7 Critical KPIs to Track for Concierge Medicine Success

Concierge Medicine Practice Kpi Metrics
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Description

KPI Metrics for Concierge Medicine

Concierge Medicine relies on predictable recurring revenue and high retention You must track financial health and patient load simultaneously This guide covers seven core KPIs, focusing on profitability and efficiency For 2026, your Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) starts at $150, requiring a strong Lifetime Value (LTV) ratio Variable costs begin at 170% of revenue (80% medical supplies, 90% software), so margin control is critical Achieving breakeven in 6 months (June 2026) depends on optimizing membership mix, especially the high-value Corporate Executive Package Review financial metrics monthly and patient load metrics weekly to manage capacity before hiring additional staff like the 15 FTE PCP planned for 2028


7 KPIs to Track for Concierge Medicine


# KPI Name Metric Type Target / Benchmark Review Frequency
1 Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) Marketing Efficiency Target CAC must be less than 1/3rd of LTV; review monthly Monthly
2 Average Monthly Recurring Revenue (AMRR) per Member Revenue Quality Target annual increase, reflecting price adjustments like $200 to $210 in 2027 Weekly
3 Provider Panel Size Utilization Operational Capacity Maintain utilization between 80-95% of total FTE capacity to optimize service delivery Weekly
4 Contribution Margin (CM) Percentage Unit Economics Starting at 830% in 2026, as variable costs are defintely 170% Monthly
5 Member Churn Rate (MCR) Retention Success Keep net loss below 5% of starting membership count annually Monthly
6 Operating Expense (OpEx) Ratio Fixed Cost Control This ratio must trend downward as monthly revenue scales past $52,433 fixed overhead Monthly
7 Lifetime Value (LTV) to CAC Ratio Long-Term Viability Must maintain a ratio of 3:1 or higher to justify acquisition spend Quarterly



How do we ensure our membership mix maximizes revenue growth and stability?

Maximizing revenue stability for your Concierge Medicine practice hinges on balancing high-volume Individual memberships against the high-yield Corporate tier while assuming a 5% annual price escalator; Have You Considered How To Outline The Unique Value Proposition For Concierge Medicine In Your Business Plan? You must calculate the exact subscriber volume needed across these tiers to consistently cover the $52,433 monthly fixed overhead. That calculation shows you exactly where to focus your sales energy right now.

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Current Break-Even Mix

  • To cover $52,433 fixed costs with only Individual members ($200/mo), you need 263 subscribers.
  • If you secure just 18 Corporate members ($3,000/mo), you cover fixed costs without needing any other tier.
  • A mix of 100 Individuals and 10 Families ($500/mo) generates $45,000 monthly revenue, leaving a $7,433 gap.
  • The Corporate tier offers 15x the revenue leverage of the Individual tier for the same sales effort.
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Forecasting Price Escalation

  • The projected 5% price increase (e.g., Individual from $200 to $210 next year) buys you breathing room.
  • This escalator means you defintely need fewer new subscribers next year to maintain the same $52,433 coverage target.
  • Model the required volume for 2027 using the higher price points to stress-test your growth assumptions.
  • If onboarding takes 14+ days, churn risk rises, negating the benefit of planned price increases.

Are we achieving optimal efficiency between patient volume and staffing costs?

Optimal efficiency in Concierge Medicine means setting the provider panel size where high-touch service quality meets the required revenue to cover fixed salaries, especially as you plan growth; Have You Considered How To Launch Your Concierge Medicine Membership Service? We need to calculate the revenue per full-time equivalent (FTE) provider against projected wage inflation to find that ceiling before quality suffers.

