What Is a Good Average Order Value for Saas?
Your SaaS company signed 50 new customers this month. They brought in $15,000. That is an average order value of $300 per customer per month. Is that strong for your industry? And how do you push it higher without adding complicated new tiers? Understanding average order value is essential for SaaS growth.
Why Average Order Value Matters for SaaS
In SaaS, customer acquisition costs can be high. Raising average order value means each customer brings more revenue. This improves unit economics and funds faster growth.
Key reasons to focus on AOV:
- Better unit economics. Higher AOV with similar acquisition costs means better margins and faster payback periods.
- More budget for growth. When customers bring more revenue, you have more to spend on acquiring more customers.
- Clearer product market fit. Higher AOV often signals stronger value perception. Customers willing to pay more believe in the product.
- Tier optimization. Tracking AOV reveals which features matter most. This guides pricing tier development.
How to Check in GA4
GA4 can track subscription revenue if properly configured. Set up ecommerce events to capture transaction data. Report on average order value through the monetization reports section.
For deeper analysis, most SaaS platforms provide revenue metrics directly. Stripe, Chargebee, or your billing system shows average revenue per customer. Cross-reference this with traffic sources in GA4 to understand which channels bring higher-value customers.
Calculate AOV by dividing total recurring revenue by the number of customers in a given period. Track this monthly. Watch for trends.
The Easier Way
ClawAnalytics provides dashboards that combine revenue data with user behavior insights. You see not just what customers pay, but what they do.
With ClawAnalytics you understand:
- Which pricing tiers convert best
- How AOV changes as customers use your product
- Revenue by acquisition source
- Impact of upgrades on overall AOV
Questions answered include: “Are our enterprise customers coming from specific campaigns?” and “Does onboarding depth affect AOV?”
You gain clarity without building complex reports.
Quick Wins
Increase your SaaS average order value:
- Create usage-based tiers. Let customers pay more as they use more. This naturally raises AOV.
- Bundle features effectively. Group popular features into higher-priced tiers. Show clear value differences.
- Offer annual discounts. Incentivize annual billing. Customers pay more upfront and you get longer commitment.
- Upsell strategically. Target customers using core features heavily. They are primed for upgrade conversations.
- Add seat-based pricing. For team products, more seats means more revenue. Make expansion easy.
Average order value in SaaS often climbs as customers grow their teams. Focus on delivering value that scales. When customers succeed, they pay more. Track the metrics to know where you stand and what moves the needle.