Digital Marketing

Good Burn Multiple for Series A

Read the complete guide below.

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The Short Answer

For Series A, a burn multiple under 1.5x is good. Under 1.0x is excellent (you are adding more ARR than you burn). Above 2.0x is concerning—you are burning $2 for every $1 of new revenue. The formula: Net Burn ÷ Net New ARR. This metric measures how efficiently you convert capital into growth.

Understanding Burn Multiple

Burn Multiple measures how much cash you consume to generate each dollar of new annual recurring revenue (ARR). Introduced by David Sacks (Craft Ventures), it became the defining efficiency metric of the 2022-2024 fundraising environment. Unlike growth rate alone, burn multiple captures whether your growth is capital-efficient or wasteful. Two companies can both grow 100%, but if one burns $500k to add $1M ARR and another burns $2M for the same growth, they are fundamentally different businesses.

The Formula: Burn Multiple = Net Burn ÷ Net New ARR. Net Burn is your monthly cash burn (expenses minus revenue) annualized. Net New ARR is the ARR you added over the period (new customer ARR plus expansion ARR minus churn ARR). A lower number is better—it means you create more revenue per dollar burned.

Why It Matters for Fundraising: In the era of cheap capital (2019-2021), investors tolerated high burn multiples for fast growth. In the current environment, capital efficiency is paramount. A Series A company with a 3x burn multiple will face skeptical investors asking: "Can this business ever be profitable? Why are you burning $3 for every $1 of ARR?" Companies with burn multiples below 1x attract premium valuations and faster term sheets.

Burn Multiple Benchmarks by Stage

Seed Stage: Burn multiples are often high (2-4x or higher) because you are investing in product before significant revenue materializes. Investors accept this if you can show a credible path to improvement. A seed company burning $50k/month to add $100k ARR (burn multiple of 6x annually) is not efficient but may be acceptable if unit economics are strong once at scale.

Series A (Your Stage): The target narrows. Under 1.5x is good. Under 1.0x is excellent. Above 2.0x is a yellow flag. At Series A, you should have product-market fit and repeatable sales motions. Inefficiency at this stage suggests fundamental go-to-market problems, not just "early-stage messiness." Investors heavily weight burn multiple when evaluating Series A opportunities.

Series B and Beyond: Expectations tighten further. Below 1.0x is expected. Companies approaching IPO should be at or below 0.5x, meaning they add $2 of ARR for every $1 burned. The best companies achieve negative burn (profitable growth), where burn multiple becomes irrelevant because net burn is negative. Growth becomes self-funding.

Example Calculations

Example 1: Healthy Series A - Monthly burn: $150k. Annual burn: $1.8M. ARR at start of year: $500k. ARR at end of year: $1.5M. Net New ARR: $1M. Burn Multiple: $1.8M ÷ $1M = 1.8x. This is slightly above the 1.5x target but acceptable. Trending improvement would make investors comfortable.

Example 2: Efficient Series A - Monthly burn: $100k. Annual burn: $1.2M. ARR growth from $200k to $1.8M. Net New ARR: $1.6M. Burn Multiple: $1.2M ÷ $1.6M = 0.75x. This is excellent. You are adding more ARR than you burn. This company attracts multiple term sheets and favorable terms.

Example 3: Concerning Series A - Monthly burn: $250k. Annual burn: $3M. ARR growth from $300k to $900k. Net New ARR: $600k. Burn Multiple: $3M ÷ $600k = 5.0x. This is problematic. Burning $5 for every $1 of ARR signals severe inefficiency. The company needs to either dramatically cut costs or demonstrate why current spending will yield future efficiency.

How to Improve Your Burn Multiple

Reduce CAC: Customer acquisition cost is often the largest component of burn. Improving conversion rates, shortening sales cycles, or shifting to product-led growth reduces CAC without reducing growth. A 20% CAC improvement directly reduces your burn multiple by improving the denominator (more ARR) while stabilizing the numerator (similar burn from fewer sales resources).

Reduce Churn: Net New ARR = New ARR + Expansion ARR - Churned ARR. Reducing churn by 2% of ARR per year adds that same 2% to your Net New ARR. This improves burn multiple without any additional spending. High churn companies often have inflated burn multiples because they are constantly replacing lost revenue rather than growing net.

Increase Expansion Revenue: Upselling existing customers is dramatically more efficient than acquiring new ones. If your average customer expands 20% annually, your Net New ARR includes that expansion at minimal incremental cost. Product features that drive expansion (usage-based pricing, premium tiers, add-ons) improve burn multiple by boosting the denominator.

Cut Non-Growth Spend: Some burn does not drive ARR—excess office space, overstaffed support for current customer base, R&D on features that do not convert. Audit every expense line against its ARR contribution. Cutting $10k/month in non-growth spend reduces your burn multiple immediately without impacting ARR growth.

Actionable Steps

1. Calculate Your Trailing 12-Month Burn Multiple: Sum your last 12 months of net burn. Calculate net new ARR over the same period. Divide. This is your current baseline. If you do not know these numbers precisely, your financial hygiene needs work before fundraising.

2. Calculate Monthly Burn Multiple Trend: Plot burn multiple on a rolling 3-month basis. Is it improving (trending toward 1.0x) or worsening (trending toward 2.0x+)? Trend matters as much as absolute number. A company at 1.8x but improving attracts more interest than a company at 1.5x but worsening.

3. Build a Burn Multiple Budget: When planning next year, set a burn multiple target first. If target is 1.2x and you plan to add $2M net new ARR, your maximum burn is $2M × 1.2 = $2.4M annually or $200k/month. Work backward from the efficiency target to the expense budget, not the reverse.

4. Identify Highest-ROI Spend: Rank every major expense category by its contribution to net new ARR. Sales team: $X spend → $Y ARR. Marketing: $A spend → $B ARR. Cut or reallocate low-ROI spend to high-ROI categories. This surgical approach improves burn multiple without across-the-board cuts that might harm growth.

5. Prepare the Investor Narrative: Investors will ask about burn multiple. Prepare a clear answer: "Our trailing 12-month burn multiple is 1.4x, down from 2.2x a year ago. We improved through [specific actions]. Our path to 0.8x by Series B is [specific plan]." Demonstrating understanding and trajectory wins confidence.

Model Your Capital Efficiency

Use our free Burn Rate Calculator to track burn multiple over time and model improvements before your next fundraise.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Under 1.5x is good. Under 1.0x is excellent. Under 0.5x is exceptional. Above 2.0x is concerning and above 3.0x is a red flag. These benchmarks tightened significantly in 2022-2024 compared to the prior era.
Magic Number measures sales efficiency specifically (Net New ARR ÷ Sales & Marketing Spend from prior quarter). Burn Multiple measures total capital efficiency (Total Net Burn ÷ Net New ARR). Burn Multiple is broader and includes all expenses, not just S&M.
Only if net burn is negative, meaning you are profitable. In that case, burn multiple is not meaningful because you are self-funding growth. A 'negative' burn multiple would actually be good news—it means you do not need external capital to grow.
Best practice is to calculate both: headline burn multiple (all expenses) and normalized burn multiple (excluding one-time items like severance, office move costs, legal settlements). Show investors both numbers with transparency about what is excluded.
Calculate monthly, review quarterly. Monthly data reveals trends. Quarterly review prevents overreaction to single-month noise. Present to investors on a trailing 12-month basis to smooth seasonality.

Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only. Consult with financial advisors for company-specific decisions.

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