What is revenue growth rate?
Revenue growth rate measures how much a company's revenue increased or decreased from one period to the next, expressed as a percentage. It answers the question: "How fast is revenue growing?" — and converts a raw dollar change into a relative figure that can be compared across periods, companies, and sizes.
A $50,000 revenue increase means very different things for a $200,000 business (25% growth) versus a $5,000,000 business (1% growth). The percentage normalises the comparison and makes the growth rate the universal metric for performance benchmarking, investor reporting, and strategic planning.
The formulas
Period-over-period growth rate
Use this for month-over-month, quarter-over-quarter, or year-over-year comparisons. The denominator is always the previous (earlier) period — not the current period.
Quick example
CAGR — Compound Annual Growth Rate
For multi-year analysis, a single year's growth rate can be distorted by one-off events. CAGR smooths this by calculating the steady annual rate that would take the starting revenue to the ending revenue over the period.
CAGR is the standard metric in investor presentations, company valuations, and market sizing because it presents a consistent annual rate regardless of how uneven actual year-by-year growth was.
How to calculate revenue growth rate step by step
- Identify the two periods. Confirm the start and end periods are comparable — month vs month, quarter vs quarter, year vs year. Mixing period lengths distorts the result.
- Get the revenue figures. Use net revenue (after returns and discounts) rather than gross revenue unless your reporting convention specifies otherwise — and be consistent across all periods.
- Calculate the change. Current revenue minus previous revenue. A positive number = growth; negative = decline.
- Divide by previous revenue. This converts the absolute change into a relative rate. The denominator is always the earlier period.
- Multiply by 100. Converts the decimal to a percentage.
- Interpret in context. A single growth rate number is most useful alongside the trend across multiple periods, industry benchmarks, and margin data.
Worked examples
Example 1 — Monthly growth
Revenue: $40,000 → $50,000
Strong monthly growth
Example 2 — Annual growth
Revenue: $900,000 → $1,020,000
Solid year-over-year expansion
Example 3 — Negative growth
Revenue: $75,000 → $66,000
Revenue declined — investigate root cause
Example 4 — Large base
Revenue: $2,000,000 → $2,080,000
Modest % on a large base = large absolute gain
Multi-period trend analysis with CAGR
A single growth rate is a snapshot. Looking at several consecutive periods reveals whether growth is accelerating, decelerating, or volatile. The CAGR summarises the overall trajectory in one number.
| Year | Revenue | Change ($) | Growth rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 (base) | $500,000 | — | — |
| Year 2 | $620,000 | +$120,000 | +24.0% |
| Year 3 | $710,000 | +$90,000 | +14.5% |
| Year 4 | $680,000 | −$30,000 | −4.2% |
| Year 5 | $890,000 | +$210,000 | +30.9% |
| 5-Year CAGR | $500k → $890k | +$390,000 | 12.2% / yr |
Year-by-year growth ranged from −4.2% to +30.9%, making the trend look volatile. The 5-year CAGR of 12.2% gives the cleaner summary — this business grew at a steady 12.2% annually on average, despite the dip in Year 4.
Revenue growth rate benchmarks by sector
What counts as a "good" growth rate depends entirely on the industry, company stage, and macro environment. A 10% annual rate is exceptional for a mature retailer but disappointing for an early-stage SaaS startup.
| Sector | Typical annual growth | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Early-stage SaaS / tech startup | 50–200%+ | VC-backed growth mode — doubling annually is the baseline expectation |
| Mid-stage SaaS (Series B–C) | 30–80% | Scaling proven product — T2D3 rule targets tripling then doubling |
| E-commerce | 15–40% | Highly variable by category, CAC trends, and competition |
| Consumer goods / retail | 3–10% | Mature markets — organic growth close to GDP growth rate |
| Professional services | 5–15% | Headcount-constrained — revenue growth tied to hiring and utilisation |
| Manufacturing | 2–8% | Capital-intensive, volume-driven — growth follows industrial cycles |
Always compare growth rate against direct peers at similar scale and stage — not against headline tech company growth rates from investor press releases.
Revenue growth rate vs incremental vs marginal revenue
These three metrics all relate to revenue change but answer fundamentally different questions.
Revenue growth rate
Incremental revenue
Marginal revenue
In practice, business reporting uses growth rate for trend and benchmarking, incremental revenue for campaign ROI and initiative impact, and marginal revenue for pricing and production decisions.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Dividing by current instead of previous revenue. The denominator is always the earlier (base) period. Dividing by current revenue produces a different metric — it understates growth during expansion and overstates decline.
- Comparing mismatched periods. Monthly revenue compared against a quarterly total inflates or deflates the rate. Always use the same period length on both sides.
- Ignoring one-time revenue events. A large one-off contract, acquisition, or asset sale in one period distorts the YoY comparison. Report organic growth rate separately when material events occur.
- Treating growth as equivalent to profitability. Revenue can grow while margins compress. High-growth companies can burn cash faster than they earn it. Always pair growth rate with gross margin and operating cash flow.
- Using CAGR to hide a recent decline. CAGR smooths multi-year trends, which can obscure a sharp recent reversal. Always show the year-by-year table alongside the CAGR so the trend direction is transparent.
- Comparing growth rates across very different base periods. A 50% growth rate from a pandemic-depressed base year is much less impressive than 50% on a normal base. Context and base effects matter.
Frequently asked questions
What is the formula for revenue growth rate?
Revenue Growth Rate = ((Current Revenue − Previous Revenue) ÷ Previous Revenue) × 100. The denominator is always the earlier (base) period revenue. A positive result means growth; negative means decline.
Can revenue growth rate be negative?
Yes. If current revenue is lower than previous revenue, the result is negative — indicating revenue contracted. A −12% growth rate means revenue fell 12% from the prior period.
What is CAGR and when should I use it?
CAGR (Compound Annual Growth Rate) calculates the equivalent steady annual growth rate from a starting to an ending revenue over multiple years. Formula: (Ending ÷ Beginning)^(1/Years) − 1. Use CAGR when comparing multi-year performance across companies or periods with uneven year-by-year growth.
Is revenue growth rate the same as incremental revenue?
No. Revenue growth rate expresses the change as a percentage relative to the prior period. Incremental revenue expresses the same change as an absolute dollar amount. A 25% growth rate on a $200,000 base equals $50,000 in incremental revenue.
What is a good revenue growth rate?
It depends on industry and stage. Early-stage SaaS startups target 50–200%+ annually. Mid-stage tech companies target 30–80%. Mature retailers typically see 3–10%. Always benchmark against direct peers at similar scale — not across industries or growth stages.
How is revenue growth rate used in investor reporting?
Revenue growth rate is one of the most scrutinised metrics in investor reporting. Public companies report quarterly and annual YoY growth in earnings releases. Private companies use it in pitch decks and board updates. Investors use it alongside gross margin, net revenue retention, and cash burn to assess business health and growth quality.