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Startup Runway Calculator

Calculate how many months of runway your startup has from burn rate and cash balance. Enter values for instant results with step-by-step formulas.

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Formula

Simple Runway = Cash Balance / (Monthly Expenses - Monthly Revenue)

Simple runway divides total cash by monthly net burn. Dynamic runway adjusts for projected revenue growth and expense changes over time, giving a more realistic estimate of when cash will reach zero.

Worked Examples

Example 1: Series A Startup

Problem: A Series A startup has $3M cash, $80K monthly revenue growing 8% per month, and $200K monthly expenses growing 3% per month. Calculate runway.

Solution: Net Burn Rate: $200,000 - $80,000 = $120,000/month\nSimple Runway: $3,000,000 / $120,000 = 25.0 months\nWith growth projections:\n- Revenue grows 8%/mo, Expenses grow 3%/mo\n- Revenue catches expenses around month 15\n- Dynamic runway extends to ~30+ months due to improving economics\nFundraise by: around month 24 (6 months before zero cash)

Result: Simple: 25 months | Dynamic: ~30+ months | Status: Comfortable | Default alive trajectory

Example 2: Pre-Revenue Startup

Problem: A pre-revenue startup has $500K in seed funding with $60K monthly expenses. When does runway end and when should they fundraise?

Solution: Net Burn Rate: $60,000 - $0 = $60,000/month\nSimple Runway: $500,000 / $60,000 = 8.3 months\nZero cash date: approximately 8 months from now\nFundraising should start: immediately (need 6 months for process)\nMonthly burn breakdown: typically salaries $45K, infrastructure $8K, other $7K

Result: Runway: 8.3 months | Status: Low | Must start fundraising immediately or cut burn rate

Frequently Asked Questions

What is startup runway and how is it calculated?

Startup runway is the number of months a startup can continue operating before it runs out of cash, assuming current spending and revenue levels remain constant. The basic formula is Runway = Cash Balance divided by Monthly Net Burn Rate, where net burn rate equals monthly expenses minus monthly revenue. For example, a startup with $1.5 million in cash and a net burn of $100,000 per month has 15 months of runway. This metric is critical because it determines how much time a startup has to reach profitability, achieve key milestones, or raise additional funding. Most investors and advisors recommend maintaining at least 12 to 18 months of runway.

How much runway should a startup have before fundraising?

The general guideline is to begin fundraising when you have at least 6 to 9 months of runway remaining. The fundraising process typically takes 3 to 6 months from initial outreach to closing, including preparation, meetings, due diligence, and legal documentation. Starting with 6 months or more prevents desperation negotiations that lead to unfavorable terms. Ideally, you should raise when your runway is 12 months or more because having leverage (not needing the money urgently) typically results in better terms and higher valuations. Companies that wait until they have less than 3 months of runway often accept punitive terms, excessive dilution, or may fail to close a round at all.

How do I extend my startup runway without raising more capital?

There are several strategies to extend runway without additional fundraising. First, reduce headcount or slow hiring, as salaries typically represent 60 to 80 percent of startup costs. Second, renegotiate vendor contracts and eliminate non-essential software subscriptions. Third, switch to cheaper office space or go fully remote. Fourth, accelerate revenue by offering annual prepayment discounts to customers. Fifth, reduce customer acquisition costs by focusing on organic growth and referrals instead of paid advertising. Sixth, delay planned product features and focus engineering resources on revenue-generating improvements. Even small monthly savings compound significantly over time.

Should I include revenue growth projections in runway calculations?

Including revenue growth projections gives a more realistic runway estimate than assuming flat revenue, but you should use conservative growth assumptions. A common approach is to calculate three scenarios: worst case (no revenue growth), base case (50 to 75 percent of planned growth), and best case (full planned growth). Most experienced founders and investors use the base case for planning while preparing for the worst case. Overestimating revenue growth is one of the most common and dangerous mistakes startups make because it creates false confidence about runway length. If your base case shows 14 months of runway but the worst case shows only 8 months, you should plan around the 8-month scenario.

How does runway change during economic downturns?

Economic downturns typically shorten runway in multiple ways simultaneously. Revenue growth slows as customers reduce spending, delay purchasing decisions, or churn at higher rates. Fundraising becomes harder and takes longer as investors become more selective and valuations decrease. Some costs may increase due to inflation or supply chain disruptions. During the 2022-2023 downturn, many SaaS companies saw sales cycles extend by 30 to 50 percent and close rates drop by 20 to 40 percent. The standard advice during downturns is to immediately cut spending to extend runway to at least 24 months. Companies with shorter runway during downturns face existential risk because fundraising timelines can double.

What financial metrics should I track alongside runway?

Beyond runway itself, track these complementary metrics for a complete financial picture. Monthly burn rate trend (is it increasing or decreasing), revenue growth rate and consistency, customer acquisition cost and payback period, gross margin (to ensure revenue is profitable), cash conversion score (net new ARR divided by net burn), months to breakeven assuming current trajectory, and monthly cash flow statement showing where money goes. Together, these metrics tell you not just how long you can survive but whether your business model is improving. Investors particularly care about the trajectory of these metrics and will look for consistent monthly improvement in unit economics even if the absolute runway is relatively short.

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