early warning that requires investigation.
It depends on the use case. Revenue-based CLV is useful for general benchmarking and trend tracking. Profit-based CLV (revenue CLV multiplied by gross margin) is required for acquisition budget decisions, because you need to know how much actual profit a customer generates, not just top-line revenue.