How much should SaaS companies spend on marketing by stage? ARR-based benchmarks from Seed to Series C, PLG vs. sales-led allocation, CAC payback targets, and when to increase spend.
Last updated: March 2026 · 14 min read
The median SaaS marketing spend in 2026 is 8% of ARR, down from 10% in prior years. But stage matters more than the average. Seed-stage companies spend 20-40% of revenue. Post-Series B companies spend 5-10%.
“The SaaS budget conversation always starts with ‘what percentage should we spend?’ That’s the wrong first question. The right first question is ‘what’s our target CAC payback period?’ Work backward from there. If your board wants 12-month payback and your average contract value is $24K, your allowable CAC is $24K. Everything else is algebra.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
| Stage | ARR Range | Marketing as % of Revenue | Typical Annual Budget |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-seed / Seed | <$1M ARR | 20-40% | $50K-$400K |
| Series A | $1M-$5M ARR | 15-30% | $150K-$1.5M |
| Series B | $5M-$25M ARR | 10-20% | $500K-$5M |
| Series C+ | $25M-$100M ARR | 8-15% | $2M-$15M |
| Growth / Pre-IPO | $100M+ ARR | 5-10% | $5M-$10M+ |
The key insight from SaaS Capital’s 2025 spending benchmarks: companies under $25M ARR spend approximately $1.03 in marketing per $1 of new ARR generated. Above $65M ARR, that drops to $0.50 per $1 of new ARR. Early-stage marketing is expensive because you’re building awareness from nothing. At scale, brand recognition, word of mouth, and organic channels reduce the marginal cost of acquiring each new dollar of revenue. Venture-backed companies spend 58-100% more on marketing as a percentage of revenue compared to bootstrapped companies (SaaS Hero, 2026). If you’re VC-funded, your board expects you to invest in growth. If you’re bootstrapped, efficiency matters more than speed. Both approaches work, but they produce different budget structures. One number that catches founders off guard: at seed stage, even a modest $2,000-$3,000 per month invested in content marketing and SEO can generate meaningful pipeline within 6-9 months (SaaS Hero, 2026). You don’t need $500K in marketing budget to start. You need focused spend on the right channels.Definition: SaaS marketing spend as a percentage of ARR measures total marketing investment (headcount, tools, media spend, content, events) divided by annualized recurring revenue.
| Budget Category | PLG Allocation | Sales-Led Allocation |
|---|---|---|
| Content marketing + SEO | 25-35% | 15-20% |
| Product marketing (in-app, onboarding) | 20-25% | 5-10% |
| Paid acquisition (search, social, display) | 15-25% | 25-35% |
| Events and field marketing | 5-10% | 15-20% |
| ABM and outbound support | 0-5% | 15-25% |
| Community and developer relations | 10-15% | 2-5% |
| Brand and PR | 5-10% | 5-10% |
| Channel | <$1M ARR | $1-5M ARR | $5M+ ARR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Paid search (Google Ads) | 40% | 25% | 15-20% |
| LinkedIn (paid + organic) | 10% | 25% | 15-20% |
| Content + SEO | 25% | 20% | 15-20% |
| Retention / expansion marketing | 5% | 10% | 30% |
| Events | 5% | 10% | 10-15% |
| Brand / PR | 5% | 5% | 5-10% |
| Experiments / new channels | 10% | 5% | 5% |
| Stage / ACV | Target CAC Payback | What This Means |
|---|---|---|
| Seed (any ACV) | 18-24 months | Acceptable while finding product-market fit. Investors expect longer payback during discovery. |
| Series A ($5K-$25K ACV) | 12-18 months | Should be trending toward 12 months. If payback is above 18, your unit economics aren’t scaling. |
| Series B ($25K-$100K ACV) | 9-15 months | Board expects improving efficiency. Blended CAC payback under 12 months is the benchmark. |
| Series C+ ($100K+ ACV) | 6-12 months | Enterprise deals should pay back within 12 months. If they don’t, your sales cycle is too long or your ACV is too low. |
| PLG (low ACV, <$5K) | 3-6 months | Low ACV requires fast payback. If your $99/mo product costs $2,000 to acquire a customer, you need 20 months to break even. That’s unsustainable for PLG. |
The math that ties budget to payback: if your target CAC payback is 12 months and your average monthly gross margin per customer is $2,000, your allowable fully loaded CAC is $24,000. If marketing is responsible for 60% of customer acquisition, your allowable marketing CAC is $14,400. Divide that by your target number of new customers, and you have your marketing budget. SaaS companies with NRR above 130% can afford longer CAC payback periods because each customer’s value increases over time through expansion revenue. Companies with NRR below 100% need short payback periods because customers are shrinking or churning. Your retention rate directly affects how much you can spend on acquisition.Definition: CAC payback period measures how many months of gross margin from a new customer are needed to recover the fully loaded cost of acquiring that customer (marketing + sales costs divided by monthly gross margin per customer).
