The SaaS industry has evolved from a disruptive model into the dominant software delivery format — but the competitive dynamics have intensified dramatically. Understanding the market size, growth benchmarks, churn norms, and unit economics benchmarks is essential whether you're building a SaaS product, evaluating competitors, or making investment decisions. This page compiles 40+ verified statistics from Gartner, Bessemer Venture Partners, OpenView Partners, SaaStr, Recurly, Paddle, ChurnZero, and McKinsey. These numbers cover the full SaaS operating picture: from the global market outlook and enterprise adoption trends to the unit economics that separate growing companies from those slowly leaking revenue through the cracks of poor retention.
Projected global SaaS market value by the end of 2024 — up from $197 billion in 2023, representing approximately 18% year-over-year growth.
— Gartner, 2024Forecast global SaaS market size by 2028, implying a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of approximately 13% through the latter half of the decade.
— Statista, 2024of total enterprise software spending is now allocated to SaaS — up from 19% in 2018 — as businesses shift from on-premise to cloud-based tooling.
— Gartner, 2024of all new enterprise software purchases are expected to be SaaS by 2025 — effectively making subscription software the default for new tooling decisions.
— Gartner, 2024SaaS companies are operating globally today — a number that has grown 500%+ since 2015 as barriers to building and distributing software products have collapsed.
— Statista / Crunchbase, 2024accounts for 55% of global SaaS market revenue, with the US alone hosting more than 17,000 SaaS companies — the highest concentration of any geography.
— Gartner, 2024Average number of SaaS applications used by companies with 1,000+ employees — up from 80 in 2020, indicating SaaS sprawl as a growing operational challenge.
— Zylo SaaS Management Index, 2024Average annual SaaS spend for enterprises with 2,500+ employees — and only 56% of that software is actively used, creating significant waste.
— Zylo, 2024of SaaS licenses in the average enterprise go unused or underutilised — representing billions in wasted software spend that SaaS management platforms aim to recover.
— Blissfully / Vendr, 2024Average annual per-employee SaaS spend at mid-market companies — a figure that has grown 50% in four years as subscription tool adoption accelerates.
— Zylo, 2024of companies say shadow IT (SaaS tools purchased without IT approval) is a major or significant concern — growing as departmental purchasing becomes easier.
— Gartner, 2024Average annual customer churn rate for B2B SaaS companies across all segments — the baseline benchmark to measure your retention performance against.
— ChurnZero SaaS Benchmarks Report, 2024Annual churn rate target for best-in-class SaaS companies. Companies at this threshold or lower consistently achieve higher valuations and more efficient growth.
— SaaStr, 2024of annual SaaS revenue lost to involuntary churn — failed payments that aren't recovered — according to Recurly's subscription benchmarks.
— Recurly Research, 2024more expensive to acquire a new SaaS customer than to retain an existing one — the core economic argument for investing heavily in customer success and retention.
— HubSpot / Bain & Company, 2024Net Revenue Retention (NRR) target for top-quartile SaaS companies — meaning expansion from existing customers more than offsets any churn from lost accounts.
— Bessemer Venture Partners, 2024of SaaS customers who churn cite lack of perceived value or poor onboarding as the primary reason — not price, competition, or budget cuts.
— ChurnZero, 2024Minimum healthy LTV:CAC ratio for a SaaS business — meaning the lifetime value of a customer should be at least 3x the cost of acquiring them.
— OpenView Partners, 2024LTV:CAC ratio for top-quartile SaaS performers — the benchmark that signals strong unit economics and a scalable, capital-efficient growth model.
— Bessemer Venture Partners, 2024Target CAC payback period for efficient SaaS businesses — recovering the cost of customer acquisition within the first year of subscription.
— SaaStr, 2024Median CAC payback period for mid-market SaaS companies — indicating most businesses take 1.5–2 years to recover acquisition costs from new customers.
— OpenView Partners, 2024of SaaS revenue comes from existing customer expansion (upsells, cross-sells, seat adds) at best-in-class companies — making expansion the most efficient growth lever.
— Bessemer Venture Partners, 2024of SaaS companies use per-seat pricing as their primary model — though usage-based pricing is growing fastest, adopted by 45% of new SaaS companies in 2024.
— OpenView Partners Pricing Survey, 2024of SaaS companies offer a free trial — and those that do see a 66% higher conversion rate from trial to paid versus companies without a trial option.
— Paddle, 2024Monthly price range covering 80% of SMB-focused SaaS products — with the median SMB SaaS contract value landing around $150/month per account.
— OpenView Partners, 2024Annual price increase that top SaaS companies apply to existing customers without significant churn impact — making annual price escalation a standard retention-conscious growth lever.
— ProfitWell, 2024of SaaS revenue at top-performing companies comes from upsell and cross-sell to existing accounts — a figure that scales up to 40% at the highest-retention SaaS businesses.
— Bessemer / OpenView, 2024higher revenue multiples for PLG SaaS companies compared to traditional sales-led SaaS companies at the same ARR level — reflecting investor confidence in product-driven distribution.
— OpenView Partners, 2024of SaaS companies now have a PLG component in their go-to-market strategy — up from 37% in 2021 as freemium and free-trial models become standard practice.
— OpenView Partners, 2024Median free-to-paid conversion rate for freemium SaaS products — with top-quartile performers converting 40%+ of free users through effective product activation.
— OpenView Partners, 2024lower customer acquisition cost for PLG companies compared to sales-led SaaS businesses at equivalent ARR scales, reflecting the efficiency of product-driven viral growth.
— OpenView Partners, 2024The "triple, triple, double, double, double" growth path — the benchmark trajectory for VC-backed SaaS companies targeting $100M ARR from $1–2M ARR.
— Neeraj Agrawal / Battery Ventures, widely citedMedian annual ARR growth rate for SaaS companies at $1M–$10M ARR — reflecting the growth rates achievable at earlier stages with product-market fit established.
— Bessemer Venture Partners, 2024YoY ARR growth rate considered the minimum benchmark for a SaaS company to attract growth-stage investment at typical Series A/B valuations.
— OpenView Partners, 2024The "Rule of 40" benchmark — growth rate % + profit margin % should equal or exceed 40 for a SaaS company to be considered healthy. Elite companies score 60+.
— Brad Feld / McKinsey, widely citedFirst major SaaS milestone — typically achieved in 12–18 months for venture-backed companies, and 24–36 months for bootstrapped businesses building without external capital.
— SaaStr, 2024Gravison Growth. (2026, April). SaaS Market Statistics 2026: Market Size, Growth Rate & Churn Benchmarks. Gravison Growth. https://gravisongrowth.com/stats/saas-market-statistics-2026.html