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Growth

Burn Rate

Burn rate measures how quickly a startup spends its cash reserves before reaching positive cash flow or profitability. For early-stage companies, it's one of the clearest indicators of financial health and survival.

Typically measured monthly and expressed in dollars per month, burn rate helps founders understand how fast they're consuming cash and how many months of runway remain. In practice, it answers three critical questions: How much cash is being spent each month? How long can the company sustain operations at this pace? What changes are needed to reach profitability or extend the runway?

Investors use burn rate to gauge a company's discipline and efficiency plus the likelihood of hitting key milestones before the next round. It reflects strategy and cost structure as well as how spending aligns with growth goals.

A healthy burn rate balances growth with sustainability. Too high and the company risks running out of cash before hitting milestones. Too low and it may signal underinvestment in growth.

Types of burn rate

There are two main types of burn rate: gross burn and net burn. Both are essential for understanding a company's cash flow.

1. Gross burn rate

Gross burn rate is the total amount of cash a company spends each month. It includes all operating expenses such as salaries and rent, marketing and software costs. Gross burn shows how much money is leaving the business before considering revenue.

Example:

  • A SaaS startup spends $40,000 on salaries, $10,000 on marketing and $5,000 on office space each month.
    • Gross burn rate = $55,000 per month.

2. Net burnrate

Net burn rate measures how much cash a company actually loses each month after accounting for revenue. It reflects the net outflow of cash and provides a more accurate picture of sustainability.

Example:

  • If the same startup earns $25,000 in monthly revenue, its net burn rate is: $55,000 − $25,000 = $30,000 per month.

3. Gross Burn vs. Net Burn

Metric

Definition

Formula

Use Case

Gross Burn

Total monthly expenses

Sum of all operating costs

Shows total spending and cost structure

Net Burn

Cash outflow minus inflow

Gross burn − Revenue

Shows actual cash loss and sustainability

How to calculate burn rate: formula, steps & example

Burn rate formula: 

Burn rate = (Starting cash balance − Ending cash balance) ÷ Number of months

This formula calculates the average monthly cash consumption over a given period.

Steps to calculate burn rate:

  1. Identify your time frame: Choose a consistent period, such as one month or one quarter.
  2. Determine starting and ending cash balances: Use your company's financial statements or bank records.
  3. Subtract ending cash from starting cash: This gives you total cash burned during the period.
  4. Divide by the number of months: The result is your average monthly burn rate.
  5. Adjust for revenue if calculating net burn: Subtract monthly revenue from total expenses to find net burn.

Burn rate example:

  • If a company starts the quarter with $900,000 in cash and ends with $600,000 after three months:
    • Burn rate = ($900,000 − $600,000) ÷ 3 = $100,000 per month.

This means the company is burning $100,000 monthly. If it maintains that pace, it has six months of runway left.

Why burn rate matters for startups

Burn rate is one of the most important metrics for early-stage startups because it connects spending to survival. Burn rate directly determines cash runway, the number of months a company can operate before running out of cash. It also influences valuation, investor confidence and the ability to hit milestones.

1. Financial health

A manageable burn rate signals an effective business. A high burn rate without matching growth can indicate poor financial health or misaligned priorities.

2. Fundraising strategy & valuation

Investors evaluate burn rate to assess how efficiently a company uses capital. A startup with a clear understanding of its burn rate and runway demonstrates operational maturity. Founders who can explain how they'll extend runway or reach profitability build trust with investors. A company that manages its burn rate effectively often earns higher valuations.

3. Strategic planning

Burn rate informs hiring, marketing and product development decisions. Knowing how much cash is left helps founders decide whether to accelerate growth or conserve resources. For structured decision-making frameworks, see the tactical guide to making better decisions.

4. Milestone tracking

Burn rate can impact how startups track toward their milestones. Founders must ensure that key goals, such as product launches or revenue targets, are achievable within the available runway.

What is a good burn rate?

There's no universal "good" burn rate. The right number depends on stage, industry and funding environment.

Still, some general benchmarks apply:

  • Early-stage startups: Aim for 12–18 months of runway
  • Growth-stage startups: Often target 18–24 months
  • Tight fundraising markets: Extend runway to 24–36 months

A good burn rate allows enough time to scale before needing additional funding. It should align with your company's growth plan, not just your bank balance.

