Month-over-Month Growth Calculator
Calculate MoM growth rate and annualise it to show the equivalent annual growth trajectory. Enter up to 12 months of data to compute CMGR (compound monthly growth rate) and display the full growth trend -- the standard startup and SaaS growth analysis toolkit.
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Built around gaps in competitor tools -- professional-grade analysis for investors, analysts and business owners.
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How we compare to alternatives
| Feature | LazyTools | OmniCalc | Investopedia | Wall St Mojo |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Annualised MoM + CMGR | Yes | No | No | No |
| Industry benchmark | Yes | No | No | No |
| Step-by-step formula | Yes | Partial | Yes | Partial |
| Interpretation | Yes | Partial | Yes | No |
| Multi-mode | Yes | Partial | No | No |
| Free, no signup | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Month-over-Month Growth: Complete Guide to Short-Term Performance Tracking
Month-over-month growth analysis is the most immediate and actionable performance measurement tool available to business operators. It provides the earliest possible signal of trend changes -- whether revenue is accelerating or decelerating, whether customer acquisition is improving, or whether key metrics are drifting in the wrong direction -- weeks or months before these trends appear in quarterly or annual reporting.
What is month-over-month growth and why does it matter?
month-over-month growth is a fundamental financial metric used by analysts, investors and management teams to assess business performance, capital efficiency and financial health across a wide range of industries and business models. It provides a standardised, comparable measure that enables meaningful benchmarks against direct industry peers and against the company's own historical trend, making it an indispensable component of any thorough financial analysis or performance management programme.
The metric matters because it reveals operational and financial realities that the income statement alone cannot adequately capture. By drawing on data from multiple financial statements -- the income statement for profit figures, the balance sheet for asset and liability positions, and the cash flow statement for actual cash movements -- it gives a genuinely multi-dimensional picture of business performance. Consistent measurement and tracking over time allows management teams to detect improvement opportunities, identify emerging risks well before they become critical problems, and set specific quantified targets with clear financial benefits and accountability.
How to calculate month-over-month growth: the formula and key inputs
MoM Growth = (Current - Previous) / Previous x 100. For previous month value of 85,000 and current of 93,500: MoM = (93,500 - 85,000) / 85,000 x 100 = 10.0%. Annualised MoM = (1 + 0.10)^12 - 1 = (1.10)^12 - 1 = 213.8% annual equivalent. CMGR from 50,000 to 93,500 over 6 months = (93,500 / 50,000)^(1/6) - 1 = (1.87)^0.167 - 1 = 11.0% per month. Compounded annual equivalent of 11% CMGR = (1.11)^12 - 1 = 248% per year.
Using average balance sheet figures rather than point-in-time period-end snapshots substantially improves accuracy when assets or liabilities change significantly during the reporting period. This is particularly important for annual calculations where large transactions -- acquisitions, major asset purchases, significant debt drawdowns or repayments -- may have occurred at different points in the year. The average of opening and closing balances smooths out these distortions and gives a more representative picture of the typical balance throughout the period, which is what most industry benchmark comparisons assume as their methodology.
What is a good month-over-month growth? Benchmarks and industry context
MoM growth benchmarks vary dramatically by business stage and model. Pre-product-market-fit startups may experience highly volatile MoM growth. Y Combinator historically described 5-7% weekly growth as exceptional, equivalent to 20-30%+ monthly. Series A SaaS companies typically target 10-20% MoM revenue growth. Established scale-ups at 50 million+ ARR may target 5-10% MoM. For mature businesses at steady state, any consistent positive MoM growth in an organic channel signals healthy momentum.
Industry sector context and specific business model characteristics are absolutely essential for correct interpretation of any financial metric. A reading that signals excellent performance in one industry may indicate stress or inefficiency in another, because structural differences in capital intensity, payment terms, margin profiles, revenue cyclicality and business model economics produce fundamentally different natural ranges for every metric. Always benchmark against direct sector peers using identical calculation methodology and the same reporting period length before drawing any performance conclusions or setting improvement targets.