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Define Provider Capacity

  • Calculate the total annual cost for one FTE physician, factoring in fixed wage inflation projections.
  • Determine the required Revenue Per FTE (RPF) needed to cover that salary plus overhead and desired profit margin.
  • If your target RPF is $450,000 annually, and the provider costs $300,000, you need $150,000 margin contribution per provider.
  • At a $250 monthly membership fee, this requires a panel of 150 members ($37,500/month revenue) to cover the fixed provider cost.
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Watch Variable Cost Creep

  • Monitor variable costs, like Medical Supplies, as a percentage of total revenue, not just absolute dollars.
  • If supplies are currently 80% of revenue but the 2030 target is 60%, any deviation eats into the margin supporting the provider's salary.
  • This margin is what shields you from wage inflation; if supplies creep up, you must raise membership fees or reduce panel size.
  • If onboarding takes 14+ days, churn risk rises defintely, impacting the stability of that required revenue base.

How effectively are we retaining high-value members and minimizing churn risk?

To effectively retain members, you must immediately segment your Member Churn Rate (MCR) and Net Promoter Score (NPS) by Individual versus Corporate status, as their drivers for staying or leaving are distinct; this tracking infrastructure is key, much like understanding the initial capital needed, as detailed in What Is The Estimated Cost To Launch Your Concierge Medicine Business? This segmentation shows where to focus your limited resources to protect the highest Lifetime Value (LTV) contracts.

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Segment Churn Drivers

  • Individual MCR often runs higher, perhaps 5% monthly if access lags.
  • Corporate MCR should stay below 1.5% due to contract lock-in mechanisms.
  • Use NPS to pinpoint service failures causing cancellations in the Individual segment.
  • If appointment wait times exceed 24 hours, churn risk spikes for busy professionals.
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Prioritize High-Value Retention

  • Corporate LTV is often 3x the Individual LTV due to scale.
  • If Individual LTV is $3,000 over 12 months, focus retention spend there first.
  • Mandate immediate physician outreach for any Individual scoring below 70 NPS.
  • Corporate renewals defintely hinge on executive satisfaction metrics and utilization reports.

When will we achieve positive cash flow and how much capital runway do we need?

You need $696,000 in runway to cover operations defintely until the projected 6-month breakeven point, while ensuring initial investments like the EHR system are accounted for.

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Runway and Breakeven Targets

  • Target operational breakeven within 6 months of starting patient onboarding.
  • Minimum required operating cash needed is $696,000 based on current projections for June 2026.
  • This runway must cover all fixed overhead until recurring membership revenue stabilizes.
  • Understand the owner's potential earnings, which relates directly to membership volume, by reviewing How Much Does The Owner Of Concierge Medicine Make?
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Investment Recovery Levers

  • The expected payback period for initial capital deployment is 15 months.
  • Correctly amortize capital expenditures (CAPEX), such as the $45,000 EHR system implementation.
  • Ensure the monthly membership fee structure supports this 15-month recovery timeline.
  • Track patient acquisition cost against the value of a long-term member relationship.


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Key Takeaways

  • Achieving a Lifetime Value to Customer Acquisition Cost ratio of 3:1 or higher is the primary measure of long-term financial viability for the practice.
  • Controlling operational expenses, particularly fixed overhead totaling $52,433 monthly, is critical to reaching the targeted 6-month breakeven point.
  • Operational efficiency requires maintaining Provider Panel Utilization between 80-95% to maximize revenue per FTE before needing to hire additional staff.
  • Membership success hinges on strategically balancing high-yield Corporate Packages with strong retention, aiming for an annual Member Churn Rate below 5%.


KPI 1 : Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)


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Definition

Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) tells you exactly how much money you spend to get one new paying member for your concierge practice. It’s the core metric for judging if your marketing spend makes sense relative to the value that member brings over time. For your membership practice, this number dictates whether scaling marketing efforts is profitable or just burning cash.


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Advantages

  • Shows true marketing spend required per new patient signup.
  • Allows setting a hard efficiency target: CAC must be less than 1/3rd of LTV.
  • Forces monthly review of acquisition channels to cut waste fast.
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Disadvantages

  • Ignores the cost of member churn over time if not paired with LTV.
  • Can be misleading if marketing costs aren't fully allocated to the budget.
  • Doesn't account for the initial onboarding cost required for a high-touch service.

