How SaaS Companies Are Valued
SaaS businesses are valued primarily on a revenue basis - a departure from the earnings-based frameworks used for most industries. The reason is structural: SaaS companies often prioritize growth over profitability, making EBITDA an incomplete picture. The market has developed a sophisticated framework around ARR (Annual Recurring Revenue), growth rate, net revenue retention, and profitability that together determine pricing.
The Revenue-Based Framework
SaaS valuation in private M&A is calibrated nightly from our 1,600+ SaaS deal comp set, with the post-2022 cohort weighted heavily (the 2020-2021 ZIRP-era cohort is filtered out). Pricing varies enormously by company quality. A $5M ARR SaaS company can sell for very different outcomes depending on its growth rate, retention, and market position - run a valuation to see your specific range against the current comp set.
The Rule of 40
The Rule of 40 - revenue growth rate plus EBITDA margin should exceed 40% - is the benchmark that separates premium SaaS companies from average ones. Companies scoring above 40 command materially higher pricing than those below. A company growing 30% with 15% EBITDA margins (score: 45) will trade at a significant premium to one growing 10% with 10% margins (score: 20), even if they have similar ARR.
Net Revenue Retention (NRR)
NRR measures whether existing customers spend more or less over time, excluding new customer acquisition. NRR above 110% means your customer base is growing organically - every dollar of ARR today becomes $1.10+ next year without any new sales. This is the most powerful SaaS metric for valuation. Companies with 120%+ NRR sit at the top of the comp set because the installed base compounds automatically.
Conversely, NRR below 90% signals a leaky bucket. Your customer base is shrinking, and you must acquire new customers just to stay flat. SaaS companies with sub-90% NRR sit at the lower end of the comp set regardless of growth.
Key Value Drivers
ARR quality matters more than ARR quantity. Buyers scrutinize your ARR composition: monthly vs. annual contracts (annual is better), customer concentration (no single customer above 10% of ARR), churn cohort analysis (is churn improving or worsening?), and expansion revenue (are customers upgrading?). $3M in high-quality ARR with 120% NRR is worth more than $5M ARR with 85% NRR.
Gross margin separates true SaaS from services businesses dressed as software. Buyers expect 70%+ gross margins for pure SaaS. Below 60%, the business likely has significant services or infrastructure costs that don't scale. Every point of gross margin below 75% pulls pricing down within the comp set.
Customer acquisition cost (CAC) and payback period indicate whether growth is efficient. A CAC payback under 18 months signals healthy unit economics. Above 24 months, buyers question whether growth is profitable on a per-customer basis, even if the P&L looks acceptable in aggregate.
Market category and competitive position set the ceiling. Category leaders in growing markets (vertical SaaS, cybersecurity, infrastructure software) command premium-tier pricing. Companies in crowded horizontal categories with many competitors price at the lower end of the comp set regardless of metrics.