CAC Inflation Tolerance Calculator
Acquisition costs only go one direction over time: up. The question is how much you can absorb before the math stops working. This tool turns your lifetime value and a floor ratio into a ceiling CAC, then shows the headroom you have to bid up and take share.
CAC inflation tolerance is the headroom between your current acquisition cost and the most you could pay and still hold your minimum LTV:CAC ratio. Ceiling CAC = lifetime value ÷ your target floor ratio. Headroom = (ceiling CAC ÷ current CAC) − 1, expressed as a percentage. Positive headroom means you can absorb rising auction prices and still clear your floor; zero or negative means you are already at the ceiling.
CAC Inflation Tolerance Calculator inputs and result
| Headroom | What it means |
|---|
How to use this calculator
- Enter your lifetime valueUse gross-profit LTV, not revenue, so the ceiling reflects real economics rather than a flattering top-line figure.
- Add your current acquisition costEnter today’s fully-loaded CAC. The tool measures how far it can climb before you breach your floor.
- Choose your minimum LTV:CAC ratioPick the lowest ratio you will accept — many operators hold 3:1. This floor sets your ceiling CAC, so choose it deliberately.
- Read your headroomPositive headroom is the percentage your CAC can rise before hitting the ceiling; use it to decide how aggressively you can bid in rising auctions.
- Export your numbersCopy a share link, download the CSV, or print a one-page PDF for the bidding-strategy discussion.
RGM Expert Says
We built the habit of measuring headroom because auctions punish the brands that have not. Paid acquisition prices ratchet up every year as more advertisers compete for the same attention, and the brand that survives a cost increase is not the one with the lowest CAC today — it is the one with the most room between its CAC and its ceiling. Headroom is competitive ammunition. When a client knows they can absorb a forty-percent rise and a rival cannot absorb ten, the strategy writes itself: bid up, take the share, let the thin-margin competitor retreat.
The floor ratio is a business decision, not a number we hand people. A venture-backed brand chasing share might run a 2:1 floor for a season; a bootstrapped one paying for growth out of cash flow might hold 4:1. We make clients pick the floor explicitly, because the ceiling — and therefore the headroom — moves with it. The most common mistake is leaving the floor implicit and then being surprised when rising costs quietly erode the economics nobody was watching.
When headroom is thin, the instinct is to defend it by cutting spend, and that is usually backwards. Thin headroom is a lifetime-value problem, not a media one. Raising LTV through retention, pricing, or expansion lifts the ceiling itself, which buys far more durable room than rationing the slack you have. We treat low inflation tolerance as the signal to go work on the customer relationship, not the auction.
How it works
CAC inflation tolerance works backward from a floor ratio: it derives the maximum CAC that still clears your minimum LTV:CAC, then expresses today’s gap to that ceiling as headroom.
- LTV — gross-profit lifetime value of a customer.
- Current CAC — what you pay to acquire a customer today.
- Minimum LTV:CAC ratio — the floor you refuse to drop below; it sets the ceiling CAC.
The ceiling derives directly from the floor ratio you choose; the 3:1 reference comes from David Skok’s widely cited SaaS Metrics 2.0. Headroom is an estimate against a fixed LTV — it shifts the moment lifetime value changes.
Why headroom, not CAC, wins rising auctions
Every paid channel is an auction, and auction prices climb as more advertisers crowd in. In that world the decisive question is not ‘is my CAC low?’ but ‘how much can my CAC rise before the math breaks?’ That slack — the gap between your current cost and the ceiling CAC your floor ratio allows — is what lets you bid up, win impressions, and take share while thinner competitors are forced to pull back. Headroom is a strategic asset; CAC alone is just a price.
Headroom is set by lifetime value, which is why the most durable way to buy more of it is to raise LTV, not to chase a cheaper click. Lifting retention, pricing, or expansion revenue raises the ceiling itself, widening tolerance permanently. Cutting CAC widens it too, but only until the next cost increase. The brands that compound are the ones that grow the ceiling faster than the auction grows the price.
Read this alongside an allowable-CAC budget. Inflation tolerance tells you the maximum you can pay; allowable CAC tells you what to actually hold each channel to. Together they convert a floor ratio into a concrete bidding strategy — a ceiling to defend and a target to manage toward.
Reading CAC headroom
Headroom is relative to the floor ratio you choose, so there is no universal target. These bands describe how much strategic slack a given headroom buys you.
| Headroom | Strategic position | Typical move |
|---|---|---|
| 40% or more | Wide slack | Bid up, take share |
| 15 to 40% | Moderate slack | Compete selectively |
| 0 to 15% | Thin slack | Raise LTV before scaling |
| At or below 0% | No slack | Fix economics first |
What operators say about acquisition headroom
The advertiser who can pay the most for a customer and stay profitable eventually owns the auction; lifetime value, not bid strategy, sets that ceiling.
Acquisition gets more expensive every year, so durable growth comes from a business that can absorb rising costs — not one that needs them to stay low.