If your CAC payback is consistently below your target (e.g., 8 months when your target is 12), you have room to spend more. The extra spend will likely increase CAC, but as long as payback stays within your target range, the growth is worth it. Increase in 20-30% increments and measure the impact on payback after 60-90 days.
When SEO, content, and community are producing 30%+ of your pipeline, your blended CAC is lower than your paid-only CAC. This gives you headroom to increase paid spend because the organic base keeps your blended numbers healthy. It’s time to scale paid acquisition when organic provides a stable foundation.
If your sales team closes 25%+ of qualified opportunities and the constraint is pipeline volume (not conversion), marketing needs more budget. The sales team is efficient. They just need more at-bats. Increasing marketing spend directly drives revenue growth in this scenario.
Post-PMF, the only question is how fast you can capture market share before competitors do. If your TAM is $1B+ and you have clear product-market fit (NPS above 40, strong retention, expansion revenue), increasing marketing spend from 10% to 20-30% of revenue is justified. Speed matters more than efficiency at this stage.
New market entry requires investment similar to an early-stage company’s marketing budget for that segment. If you’re a $20M ARR company entering the healthcare vertical, budget 15-25% of projected healthcare revenue for the first 12-18 months. You’re building awareness from zero in that vertical, even though your overall company has brand recognition.
Download the spreadsheet with channel-level tracking, budget vs. actual, and ROI calculation built in. Works for any SaaS stage. Get Template →
How to build an SEO strategy for SaaS companies. Keyword strategy, content frameworks, and technical requirements specific to B2B SaaS. Read Guide →
Calculate your return on marketing spend across channels. Input your spend, leads, and conversions to see actual ROI per channel. Use Calculator →
Seed-stage SaaS companies typically spend 20-40% of revenue on marketing, focusing on high-efficiency channels like SEO, targeted paid search, and content marketing. Even $2,000-$3,000/month invested strategically can generate meaningful results at this stage. VC-backed seed companies spend closer to the top of that range.
PLG companies allocate 25-35% to content/SEO, 20-25% to product marketing, and 10-15% to community. Sales-led companies allocate 25-35% to paid acquisition, 15-25% to ABM, and 15-20% to events. The total budget percentage may be similar, but channel allocation differs significantly based on whether the product or sales team drives conversion.
Target CAC payback depends on stage: 18-24 months at seed, 12-18 months at Series A, 9-15 months at Series B, and 6-12 months at Series C+. PLG companies with low ACV (under $5K/year) should target 3-6 month payback. Companies with NRR above 130% can afford longer payback because customer value increases over time.
Yes. VC-backed SaaS companies spend 58-100% more on marketing as a percentage of revenue compared to bootstrapped companies (SaaS Capital, 2025). Venture capital provides growth capital specifically for scaling acquisition. Bootstrapped companies prioritize efficiency and profitability, resulting in lower marketing spend but often better unit economics.
Increase marketing spend when: (1) CAC payback is consistently below target, (2) organic channels generate 30%+ of pipeline, (3) sales win rate is above 25% and pipeline is the bottleneck, (4) you’ve confirmed product-market fit in a large market, or (5) you’re entering a new market segment. Increase in 20-30% increments and measure the impact on CAC payback after 60-90 days.
We build growth marketing engines for SaaS companies. SEO, content strategy, and demand generation that compounds. Talk to our team. Get a Free Consultation →