Startup Burn Rate Calculator
Runway months from cash balance, expenses, and revenue
Startup burn rate and runway calculator from cash balance, monthly burn, and monthly revenue, with gross burn and net burn separated.
What this tool does
This calculator models how long a startup's cash reserves will last based on spending patterns and income. It computes three interconnected metrics: gross burn (total monthly expenses), net burn (monthly expenses minus revenue), and runway (months until cash depletes at the current burn rate). The calculation also estimates the additional revenue needed to reach break-even. Monthly expenses and net burn rate are the primary drivers of runway length—higher spending or lower revenue both reduce the timeframe. A typical scenario involves a pre-revenue startup with fixed monthly costs estimating how many months remain before funding becomes necessary, or a revenue-generating startup tracking progress toward sustainability. The calculator assumes constant monthly figures and doesn't account for seasonal variations, one-time costs, or future changes in spending or income. Results are estimates for planning purposes.
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Formula Used
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Disclaimer
Results are estimates for educational purposes only. They do not constitute financial advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions.
Gross Burn Versus Net Burn Is the First Distinction
Gross burn is total monthly expenses — rent, salaries, software, hosting, everything the company spends. Net burn subtracts monthly revenue from gross burn. A startup spending 100,000 a month with 30,000 in monthly revenue has 100k gross burn and 70k net burn. Investors and boards track net burn because it measures how fast the bank account actually empties. Gross burn matters when planning hiring, cost-cutting, or scenario modeling where revenue is not guaranteed to continue.
Runway Math
Runway equals cash balance divided by net burn. 1,000,000 in the bank with 70,000/month net burn gives 14.3 months of runway. Divide by net burn, not gross burn, because revenue is offsetting some costs. If revenue exceeds expenses, net burn is zero and runway is infinite — the company is profitable, and the calculator reports that. If revenue drops to zero unexpectedly, gross burn becomes the relevant number. Model both scenarios because revenue in early-stage startups is rarely reliable.
The 12-Month Rule
A common heuristic in startup fundraising places the capital raise trigger at 12 months of runway remaining. This reflects that fundraising typically takes 3-6 months from first conversation to wired funds. Starting at 12 months allows roughly 6 months of active fundraising plus a buffer. Starting at 6 months narrows the timeline, and valuations and terms may compress under time pressure. The calculator's isPositive indicator flips when runway drops below 12 months as a quick visual check on fundraising urgency.
What Counts Toward Monthly Expenses
Salaries and contractor payments are often the largest line item for software startups (60-80% of monthly burn). Office rent, insurance, software subscriptions, hosting, ad spend, professional services. Payroll taxes, healthcare, equipment leases, travel. Overlooked items include quarterly or annual expenses — legal retainer, software annual renewals, business insurance. Convert these to their monthly equivalents before entering. A 12,000 annual contract equals 1,000/month of monthly burn even though it only hits the bank account once.
Worked Example
Seed-stage SaaS startup. Cash balance: 800,000. Monthly expenses: 95,000 (team of 7 at 80k avg plus overhead). Monthly revenue: 18,000 (early MRR). Gross burn: 95,000. Net burn: 77,000. Runway: 800,000 / 77,000 = 10.4 months. Additional revenue needed to break even: 77,000/month — roughly 4x current MRR. Revenue coverage: 19%. Read: runway is below 12 months, so active fundraising should start now. To break even organically, MRR needs to 5x — possible if growth is strong but carries execution risk versus raising.
Runway Extension Levers
Reduce expenses. Typical cuts: postpone hires, renegotiate vendor contracts, cancel unused software, move to cheaper office or remote-first. Realistic: 10-20% expense reduction without damaging operations. Increase revenue. Price increases, upsells to existing customers, faster new-customer acquisition. Realistic: 20-50% revenue growth over 3-6 months if product-market fit exists. Raise capital. Most common runway extension. Realistic: 6+ months of capital typically adds 12-18 months of runway net of fundraising costs and dilution. Bridge financing. Short-term debt or convertible notes. Applicable when a round is imminent but not closed. Usually 3-6 months of extension.
With $800,000 cash and $95,000 monthly burn net of revenue, runway is approx 10.4 mo.
Inputs
This example uses typical values for illustration. Adjust the inputs above to match a specific situation and see how the result changes.
Sources & Methodology
Methodology
This calculator computes runway by dividing current cash balance by net monthly burn, defined as monthly expenses minus monthly revenue. The model assumes a constant monthly burn rate that does not change over the forecast period, and that cash decreases linearly at this rate. It also assumes all revenue and expenses occur uniformly each month with no seasonal variation. The calculator does not account for one-time expenditures, variable costs that scale with revenue, timing mismatches between cash inflows and outflows, or changes in burn rate due to operational adjustments. Results represent a simplified projection and should be treated as estimates for illustration purposes only.
References
Frequently Asked Questions
What runway is considered safe?
Include founder salaries in expenses?
How do I handle quarterly or annual expenses?
What if my revenue is growing month-over-month?
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