| Period | Start customers (S) | End customers (E) | New customers (N) | Retention rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 2026 | 1200 | 1350 | 400 | 79.17% |
| Feb 2026 | 1350 | 1405 | 310 | 81.11% |
| Mar 2026 | 1405 | 1520 | 420 | 78.29% |
The standard customer retention rate for a period measures how many customers from the starting base remained active by the end.
- S = customers at the start of the period
- E = customers at the end of the period
- N = new customers acquired during the period
Note: Use consistent definitions for “customer” (unique buyer, active account, subscribed user) across S, E, and N.
- Pick a fixed time window (weekly, monthly, quarterly) and one segment.
- Enter S as unique customers at the start.
- Enter E as unique customers at the end.
- Enter N as customers first acquired in the window.
- Optional: add revenue and average order value for impact estimates.
- Click Calculate, then export CSV or PDF as needed.
Retention rate as an ecommerce stability signal
Customer retention rate shows how well your store keeps existing buyers active across a period. If your starting base is 1,200 and you retain 950, you kept 79.17% of customers. This metric smooths daily order noise and highlights loyalty, service quality, product-market fit, and post‑purchase experience. Use it to validate that acquisition spend is building a reusable customer base.
Choosing the right measurement window
Monthly windows suit most catalog stores because repeat cycles often span weeks. Subscription and replenishment brands may prefer weekly views, while high‑ticket categories can use quarterly periods. Keep the window consistent so retention changes reflect behavior, not calendar length, and align it with promo cadence. For cohorts, apply the same window to each first‑purchase month.
Interpreting retained customers and churn
Retained customers equal end customers minus new customers. When this number drops, the churn rate rises because churn is the complement of retention. In practice, churn indicates the portion of your opening customer base that did not remain active by period end, even if orders temporarily spike. Watch for negative retained customers, which signals mismatched counts.
Using segments to find actionable improvements
Segment retention by acquisition channel, first product purchased, region, device type, or discount exposure. A segment with 65% retention may need onboarding emails, faster delivery, clearer size guides, or better product recommendations. Compare segments side by side to locate bottlenecks and protect margins. Prioritize fixes where retention gains reduce paid re‑acquisition.
Linking retention to revenue outcomes
If you add starting revenue, the calculator estimates revenue per starting customer and multiplies it by retained customers. This gives a quick retained revenue benchmark. With average order value, you can translate retained revenue into retained orders, helping forecast workload, inventory turns, and support capacity. Combine this with contribution margin to estimate profit at risk.
Reporting and decision cadence
Export results to CSV for dashboards or to PDF for weekly stakeholder updates. Pair retention with net growth to tell the full story: growth can hide poor loyalty if acquisition is high. Track trends, run tests, document assumptions, and use the same customer definition across analytics tools. Review results monthly after major campaigns and season changes.
What counts as a “customer” for S, E, and N?
Use a consistent definition such as unique purchasers, active accounts, or subscribed users. Apply the same rule to start, end, and new counts so retention reflects behavior, not labeling differences.
Can retention exceed 100% or become negative?
Yes, if end and new customer counts are inconsistent with the starting base. For example, very high new customers with a low end count can make retained customers negative. Recheck your period, filters, and deduplication.
How do I choose the best period length?
Match it to your repeat purchase cycle. Fast-moving consumables often work weekly or monthly, while high-ticket categories may need quarterly windows. Keep the window fixed when comparing trends.
Should I include customers who made returns or refunds?
Decide based on your business rule. Many teams count a customer as retained if they remained active, then track return rate separately. If refunds eliminate the purchase, adjust counts consistently across S, E, and N.
How can I improve retention quickly?
Focus on post‑purchase communication, delivery reliability, product education, and personalized recommendations. Reduce friction in returns and support, and test incentives for second purchases. Segment results to target the highest-impact cohort.
What should I report alongside retention?
Pair retention with churn, retained customers, and net growth. Add revenue per start customer to estimate revenue at risk. Reporting both counts and rates prevents misinterpretation when acquisition or seasonality changes.