Unit Economics metric

Burn Multiple. The harshest efficiency number in SaaS — and the one metric that, if you're doing it right, you may not have at all.

Burn Multiple divides your total net cash burn by the net new ARR that burn produced: how many dollars you torched to add each dollar of new recurring revenue. It's the most whole-company, most unforgiving efficiency metric on the board deck — and a pure venture number. By definition it only means something if you're spending more than you make. A profitable, bootstrapped company has negative burn and no real multiple to speak of, which isn't a gap in your reporting — it's the goal. For the founders who are burning, the honest way to read it isn't as an abstract efficiency score. It's as a survival clock.

What it is

Net cash burn divided by net new ARR added in the same period. The whole-company efficiency test — not just sales and marketing, but R&D, G&A, everything. Lower is better. If you're profitable, your burn is negative and the multiple doesn't apply — which is a good problem to have.

Measurement period

Quarterly.

A company-level health number built on a quarter (or year) of burn against the ARR it produced. Read it quarterly at the board level — and watch the raw cash position far more often if burn is high.

Formula
Net cash burn
Net new ARR
= Burn Multiple

Total burn, not just S&M. Lower is better — and negative (profitable) means it doesn't apply to you.

When to review

Quarterly.

If you're burning, read it quarterly as a survival clock, not a score — how much runway is each dollar of growth costing you. If you're profitable, you're tracking cash and runway instead, which matter at every size.

Why it matters

It never applied to us. The instinct underneath it applies to everyone.

Let me be straight: Burn Multiple never applied to PipelineCRM. We were bootstrapped and profitable — negative burn — so there was no multiple to compute. It's a pure venture metric, built for companies deliberately spending a war chest to grow faster than their revenue can fund. That was never the company we were running, so I'm not going to pretend I lived and breathed this number. I didn't.

But here's what I did do, and it's the same instinct in a cruder form: I used to look at our bank account, calculate how much cash we were burning through each month, and work out how many months of survival that bought us. We were never in danger — but I always knew the number. That homemade survival-month figure is, in spirit, exactly what Burn Multiple is reaching for. The question underneath the fancy ratio is the oldest question in business: how much time do I have to live, given the cash I'm holding and the rate I'm spending it? Every founder should know the answer to that, venture-backed or not.

So that's the lens I'd hand you for this number. Don't read a 3x burn multiple as an abstract grade. Read it as a clock: every dollar of new ARR you just added cost you three dollars of runway you'll eventually have to raise again — and every quarter at that rate is a quarter closer to the next raise or the wall. The metric's whole value is making the invisible cost of inefficient growth visible, in time. That's what makes it the harsh one. It doesn't let you celebrate growth without asking what the growth cost you in survival.

The question underneath the fancy ratio is the oldest one in business: how much time do I have to live, given the cash I'm holding and the rate I'm spending it? Read the burn multiple as a clock, not a grade.

Worked example

Same growth, three burns. The multiple is what the growth cost you.

Each company added the same $1M of net new ARR this year. The only difference is how much cash they burned to get it — and that's the whole story the growth number alone never tells. Read each multiple as a clock: how fast it's eating the war chest per dollar of growth.

Efficient · 1.0x
1.0x
  • Net new ARR$1.0M
  • Net burn$1.0M
  • Burn Multiple1.0x
  • ReadA dollar burned per dollar of ARR

Strong. A dollar of burn buys a dollar of new ARR — efficient growth that doesn't run the survival clock down hard. The kind of multiple that makes the next raise a choice, not an emergency.

Suspect · 2.0x
2.0x
  • Net new ARR$1.0M
  • Net burn$2.0M
  • Burn Multiple2.0x
  • ReadTwo dollars of runway per dollar of ARR

Getting expensive. Every dollar of growth now costs two of runway — the clock is running twice as fast for the same result. Workable for a stretch, but not a rate you can hold indefinitely without a plan to tighten it.

Bad · 3.5x
3.5x
  • Net new ARR$1.0M
  • Net burn$3.5M
  • Burn Multiple3.5x
  • ReadThe bloat is usually outside S&M

The danger zone. And note where it hides: the sales engine here might look perfectly efficient on its own — it's the over-hired R&D and bloated G&A that drive a multiple this high. That's exactly what Magic Number would miss and this number catches.

Benchmarks

Burn Multiple bands — and yes, lower is better here.

Unlike most metrics on this site, a smaller number is the good one — so these bands run best at the top, worst at the bottom. They're the widely-used standard for companies that are burning. If you're profitable, none of them apply, and that's the best place to be.

Elite Under 1x
Elite. You're adding more than a dollar of new ARR for every dollar burned — growth that nearly pays for itself. Rare, and the strongest signal that the engine is efficient across the whole company, not just in sales.
Healthy 1x — 2x
Healthy. The band most well-run, growing-but-burning companies live in. Each dollar of ARR costs one to two of burn — sustainable with a reasonable runway and a credible path to tightening as you scale. A fundable, defensible place to be.
Suspect 2x — 3x
Suspect. Growth is getting expensive, and the survival clock is running fast. Fine for a quarter or two while you fix the leak, but a multiple parked here is a signal that something — usually outside S&M — needs cutting before the next raise.
Bad Over 3x
Bad. You're burning three-plus dollars for every dollar of new ARR — the clock is sprinting and the growth isn't paying for itself in any meaningful sense. Stop and fix the structure before raising another dollar; more capital at this multiple just buys a faster trip to the same wall.