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Industry Benchmarks

For membership models like yours, a good benchmark is keeping CAC below one-third (1/3) of the projected Lifetime Value (LTV). If your LTV is high because members stay for years, you can afford a higher absolute CAC than a transactional business. If you see CAC creeping above 33% of LTV, you need to pause spending immediately; that’s a sign of inefficient marketing spend.

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How To Improve

  • Drive referrals from existing happy members to lower acquisition costs.
  • Focus marketing spend only on channels showing the lowest initial CAC.
  • Increase Average Monthly Recurring Revenue (AMRR) per Member to support higher CAC.

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How To Calculate

You calculate CAC by taking your total marketing and sales expenses over a period and dividing that by the number of new members you signed up in that same period. This is a straightforward division that measures marketing efficiency.

Total Annual Marketing Budget / New Customers Acquired


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Example of Calculation

Let's look at your 2026 plan. You budgeted $36,000 for marketing. If you estimate your target LTV is $3,000, your maximum allowable CAC is $1,000 to maintain the 3:1 ratio. Here’s the quick math to see how many patients you need to acquire.

$36,000 (Annual Marketing Budget) / 36 (New Customers) = $1,000 CAC

To keep your CAC at $1,000, you must acquire exactly 36 new members using that $36,000 budget. If you spend $36,000 and only get 30 members, your CAC jumps to $1,200, breaking the 1/3 LTV rule.


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Tips and Trics

  • Track CAC by channel; digital ads vs. physician referrals.
  • Review the ratio monthly; don't wait for quarterly finance reports.
  • Ensure all associated costs, like CRM software, are included in the budget.
  • If onboarding takes 14+ days, churn risk rises, effectively increasing your true CAC.

KPI 2 : Average Monthly Recurring Revenue (AMRR) per Member


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Definition

Average Monthly Recurring Revenue (AMRR) per Member tells you the average dollar amount each active subscriber pays you every month. This metric is key because it reflects the pricing power and value perception of your membership offering. For this concierge medicine practice, it’s the purest measure of revenue quality.


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Advantages

  • Shows true pricing power, separate from member volume growth.
  • Directly ties to subscription tier performance and upsell success.
  • Helps forecast stable, predictable monthly income streams based on fee structure.
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Disadvantages

  • Can hide poor retention if new, high-fee members mask high churn rates.
  • Doesn't account for the variable cost of servicing different membership levels.
  • A rising AMRR might result from dropping lower-value members, not organic value improvement.

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Industry Benchmarks

For membership-based primary care, AMRR is often dictated by the base fee structure you set. If your standard fee is around $200 per member per month, that sets the floor for your expectations. Benchmarks are important because they show if you are pricing competitively against other high-touch models or if you are leaving money on the table by not implementing annual price escalators.

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How To Improve

  • Implement small, scheduled annual price increases, like moving from $200 to $210 next year.
  • Tier your offerings so members can upgrade for premium services, boosting the average.
  • Focus marketing on attracting members willing to pay higher fees for immediate access.

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How To Calculate

To find your AMRR, take your total subscription revenue collected in a month and divide it by the count of members who paid that month. You must review this weekly to ensure pricing integrity.

AMRR = Total Monthly Revenue / Total Active Members


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Example of Calculation

Let's assume you are tracking performance in 2026 when the base fee is $200. If Total Monthly Revenue hits $100,000 and you have exactly 500 active members, your AMRR is $200. Next year, if you successfully raise the price to $210, you need to maintain that volume or slightly increase it to see the AMRR rise to $210.

