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Read the postRevenue Operations
Logo retention (also called customer retention rate, gross customer retention, or account retention) is the percentage of customers a company retains over a set time frame. It counts logos — each customer is one unit, whether they pay $500/month or $50,000/month. This makes it a purer signal of product-market fit than revenue-based retention metrics, which can be skewed by a single large account expanding.
Companies focused only on net revenue retention often miss a dangerous pattern: logo count drops while NRR stays above 100% because remaining customers expand. This works until the remaining accounts run out of expansion room. At that point, both metrics decline together — and rebuilding a customer base is far slower than growing revenue from existing ones.
For B2B SaaS with annual contracts, 85-90% annual logo retention is considered strong. Companies serving SMBs typically see lower retention (80-85%) due to higher business failure rates among smaller customers. Enterprise-focused companies with $100K+ ACVs should target 90-95%. Below 80% annually, the business is replacing more than one-fifth of its customer base every year.
Logo retention differs from gross revenue retention in what it counts. Logo retention treats every customer equally — one lost customer is one lost logo. GRR weights by revenue, so losing a $5K customer matters less than losing a $200K customer. Both are useful. Neither alone is sufficient.
Every lost logo carries costs beyond the lost revenue. The sales team spent money acquiring that customer. The onboarding team invested hours. The support team built context. When logo retention drops, the company is not just losing revenue — it is writing off the full customer acquisition cost and all post-sale investment for each departed account.
A 60-person SaaS company with $8M ARR, 400 customers, and 82% annual logo retention loses 72 customers per year. At a $3,200 average CAC, that is $230K in acquisition spend that produced zero long-term return. The revenue loss compounds: those 72 customers would have generated $1.44M in the following year, assuming zero expansion.
Operators who track logo retention by segment and cohort find actionable patterns. If customers acquired through paid channels churn at 25% while organic customers churn at 12%, the problem is not the product — it is the acquisition channel attracting poor-fit customers. That data changes budget allocation, not feature roadmaps.
Logo Retention Rate = ((Customers at Start - Churned Customers) / Customers at Start) x 100
Example:
- Customers at start of quarter: 387
- Customers churned during quarter: 29
Logo Retention = ((387 - 29) / 387) x 100 = 92.5%
Annualized from quarterly:
Annual Logo Retention = Quarterly Rate ^ 4
= 0.925 ^ 4 = 0.732 = 73.2%
What each component means:
Some teams also track "new customer retention" — the retention rate of customers acquired in the last 90 days. This isolates onboarding quality from long-term product satisfaction.
How logo retention varies across B2B segments. Rates shown are annual unless noted.
| Segment | Strong | Average | Below average | Action needed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SMB SaaS (<$10K ACV) | 85-90% | 75-85% | <75% | Audit onboarding completion rates and time-to-value |
| Mid-market SaaS ($10-50K ACV) | 90-95% | 85-90% | <85% | Review customer success coverage and QBR cadence |
| Enterprise SaaS ($50K+ ACV) | 93-97% | 88-93% | <88% | Investigate contract renewal process and champion turnover |
| B2B Services / Agencies | 80-90% | 70-80% | <70% | Assess scope creep and outcome delivery consistency |
| Usage-based pricing models | 80-88% | 70-80% | <70% | Track activation rate and usage drop-off signals |
Sources: ChartMogul SaaS Retention Benchmarks 2025 (n=2,600 companies), Gainsight Customer Success Report 2025, Pavilion COO Survey 2025.
1. Conflating logo retention with net revenue retention
NRR above 100% feels reassuring. But if logo retention is 78%, the company is losing nearly a quarter of its customers annually. Expansion from remaining accounts masks the churn. Report both metrics together — NRR tells you about revenue health, logo retention tells you about customer health.
2. Counting reactivated customers as retained
A customer who churned in January and re-signed in March was not retained. They churned and then were re-acquired. Counting them as retained inflates the metric and hides the actual friction point. Track reactivations separately.
3. Not segmenting by cohort or acquisition channel
A blended 88% retention rate hides the variance. Customers from Q1 2025 might retain at 93% while Q3 2025 customers retain at 76%. Cohort analysis reveals whether retention is improving or degrading — and often exposes that a specific acquisition channel or pricing tier drives the problem.
4. Measuring only annual retention when contracts are monthly
For month-to-month SaaS, annual retention is a lagging indicator by 11 months. Track monthly logo retention and annualize it. A 97% monthly rate sounds strong. Annualized, it is 69% — which is a significant problem.
Fairview's Operating Dashboard connects to your CRM and billing system (Stripe, HubSpot, Salesforce) to calculate logo retention by period, segment, and acquisition cohort. The dashboard shows both logo and revenue retention side by side — making it clear when they diverge.
The Margin Intelligence layer maps lost logos to their original acquisition cost, calculating the total write-off from churn — not just lost revenue, but lost CAC, onboarding investment, and projected lifetime value. When logo retention drops below the configured threshold, the Next-Best Action Engine identifies the segment driving the decline and recommends a specific investigation.
→ See how the Operating Dashboard works
People often track one but not the other. They answer different questions.
| Logo Retention | Net Revenue Retention (NRR) | |
|---|---|---|
| What it measures | Percentage of customers kept | Percentage of revenue kept plus expansion from existing customers |
| Unit counted | Logos (accounts) — each customer is one unit | Dollars — weighted by contract value |
| Can exceed 100% | No — you cannot retain more logos than you started with | Yes — expansion revenue can push NRR above 100% |
| What it reveals | Product-market fit and customer satisfaction | Revenue durability and expansion efficiency |
Logo retention answers "are customers staying?" NRR answers "is revenue growing from existing accounts?" A company with 82% logo retention and 115% NRR is losing customers but making it up on expansion. That model has a ceiling — eventually there are not enough logos left to expand.
Logo retention is the percentage of customers you keep over a period. If you start the year with 300 customers and 42 cancel, your annual logo retention is 86%. Each customer counts equally — a $500/month customer and a $50,000/month customer are both one logo. It measures how well the business holds onto accounts.
For mid-market B2B SaaS ($10-50K ACV), 90-95% annual logo retention is strong. SMB-focused products typically see 80-90% due to higher small business failure rates. Below 80% annual retention means the company replaces more than one-fifth of its customer base each year — a signal that onboarding, fit, or product value needs attention (ChartMogul, 2025).
Subtract churned customers from starting customers, divide by starting customers, multiply by 100. For example: 387 customers at the start of Q1 minus 29 churned = 358 retained. Logo retention = (358 / 387) x 100 = 92.5%. To annualize a quarterly rate, raise it to the power of 4.
Logo retention counts customers equally — each account is one unit regardless of size. Revenue retention (NRR or GRR) weights by contract value, so a lost $200K customer impacts the number more than a lost $5K customer. Track both: logo retention reveals product-market fit, revenue retention reveals financial durability.
Monthly for month-to-month contracts. Quarterly for annual contracts with staggered renewal dates. Always report the trailing 12-month figure alongside the period rate. Monthly data catches early deterioration; the annual figure provides the strategic view for board reporting and investor conversations.
Reduce time to value during onboarding — customers who reach their first outcome within 14 days retain at significantly higher rates. Implement QBR cadences for mid-market and above. Monitor product usage by cohort to catch disengagement before the renewal conversation. Fix acquisition channels that attract poor-fit customers.
Fairview is an operating intelligence platform that tracks logo retention alongside churn rate, NRR, and customer lifetime value. Start your free trial →
Siddharth Gangal is the founder of Fairview. He built cohort-level retention tracking into the platform after seeing operators report blended retention rates that obscured which acquisition channels were producing customers who stayed.
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