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Net Revenue Retention (NRR) Explained

Net Revenue Retention (NRR)

Net Revenue Retention (NRR) measures how much recurring revenue you retain from existing customers over time, including upgrades, downgrades, and churn. It is one of the most important SaaS metrics because it shows whether your revenue base grows even without acquiring new customers.

What is Net Revenue Retention?

NRR answers the question:

“How much revenue do we have from last period’s customers after all changes?”

NRR focuses only on existing customers and ignores new customer revenue entirely.

Quick definition:
NRR = percentage of starting recurring revenue retained after churn, contraction, and expansion

Why NRR matters

  • Durability signal: shows whether growth compounds internally

  • Product strength: strong NRR indicates real, expanding customer value

  • Efficiency driver: high NRR reduces pressure on sales and marketing

  • Valuation impact: one of the strongest predictors of SaaS multiples

A SaaS with high NRR can grow even with zero new customer acquisition.

How to calculate NRR

Formula

NRR = (Starting revenue + Expansion − Contraction − Churn) ÷ Starting revenue × 100

Only revenue from customers who existed at the start of the period is included.

Example calculation

MetricValue
Starting MRR€100,000
Expansion MRR€18,000
Contraction MRR€6,000
Churned MRR€7,000
Ending MRR (existing customers)€105,000
NRR105%

An NRR above 100% means expansion outweighs churn and contraction.

How to interpret NRR

NRR rangeInterpretation
< 90%Revenue base is shrinking
90–100%Flat or fragile retention
100–110%Healthy expansion
110%+Strong product-led growth

What’s “good” depends on your market, pricing model, and customer size.

NRR vs GRR

MetricIncludes expansion?Measures
NRRYesNet revenue growth from existing customers
GRRNoPure revenue retention without upsells

Use GRR to understand downside risk. Use NRR to understand upside potential.

What drives NRR up

  • Seat growth within accounts

  • Usage-based expansion

  • Add-ons and cross-sells

  • Price increases at renewal

  • Strong onboarding and activation

High NRR is usually the result of product value, not sales pressure.

What drives NRR down

  • Customer churn

  • Downgrades and seat reductions

  • Poor adoption or weak ROI

  • Over-selling during initial deals

  • Lack of ongoing engagement

NRR degradation often starts silently before revenue declines are obvious.

How SaaS teams use NRR

Evaluate product-market fit

Consistently high NRR indicates customers find increasing value over time.

Prioritize customer success

NRR helps focus retention efforts on accounts with the highest expansion potential.

Support strategic planning

NRR informs hiring plans, sales targets, and long-term growth models.

Common pitfalls

  • Including new customer revenue in NRR

  • Mixing billing changes with cash movements

  • Tracking NRR without segmentation

  • Ignoring contraction while celebrating expansion

  • Measuring NRR without understanding drivers

NRR is powerful only when broken down by cohort and segment.

FAQ

Can NRR be above 100%?
Yes. An NRR above 100% means expansion revenue exceeds churn and contraction.

Is high NRR enough to guarantee growth?
No. You still need new customers to scale, but high NRR dramatically reduces growth pressure.

How often should NRR be measured?
Most SaaS teams track NRR monthly and review trends quarterly.

Banyan AI note: NRR shows whether your revenue engine compounds on its own. The real edge comes from understanding which actions push NRR above 100% — and repeating them systematically.