AMRR = $100,000 / 500 Members = $200 per Member

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Tips and Trics

  • Review AMRR every week to catch immediate pricing drift or tier downgrades.
  • Segment AMRR by membership tier to see which products drive the most revenue per patient.
  • Ensure your annual price increase plan is locked in your budget defintely for the following year.
  • Use AMRR trends to justify investments in provider capacity expansion or new service lines.

KPI 3 : Provider Panel Size Utilization


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Definition

Provider Panel Size Utilization measures your operational capacity by comparing how many members you currently serve against the total number of full-time equivalent (FTE) providers, which includes Primary Care Physicians (PCP) and Nurse Practitioners (NP). This KPI is vital because, in concierge medicine, service quality is directly tied to provider bandwidth. You need to keep utilization between 80% and 95% of maximum capacity to ensure you deliver the unhurried, personalized care members expect without paying for idle time.


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Advantages

  • Maintains service quality by preventing providers from exceeding sustainable patient loads.
  • Optimizes fixed labor costs by ensuring providers are near their efficient operating ceiling.
  • Provides an early warning system for hiring needs before service quality starts to slip.
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Disadvantages

  • If utilization falls below 80%, you are carrying excess fixed overhead in provider salaries.
  • Exceeding 95% utilization rapidly increases the risk of member churn due to perceived rushed appointments.
  • It relies heavily on accurately defining the maximum capacity for each provider role.

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Industry Benchmarks

For membership-based primary care, the target utilization range is intentionally narrow, sitting between 80% and 95%. This range reflects the trade-off between high fixed costs and high-touch service delivery. Operating consistently below 80% suggests poor resource allocation for your premium pricing structure. Staying above 95% is unsustainable for maintaining the core value proposition of direct, immediate access.

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How To Improve

  • Review utilization weekly to align provider hiring schedules with projected member growth targets.
  • Implement dynamic scheduling rules that automatically shift non-urgent tasks away from providers nearing 90% load.
  • If utilization lags below 80% for two consecutive weeks, pause new member acquisition campaigns temporarily.

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How To Calculate

You calculate this metric by dividing the number of patients actively paying their membership fee by the total number of providers on staff, expressed as a percentage of maximum capacity. This tells you where you stand relative to your operational ceiling. Here’s the quick math for the formula:

Provider Panel Size Utilization = (Current Active Members / Total FTE Providers) / Maximum Capacity Per Provider


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Example of Calculation

Let's assume your internal analysis determined that the maximum sustainable panel size for one FTE Provider is 600 active members to maintain service quality. If you currently have 1,000 active members being served by 2 FTE Providers, you first find the current utilization ratio before comparing it to the maximum.

Utilization = (1,000 Members / 2 Providers) / 600 Max Members Per Provider = 500 / 600 = 83.3%

In this example, 83.3% utilization is excellent, sitting right in the target zone of 80-95%. If you had 1,500 members with 2 providers, the result would be 125% capacity, which is a major red flag.


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Tips and Trics

  • Define maximum capacity based on provider time spent on patient care, not just member count.
  • Track utilization weekly; if you wait until monthly review, you’ve already missed the window to hire effectively.
  • Segment utilization by provider specialty (PCP vs NP) as their capacity might differ.
  • If utilization hits 95%, you should defintely have an active recruitment pipeline ready to go.

KPI 4 : Contribution Margin (CM) Percentage


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Definition

Contribution Margin Percentage (CM%) measures unit economics by showing what portion of revenue remains after paying variable costs (VCs). It tells you how much money each membership fee contributes toward covering your fixed overhead, like rent and salaries. This metric is defintely key for understanding the core profitability of every dollar earned before fixed expenses hit the books.


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Advantages

  • Shows true profitability per member.
  • Guides pricing strategy and fee adjustments.
  • Helps manage variable service delivery costs.
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Disadvantages

  • Ignores fixed costs needed for operations.
  • Requires accurate separation of all costs.
  • A high CM doesn't guarantee overall profit.

