Formula used
Projected MRR compounds monthly by applying growth rate minus churn rate for 60 months.
Subscription tool
Forecast recurring revenue for five years and see how much more MRR you could keep by reducing churn by one percentage point.
Inputs
Use monthly growth and churn rates for a simple compounding view.
Your numbers stay in this browser. Free calculator inputs are not stored on our servers.
Cutting churn by one percentage point changes year-five MRR from $82,026to $147,290 in this model.
Guide
Use this when growth looks healthy but retention is quietly reducing the long-term value of every new subscriber.
Projected MRR compounds monthly by applying growth rate minus churn rate for 60 months.
Many subscription teams treat monthly churn below 2% as strong, 2-5% as a watch zone, and above 5% as a serious growth drag unless expansion revenue offsets it.
Use this when growth looks healthy but retention is quietly reducing the long-term value of every new subscriber.
For a bootstrapped operator, this is a cash decision checkpoint, not just a finance definition. It answers whether a planned move has enough margin, time, demand, conversion room, or operating capacity to survive after the messy costs that usually sit outside a tidy spreadsheet.
Use the calculator when you are about to commit real money: ad spend, a supplier purchase order, payroll, agency delivery time, a discount, a retention push, or a new pricing package. Enter the numbers as they are today, then adjust one assumption at a time so you can see which lever actually changes the outcome.
Projected MRR compounds monthly by applying growth rate minus churn rate for 60 months.
The most useful version of the formula uses current operating data rather than aspirational forecasts. If one input is uncertain, run a conservative version first and treat the result as the minimum threshold you need to beat. After that, test the optimistic case separately so you do not mix hope and discipline in the same calculation.
Bootstrapped businesses pay for bad assumptions with runway, not just with a messy report. A campaign that looks promising on revenue can still reduce cash after fulfillment, returns, payroll, supplier timing, or support load. A hire can look affordable in a monthly budget and still become risky if it needs perfect utilization to break even.
The goal is to turn a vague question into a number you can act on. Once you know the floor, trigger, ratio, or velocity, you can write a simple operating rule: pause spend below this level, reorder at this quantity, avoid discounts unless volume can clear this hurdle, or hold the hire until demand is visible.
At $25,000 MRR, 6% monthly growth, and 4% churn, reducing churn by one point creates a much larger year-five base because each saved customer keeps compounding in future months.
A healthy result has a margin of safety between the calculator output and the real-world number you expect to hit. Many subscription teams treat monthly churn below 2% as strong, 2-5% as a watch zone, and above 5% as a serious growth drag unless expansion revenue offsets it. A risky result leaves no buffer for late invoices, lower conversion, supplier delays, customer returns, tax, payment fees, or the extra work required to manage the decision after it launches.
The most common mistake is treating the calculator as a one-time answer instead of a weekly operating check. Markets, costs, conversion rates, and supplier timelines move quickly, so rerun the math when your inputs change materially or when a decision becomes large enough to affect cash.
Another trap is looking only at new MRR while churn erases the base underneath it. When in doubt, separate the direct cost, the time cost, and the cash timing cost before trusting the final number.
Put the result next to the decision owner, the date, and the assumption most likely to change. Then compare last week's number with this week's number. If the gap is widening in the wrong direction, you have an early warning before the bank balance or monthly close makes the problem obvious.
Clear Margins Pro is built around that habit: save the scenario, keep notes on why you changed an assumption, and export the history when you need to explain a pricing, inventory, hiring, retention, or growth decision to a partner, client, or lender.
Yes. You can use the calculator without an account. Clear Margins Pro is for saving scenario history, exporting CSV notes, and reviewing repeat decisions.
Free calculator inputs stay in your browser while you use the page and are not stored on Clear Margins servers.
Treat the result as a decision floor, then compare it with the paired risk: pricing with ROAS, discounts with volume, inventory with runway, and hiring with capacity.
Use case
Use this before prioritizing retention, pricing, expansion revenue, or acquisition spend.