Gross Revenue Retention (GRR)
Gross Revenue Retention (GRR) measures how much recurring revenue you retain from existing customers excluding any expansion revenue. It shows the pure downside risk of your SaaS business by focusing only on churn and downgrades.
What is Gross Revenue Retention?
GRR answers the question:
“How much of our starting recurring revenue did we keep, ignoring upsells?”
Unlike NRR, GRR deliberately removes expansion to expose whether your core revenue base is stable on its own.
Quick definition:
GRR = percentage of starting recurring revenue retained, excluding expansion
Why GRR matters
Downside visibility: reveals how much revenue you lose before upsells save you
Risk metric: highlights fragility hidden behind strong expansion
Customer health signal: reflects satisfaction and core product value
Investor focus: commonly scrutinized in due diligence
A SaaS can have great NRR and still be fundamentally fragile if GRR is weak.
How to calculate GRR
Formula
GRR = (Starting revenue − Churn − Contraction) ÷ Starting revenue × 100
Only revenue from customers who existed at the start of the period is included.
Example calculation
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Starting MRR | €100,000 |
| Churned MRR | €8,000 |
| Contraction MRR | €7,000 |
| Retained MRR | €85,000 |
| GRR | 85% |
This means 15% of the original revenue base was lost, regardless of any upsells.
GRR vs NRR
| Metric | Includes expansion | What it shows |
|---|---|---|
| GRR | No | Revenue stability and downside risk |
| NRR | Yes | Net growth from existing customers |
Rule of thumb:
GRR tells you how leaky the bucket is
NRR tells you how fast it refills itself
How to interpret GRR
| GRR range | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| < 80% | High revenue risk |
| 80–90% | Weak retention |
| 90–95% | Acceptable for SMB SaaS |
| 95%+ | Strong retention |
| 98%+ | Enterprise-grade |
GRR expectations rise sharply with customer size and contract length.
What drives GRR down
Customer churn
Downgrades and seat reductions
Poor onboarding or activation
Weak ROI or unclear value proposition
Over-selling during initial contracts
Expansion cannot fix these issues — it only hides them temporarily.
What improves GRR
Strong early activation
Clear ongoing value delivery
Stable pricing and packaging
Proactive customer success
Renewal-focused engagement
High GRR almost always reflects a product that customers would miss if it disappeared.
How SaaS teams use GRR
Risk management
GRR highlights structural risk before it shows up in topline revenue.
Product prioritization
Low GRR often points to missing core features or poor reliability.
Enterprise readiness
Enterprise buyers expect strong GRR as proof of long-term value.
Typical benchmarks (very rough)
| SaaS type | Annual GRR |
|---|---|
| Enterprise SaaS | 95–98% |
| Mid-market SaaS | 90–95% |
| SMB / self-serve | 80–90% |
Benchmarks vary widely — trends and segmentation matter more.
Common pitfalls
Confusing GRR with NRR
Ignoring downgrades in churn calculations
Using GRR averages instead of cohort views
Celebrating expansion while GRR deteriorates
Measuring GRR without customer context
GRR is most powerful when segmented by plan, cohort, and customer size.
FAQ
Can GRR be above 100%?
No. GRR excludes expansion by definition and therefore cannot exceed 100%.
Is GRR more important than NRR?
They answer different questions. GRR measures downside risk; NRR measures growth quality. You need both.
How often should GRR be tracked?
Most SaaS teams track it monthly and review trends quarterly.
Banyan AI note: GRR shows how strong your revenue foundation really is. Expansion is upside — GRR tells you whether the floor is solid or cracking.