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Industry Benchmarks

For high-touch, recurring service models like concierge medicine, the CM% should be very high, often exceeding 70% once scaled. Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) benchmarks often push toward 80% or more, which is the goal here. You need a high CM because your fixed costs, like physician salaries and office space, are substantial.

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How To Improve

  • Increase the Average Monthly Recurring Revenue (AMRR) per Member.
  • Negotiate better rates for necessary supplies or administrative support.
  • Optimize provider panel size utilization to reduce per-member variable effort.

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How To Calculate

Calculate CM% by taking total revenue, subtracting all variable costs associated with delivering that revenue, and dividing the result by total revenue. This shows the percentage of revenue that contributes to covering fixed expenses and profit.

CM Percentage = (Revenue - Variable Costs) / Revenue


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Example of Calculation

For 2026 projections, the plan assumes variable costs (VCs) are 170% of revenue. The target CM is set unusually high at 830% for that year, meaning the business needs to track this closely against the standard formula.

CM Percentage = (Revenue - 1.70 Revenue) / Revenue = -0.70 or -70% (Note: Target CM is stated as 830% in planning documents)

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Tips and Trics

  • Review CM% monthly to catch cost creep immediately.
  • Ensure provider compensation tied to patient load is classified as variable.
  • Link CM performance directly to the Operating Expense Ratio goal.
  • If AMRR rises, CM% should naturally improve unless VCs scale faster.

KPI 5 : Member Churn Rate (MCR)


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Definition

Member Churn Rate (MCR) tells you exactly how many members you lose over a set time, calculated as members lost divided by members at the start. Since this is a membership business built on recurring revenue, retention success hinges on keeping this number low. The goal for this concierge practice is keeping annual churn below 5%, which means you must review the rate every single month.


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Advantages

  • Shows true success of the relationship-based care model.
  • Directly dictates the Lifetime Value (LTV) of a member.
  • Flags immediate issues with physician access or service delivery.
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Disadvantages

  • It’s a lagging indicator; it tells you what happened, not why.
  • A low MCR might hide high acquisition costs (high CAC).
  • It doesn't distinguish between a high-value executive leaving versus a low-engagement member.

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Industry Benchmarks

For subscription models, especially high-touch services like concierge medicine, annual churn needs to be very low. While general software targets might hover around 5-7% annually, for premium, relationship-driven healthcare, you should aim lower, ideally below 3% annually. Hitting the stated target of under 5% annually is the absolute minimum threshold for sustainable growth here.

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How To Improve

  • Perfect the initial 90-day onboarding experience to lock in value early.
  • Ensure physician response times meet the 24/7 direct access promise.
  • Run proactive satisfaction surveys before the annual renewal date hits.

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How To Calculate

To find your MCR, take the number of members who canceled or left during the period and divide that by the total number of members you had on day one of that same period. Then, multiply by 100 to get the percentage. This calculation must be done monthly to spot trends.

MCR = (Members Lost in Period / Members at Start of Period) x 100


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Example of Calculation

Say you started the first month of 2026 with 400 active members signed up for the monthly fee. During that month, 12 members decided to leave the practice for various reasons. Here’s the quick math to see your monthly churn rate:

MCR = (12 Members Lost / 400 Members at Start) x 100 = 3.0%

A 3.0% monthly churn rate translates to an annual churn rate of about 30.6% (1 - (1 - 0.03)^12), which is way too high for this model. You need to get that monthly rate closer to 0.4% to hit the 5% annual target.


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Tips and Trics

  • Always calculate MCR monthly to catch spikes fast.
  • Segment churn by the physician panel a member belongs to.
  • Analyze churn reasons immediately; don't wait for exit interviews.
  • If onboarding takes 14+ days, churn risk defintely rises.

KPI 6 : Operating Expense (OpEx) Ratio


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Definition

The Operating Expense (OpEx) Ratio shows how much of your revenue is consumed by fixed overhead costs. It measures your fixed cost control, which is vital for a membership model like this. If this ratio doesn't fall as you add members, you aren't gaining operational leverage.