When the multiple is too high

Three plays that actually move it.

A high burn multiple means cash is going out faster than growth justifies. Because it's a whole-company number, the fix is rarely in the obvious place. These run in the order I'd work them — find the real leak first, then tighten, then protect the clock.

— 01 Find the leak — it's usually not sales

Check the line items Magic Number can't see.

The instinct is to blame acquisition, but a high burn multiple often hides in R&D and G&A, not S&M. Run the diagnosis: if your Magic Number and payback look fine but the burn multiple is ugly, the problem is everything except sales — over-hiring ahead of revenue, bloated overhead, infrastructure built for a company three times your size. Find the line items burning cash that aren't producing ARR. That's where the multiple actually lives.

— 02 Cut to the runway you can defend

Burn is a choice — make it a deliberate one.

Once you know where the cash is going, the lever is straightforward and unglamorous: cut the burn that isn't buying growth. Every dollar you stop torching extends the clock and pulls the multiple down at the same time. The goal isn't zero burn — it's deliberate burn, where every dollar out has a defensible reason and a line back to ARR. Spend like the next raise isn't guaranteed, because it isn't.

— 03 Know your survival clock cold

Cash on hand, divided by burn — always know it.

This is the homemade discipline that matters at every size: cash in the bank divided by monthly burn equals the months you have to live. Know that number cold and watch it move. The burn multiple tells you how efficiently growth is consuming the clock; runway tells you how much clock is left. Read them together, and you'll never be surprised by the wall — you'll see it coming with quarters to spare.

Common mistakes operators make with Burn Multiple.

Reading it as a grade instead of a clock.
The big one. A burn multiple isn't an abstract efficiency score to feel good or bad about — it's a measure of how fast growth is consuming your runway. A 3x means each dollar of new ARR cost three dollars of survival you'll have to raise again. Read it as time, not a letter grade, and the urgency becomes obvious. The number only does its job when you translate it into "how many quarters does this buy or cost me."
Assuming the problem is sales and marketing.
Burn Multiple is whole-company — and a bad one usually hides outside S&M. Your Magic Number and payback can look perfectly healthy while over-hired R&D and bloated G&A quietly drive the multiple sky-high. That's the entire reason this number exists and the GTM-only metrics don't catch it. When the multiple is ugly but acquisition looks fine, stop staring at the sales team and audit everything else.
Thinking it applies to you when you're profitable.
If you're profitable, your net burn is negative and the multiple doesn't compute — and that's not a reporting gap, it's the goal. Don't contort a profitable P&L to manufacture a burn multiple because investors talk about it. Track cash and runway instead. The healthiest possible burn multiple is not having one, because you're funding your own growth.
Raising more capital to fix a high multiple.
A bad burn multiple is an efficiency problem, and capital doesn't fix efficiency — it funds the inefficiency longer. Raising at a 3x multiple just buys a faster trip to the same wall, now with more dilution and higher expectations. Fix the structure first, get the multiple into a defensible band, then raise from strength. Capital should accelerate an efficient engine, not paper over a leaky one.
Ignoring cash discipline because you're not venture-backed.
The metric is a venture metric, but the instinct under it is universal. Bootstrapped or funded, you should always know how much cash you're holding, how fast you're spending it, and how many months that buys. I ran that calculation off our bank account for years and was never caught off guard. The fancy ratio is optional; knowing your survival clock is not.
Over-reacting to a single lumpy quarter.
Both halves swing — a big one-time spend, a slow quarter of net new ARR, a delayed enterprise deal — so a single quarter's multiple can look alarming or rosy for reasons that don't reflect the real trend. Read it across several quarters and understand what drove each half before you cut or celebrate. One quarter is a data point; the trend is the signal.

Read alongside

Magic Number asks it of your sales engine. Burn Multiple asks it of the whole company.

They're the same question — is growth paying for itself — at two scopes. Magic Number sees only sales and marketing; Burn Multiple sees every dollar the company spends. When the two disagree, the gap is exactly where your hidden burn lives.

Magic Number guide

How Upbeat helps

The investor's ratio, translated into your survival clock.

A burn multiple on a board deck is an abstraction. Upbeat puts it next to the numbers that make it real — net new ARR, net burn, and the runway it implies — so the multiple reads as time, not a grade. When it drifts the wrong way, you see whether the leak is in acquisition or hiding in overhead, and exactly how many quarters of clock it's costing you — in one place, every quarter.

Read the multiple as a clock, not a grade.

Upbeat puts your burn multiple next to net new ARR, burn, and runway on the scorecard — so an investor's ratio becomes the question that actually matters: how much time is this growth costing me, and where is the cash really going?

Email Nick directly