How analysts and investors use month-over-month growth in practice
Growth investors and venture capitalists monitor MoM growth as the primary signal of product-market fit and business momentum. Decelerating MoM growth -- growth rate falling even as absolute values rise -- is the most important early warning signal in startup analysis. A business growing at 15% MoM in month 3 but 8% MoM in month 8 is exhibiting deceleration that often precedes a plateau, requiring investigation of customer acquisition efficiency, churn rates, and competitive positioning.
Professional investment analysts consistently cross-reference any single metric with complementary measures to build a comprehensive, multi-dimensional picture of business quality and risk. A single metric reading in isolation provides limited analytical value and can be actively misleading; the combination of trend direction over multiple periods, absolute level versus sector peers, and consistency of performance across different economic environments provides the most reliable basis for investment, credit or strategic decisions. Always examine at least three consecutive periods before forming a definitive view and making decisions based on that view.
How to improve month-over-month growth: proven levers
Improving MoM growth typically requires identifying and doubling down on the highest-performing acquisition channel, improving product retention to increase the compounding base, or expanding the addressable market through new segments or geographies. The power of compounding means that improving MoM growth by even 2 percentage points -- from 8% to 10% monthly -- increases the one-year value by (1.10^12 / 1.08^12 - 1) = approximately 29%.
Prioritise improvement levers by their magnitude within the relevant financial statement and the practical feasibility of delivering change within your specific operational, competitive and resource context. Small, consistent improvements applied systematically over multiple periods compound into very significant cumulative performance gains over a 2-to-3-year horizon. Assign clear ownership of each specific improvement lever to a named manager with a quantified target, a realistic delivery timeline and a defined review date to maintain accountability, momentum and management focus throughout the improvement programme.
Common mistakes when calculating and interpreting month-over-month growth
Seasonal businesses require careful MoM interpretation. A retailer showing 30% MoM growth in November is not necessarily outperforming -- this may simply be the seasonal Christmas build that occurs every year. Comparing MoM growth for a given month against the same month in the prior year (the year-over-year equivalent of MoM) eliminates this seasonal distortion and reveals whether growth is genuinely accelerating or simply tracking seasonal norms.
Cross-period consistency is absolutely essential for any trend analysis to be meaningful. Changing the calculation methodology between periods -- using a different denominator definition, switching period length, or changing between average and period-end balance sheet figures without disclosure -- breaks the trend line and makes it impossible to distinguish genuine operational changes from methodological artefacts. Document your calculation approach formally and consistently, apply it identically across every reporting period, and disclose any changes explicitly when they are made so that historical comparisons remain meaningful to all users of the analysis.
Worked example: month-over-month growth calculation and interpretation
A SaaS company tracks monthly recurring revenue: Jan 40,000, Feb 44,000, Mar 48,400, Apr 51,704, May 55,323. Monthly growth rates: Feb 10.0%, Mar 10.0%, Apr 6.8%, Apr 7.0%. CMGR from Jan to May = (55,323/40,000)^(1/4) - 1 = (1.383)^0.25 - 1 = 8.5% per month. Annualised: (1.085)^12 - 1 = 166% annual equivalent. The growth deceleration from 10% to approximately 7% in months 4-5 is a signal to investigate -- is it seasonal or structural?
Once the base calculation is confirmed and validated against source data, sensitivity analysis reveals which individual inputs drive the largest changes in the final result. Identifying the two or three most impactful variables -- typically the primary revenue driver, the dominant cost component, or the main balance sheet efficiency metric -- allows management to focus improvement effort and capital allocation on the highest-leverage activities. This focused approach consistently outperforms broad-based efficiency programmes that distribute effort evenly across all inputs regardless of their actual quantitative impact on the outcome metric.
How to track month-over-month growth over time
Track this metric every quarter using identical methodology and chart results over a rolling 12-to-24-month window to identify trend direction early. A persistently improving trajectory demonstrates durable operational progress rather than one-off benefits from external conditions or accounting timing differences. Recording every period result enables regression analysis, forecasting and the quantification of how much specific management actions have moved the metric.
Require at least three consecutive periods moving in the same direction before drawing firm management conclusions or committing resources to a major improvement programme. Individual readings are routinely distorted by seasonality, one-time transactions, supplier or customer disruptions, and accounting policy changes that temporarily obscure the true underlying trend. Three consistent periods constitute a genuine signal that warrants root-cause investigation and a specific response plan with measurable milestones, assigned ownership and defined review dates.