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ARR

Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) is the amount of predictable subscription revenue a company expects to generate in a year.

For SaaS companies and other subscription-based businesses, ARR is a key metric because it reflects the durability of their subscription model. Unlike one-time fees or short-term deals, ARR shows the revenue streams you can count on if customers renew, expand and stick around for year-long contracts — providing a better long-term outlook on company performance.

It’s important to distinguish between ARR and Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR).

  • ARR = annual recurring revenue, the macro view of a subscription company’s financial health.
  • MRR = monthly recurring revenue, the micro view of how revenue fluctuates month-to-month.

Both are key SaaS metrics, but ARR is often the benchmark investors use to evaluate growth potential, financial health and valuation.

Why ARR matters

ARR serves as the foundation for understanding whether a subscription business is sustainable. For SaaS companies, ARR connects directly to:

  • Financial health: ARR is one of the best measures of a company’s growth. Consistently increasing ARR shows whether revenue streams are stable enough to support future growth (like hiring, launching new products and more).
  • Retention and churn: Similarly, it can be a signal for other downstream parts of the business. When ARR stagnates, customer churn might be high. When ARR compounds, renewals and expansions are likely strong. 
  • Valuation: Investors use ARR to judge growth potential and profitability. Strong ARR signals durable revenue, which boosts confidence in long-term sustainability.
  • Milestones: Hitting ARR benchmarks, like the first $1M or $5M, often marks important inflection points in a company’s journey.

How to calculate ARR

The ARR formula looks simple on paper:

ARR = (Annual subscription price × Number of customers)

But in practice, ARR calculation has to account for changes over time. One-time fees, onboarding charges and non-recurring add-ons should never be included in ARR. It’s all about recurring subscription revenue.

Here are the main factors to include:

Factor

What it means

Effect on ARR

Upgrades / Upsells

Customers move to higher tiers or purchase recurring add-ons

Increases ARR

Downgrades

Customers switch to cheaper subscription tiers

Decreases ARR

Renewals

Customers continue their yearly subscriptions

Keeps ARR steady

Cancellations / Churn

Customers cancel and stop paying

Decreases ARR

How SaaS companies use ARR

ARR is one of the most important SaaS metrics because it turns subscription revenue into a predictable revenue baseline. Operators use ARR to:

  • Forecast future revenue: ARR growth rate helps model cash flow, growth potential and long-term sustainability.
  • Benchmark performance: Founders can compare ARR against industry standards or internal targets.
  • Guide strategy: ARR highlights whether pricing, retention, or expansion revenue is driving growth. It can also show which areas of go-to-market need attention. Customer churn could signal inadequate product stickiness, or smaller-than-expected contracts can indicate a need for a stronger upsell motion. 
  • Fundraise with confidence: A strong ARR metric shows investors that the company is scaling on durable revenue.

As Vanta’s path to product-market fit shows, aligning product, retention and go-to-market efforts around ARR can be the difference between early traction and long-term success.

Strategies to grow ARR

Growing ARR means improving both new customer acquisition and revenue from existing customers. In the early days of a venture, founder-led sales often set the foundation for the first few million of ARR. Key strategies to expand ARR over time include:

  • Improve retention: Strong renewals reduce churn and increase customer lifetime value. There can be many reasons for this, but it shows that customers are continuing to get value from your product.
  • Drive expansion revenue: Upsells, upgrades, add-ons and cross-selling expand account value over time. You can gate features on your product or add different subscription tiers. 
  • Balance new and existing customers: New logos fuel ARR, but the compounding effect comes from keeping the base and expanding it. Case studies can be a big driver here, and you can even incentivize existing customers with specific deals to work with you on producing one. 
  • Optimize pricing strategy: Well-designed tiers and annual subscriptions improve profitability and long-term adoption. Whether it’s sales-led or self-serve, you need to be thoughtful about how you’re pricing the product — and be willing to change it over time. 

Pitfalls and misconceptions

Despite its clarity, ARR is often inaccurately reported. Common mistakes include:

  • Mistaking ARR for cash flow: ARR is a projection, not money in the bank. Billing cycles payment terms and cancellations affect actual cash flow.
  • Inflating ARR by ignoring churn: Excluding downgrades, cancellations, or customer churn leads to misleading numbers.
  • Chasing short-term spikes: Even if a one-off deal is large and looks good on paper, it doesn’t create sustainable revenue streams.

ARR vs MRR

  • ARR = annual recurring revenue, the macro view of a subscription company’s financial health.
  • MRR = monthly recurring revenue, the micro view of how revenue fluctuates month-to-month.

Used together, ARR and MRR provide both the long-term trajectory and the short-term health of a subscription model.

Read more from First Round on ways to build sustainable ARR, such as paths to product-market fit and founder-led sales.

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