As Sam Shank of HotelTonight shared, reducing burn can be a turning point. His team went from burning millions to turning profitable in seven months by cutting costs, focusing on core metrics and aligning spending with outcomes.

High burn rate: risks and implications

A high burn rate can signal aggressive growth, but it also increases risk. If revenue or funding doesn't keep pace, the company may run out of cash.

Common causes of a high burn rate:

  • Overhiring before product-market fit
  • Excessive marketing spend without clear ROI
  • Costly office space or infrastructure
  • Long sales cycles that delay revenue
  • Poor forecasting or a lack of financial discipline

Consequences:

  • Shortened runway and funding pressure
  • Lower valuation in future rounds
  • Forced layoffs or restructuring
  • Loss of investor confidence

As Tasso Roumeliotis of Location Labs put it, "Your power as a founder is a function of whether you need money or not." Keeping burn low gives founders leverage and optionality.

Low burn rate: benefits and tradeoffs

A low burn rate extends the runway and reduces dependence on external funding. It signals efficiency and discipline, but it can also slow growth if spending is too constrained.

Benefits:

  • Longer runway and more flexibility
  • Easier fundraising conversations
  • Greater control over valuation
  • Stronger negotiating position with investors

Tradeoffs:

  • Slower product development
  • Limited marketing reach
  • Risk of missing growth opportunities

The key is balance. Roumeliotis showed that a slow burn strategy can still lead to a major exit when paired with focus and capital efficiency.

Burn rate analysis

Analyzing burn rate isn't just about tracking expenses. It's about understanding how spending drives outcomes.

Key steps for burn rate analysis:

  • Break down expenses: Separate fixed costs, such as rent and salaries, from variable costs like marketing and contractors.
  • Track monthly trends: Compare burn rate month over month to spot spikes or inefficiencies.
  • Align spending with milestones: Ensure that major expenses tie to measurable progress, such as product launches or customer acquisition goals.
  • Model scenarios: Use financial forecasting to test how changes in revenue or spending affect the runway.
  • Monitor cash flow in real time: Tools and dashboards can help founders stay updated on cash position and forecasted runway.

How to reduce burn rate

When burn rate exceeds expectations, founders have two levers: increase revenue or reduce expenses. The most effective strategies combine both.

1. Optimize operating expenses

  • Reevaluate office space and shift to hybrid or remote models
  • Negotiate vendor contracts and software subscriptions
  • Delay non-critical hires or freeze headcount temporarily
  • Reassess marketing spend for ROI

2. Improve cash flow

  • Accelerate collections and shorten payment cycles
  • Offer annual prepayment discounts to boost cash inflows
  • Delay large capital expenditures until revenue stabilizes

3. Increase revenue

  • Introduce new pricing tiers or upsells
  • Expand into adjacent customer segments
  • Strengthen retention to reduce churn

4. Secure additional funding

  • Plan fundraising well before cash runs low
  • Use clear burn rate and runway data to demonstrate financial control
  • Align investor expectations with your growth and profitability plan

5. Build a culture of efficiency

  • Encourage teams to treat capital as their own
  • Reward creative cost-saving ideas
  • Maintain transparency around financial metrics

Burn rate in SaaS and early-stage startups

SaaS startups often face unique burn dynamics. Recurring revenue creates predictability, but customer acquisition costs can be high early on. Founders must balance growth with sustainability.

SaaS-specific considerations:

  • Track burn multiple, which measures how efficiently cash burn converts into new recurring revenue
    • Formula: Burn multiple = Net burn ÷ Net new ARR
      • A lower burn multiple indicates efficient growth
  • Monitor gross margin to ensure revenue covers variable costs
  • Use cohort analysis to understand retention and expansion trends
  • Align spending with customer acquisition payback periods

Early-stage startups should focus on validating product-market fit before scaling spending. Once revenue stabilizes, they can safely increase burn to accelerate growth.

Burn rate and profitability

Burn rate is a leading indicator of how close a company is to profitability. When net burn approaches zero, the company reaches cash flow break-even, the point where inflows equal outflows.

Tracking burn rate alongside other metrics like ARPU, LTV and CAC helps founders understand whether growth is sustainable. A company with a high burn rate but improving unit economics may still be on a healthy trajectory.

Profitability isn't always the immediate goal, but understanding burn ensures that growth is intentional, not reckless.

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