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Advantages

  • Shows fixed cost leverage as membership scales.
  • Signals if overhead spending is growing too fast.
  • Directly ties overhead management to revenue targets.
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Disadvantages

  • It ignores variable costs, like supplies or specific service add-ons.
  • A low ratio doesn't guarantee profitability if revenue is too small.
  • Can lead to under-investing in necessary fixed capacity, like hiring providers too slowly.

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Industry Benchmarks

Benchmarks for concierge medicine are highly sensitive to provider compensation structures. Generally, successful subscription practices aim for this ratio to drop below 35% once they pass initial scale. If your ratio stays above 50% consistently, you aren't spreading your fixed base costs effectively across your member base.

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How To Improve

  • Drive member acquisition faster than adding new fixed overhead commitments.
  • Delay hiring new FTE providers until Provider Panel Size Utilization hits 90%.
  • Scrutinize all fixed contracts, like office leases, for opportunities to reduce monthly spend.

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How To Calculate

You calculate the OpEx Ratio by taking your total fixed expenses for the month and dividing that by the total revenue collected that same month. This shows the percentage of revenue needed just to cover your baseline operating structure.

OpEx Ratio = Total Monthly Fixed Expenses / Total Monthly Revenue


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Example of Calculation

For 2026 planning, your fixed expenses are set at $52,433 per month. If your membership growth drives total monthly revenue to $150,000 that month, the ratio calculation looks like this:

OpEx Ratio = $52,433 / $150,000 = 0.3496 or 34.96%

This means almost 35 cents of every dollar earned goes straight to fixed overhead before accounting for variable costs or profit. The goal is to see this percentage drop next month.


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Tips and Trics

  • Review this metric monthly; it's a lagging indicator of fixed cost control.
  • Map fixed costs against the AMRR per Member to see cost per patient.
  • Set a target reduction of at least 100 basis points (1.0%) quarter over quarter.
  • If the ratio spikes, investigate immediately—it defintely signals revenue stalled or fixed costs crept up unexpectedly.

KPI 7 : Lifetime Value (LTV) to CAC Ratio


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Definition

The Lifetime Value to Customer Acquisition Cost ratio shows your long-term viability. It tells you how much revenue a member generates over their entire relationship compared to what you spent to sign them up. You need this ratio to hit 3:1 or higher, and you should check it quarterly.


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Advantages

  • Confirms if your business model supports profitable scaling.
  • Guides spending decisions on marketing campaigns.
  • Shows the true value of retaining members past the initial signup.
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Disadvantages

  • It relies heavily on accurate churn rate projections.
  • A high ratio might hide poor unit economics elsewhere.
  • It’s a lagging indicator, not useful for immediate tactical changes.

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Industry Benchmarks

For subscription models like this membership practice, investors look for ratios above 3:1. If you are below 2:1, you are likely losing money on every new member you acquire over time. A ratio above 5:1 suggests you might be under-investing in growth marketing.

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How To Improve

  • Reduce Member Churn Rate (MCR) below the 5% annual target.
  • Increase Average Monthly Recurring Revenue (AMRR) via price adjustments.
  • Optimize marketing spend to lower Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC).

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How To Calculate

First, calculate LTV using the average member lifetime. Then, divide that by the cost to acquire that member.

LTV = (AMRR Contribution Margin Percentage) / Member Churn Rate (Monthly)


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Example of Calculation

Let's estimate LTV based on 2026 targets. We use the $200 AMRR and the 83% Contribution Margin. If we use the target annual churn of 5%, the monthly churn is 0.4167% (5% / 12 months).

Frequently Asked Questions

Focus on LTV/CAC ratio (target 3:1+), Member Churn Rate (under 5% annually), and Contribution Margin (starting near 830% given 170% variable costs in 2026) Review these metrics monthly to ensure sustained profitability;