← Glossary Marketing

CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost)

The total cost to acquire one new paying customer. All-in, including salaries.

Explained simply.

CAC = (total sales + marketing spend) ÷ (new customers acquired). Most teams calculate it too narrowly, just ad spend, and then wonder why their CAC looks great but their business struggles. True CAC includes salaries, software, content, everything you spent on acquisition. The broader you count, the more honest the number.

An example.

Quarter: $500k on sales + marketing (ads, salaries, tools). 200 new customers. CAC = $2,500. Whether that's good or bad depends entirely on how much those customers are worth (see LTV).

Why it matters.

CAC is half of the unit economics equation. Paired with LTV, it tells you whether your business can grow profitably. Without knowing both, you're flying blind. Every growth decision should start by asking: what's this do to CAC?