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Rule of 40

Last updated 2026-05-02 RevOps

The Rule of 40 says that a healthy SaaS business should have year-over-year revenue growth rate plus free cash flow margin add up to at least 40 percent. It is the single most-cited public-market benchmark for SaaS, and the framing is genuinely useful: at any growth-vs-profitability trade-off, the sum should hit 40. A 50 percent grower at minus 10 percent margin is fine; a 10 percent grower at 30 percent margin is also fine.

The formula

Rule of 40 = YoY revenue growth % + FCF margin %

You can substitute different denominators for “profitability” and the spirit holds:

  • FCF margin: Strictest. Public-market preferred.
  • EBITDA margin: Common in private SaaS reporting.
  • Operating margin: Sometimes used. Less honest because it hides capex.

Pick one and stick with it. Mixing definitions across quarters defeats the metric.

How to calculate it cleanly

  1. YoY growth. Trailing-12-month revenue this period over trailing-12 prior. Avoid quarter-on-quarter, which is noisy at small scale.
  2. FCF margin. Operating cash flow minus capex, divided by revenue. Be honest about stock-based compensation — most SaaS companies report adjusted FCF that ignores SBC, but the IPO market increasingly does not.
  3. Use the same period for both terms. TTM growth against TTM FCF margin.

A company at 35 percent growth and 5 percent FCF margin sits at 40 — exactly the bar. A company at 60 percent growth and minus 30 percent margin sits at 30 — under the bar despite eye-popping growth. The rule punishes both extremes.

Benchmarks

For public SaaS:

PerformanceRule of 40 score
Top quartile50 or higher
Healthy40 to 50
Acceptable30 to 40
ConcerningUnder 30

Private SaaS investors apply the same bar from Series C onward. Earlier-stage companies should not be evaluated on Rule of 40 — they are deliberately sacrificing margin for growth.

Common pitfalls

  • Using gross margin or operating margin. They flatter the score versus FCF. Use FCF for honest comparisons.
  • Including non-recurring revenue. Services, perpetual licenses, one-time fees inflate growth. Use ARR or recurring revenue only.
  • Ignoring the trade-off direction. A team at 40 hitting it via 80 percent growth and minus 40 percent margin is in a different place than a team at 40 hitting it via 20 percent growth and 20 percent margin. Both pass, but they need different next-year plays.
  • Using non-GAAP numbers without disclosure. SBC-adjusted FCF can be 20 to 40 percent higher than GAAP. Be explicit about which.