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NRR (Net Revenue Retention)

NRR (Net Revenue Retention) measures how much recurring revenue you keep from an existing customer cohort over a period, after churn and contraction but including expansion. NRR above 100% means the existing base grows by itself, before any new sales.

Formula

NRR = (starting MRR + expansion − contraction − churn) ÷ starting MRR × 100

Worked example

A cohort starting at $200,000 MRR that adds $16,000 expansion and loses $9,000 to churn and contraction ends at $207,000: NRR of 103.5% for the period.

NRR is the single number public-market investors weight most heavily in SaaS, because it compounds: at 120% NRR a company doubles revenue from existing customers alone in under four years. Best-in-class enterprise SaaS runs 110–130%; SMB-focused products typically sit at 90–105% because small businesses fail and downgrade more.

Only revenue from customers present at the period start counts — new logos acquired during the period are excluded from both numerator and denominator.

Compute it: NRR calculator

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