Churn Rate

No one likes to talk about customers leaving. But in the world of subscription-based businesses, it can’t be ignored, and that’s where churn rate comes in. At its simplest, churn rate is the percentage of customers who stop using your product or service over a given time period. It’s a key health check, letting you know if your business is holding on to its users or if people are slipping through the cracks.

Churn rate matters because keeping an existing customer tends to be far more cost-effective than acquiring a new one. A high churn rate can suggest something isn’t quite right: your product may not meet users’ needs, onboarding is too tricky, or competitors are luring your customers away. On the other hand, a low churn rate is a healthy sign that people are finding value and sticking around.

There are a few ways to slice churn. Customer churn is about the number of users leaving; revenue churn looks at the money lost when subscribers downgrade or cancel. Understanding churn rate helps you:

  • Improve product experience and customer support
  • Spot early signs of customer dissatisfaction
  • Align teams around reducing avoidable losses
  • Forecast future revenue more accurately
  • Balance your growth strategy with long-term sustainability

Churn rate calculator

To gain insight into your churn rate, use the simple formula below. Input the number of customers you had at the start of the month and how many customers you had at the end of the month.

( ) / ( # at the start ) * 100 =

Keep expanding your knowledge

Gmail AI Overviews: what are they and what do they mean for email marketing?
What is a WhatsApp chatbot? How it works, benefits and use cases
Create emails for humans and AI: Why accessibility matters more than ever
Doctolib strengthens the reliability of its email delivery with Spotler SendPro
6 triggered email campaigns to increase travel bookings
How travel brands can rebuild trust with email marketing
How travel brands can cope with AI and social-first holiday research
Why travel brands need more than an ecommerce marketing platform
Traveldeal: From customer insights to AI-driven personalisation for every visitor
Microsoft is phasing out SMTP AUTH Basic Authentication; what does this mean for you?