Cash Runway Estimator
Combine your current cash balance and monthly net burn rate to see how many months you have before needing more funding.
Cash Runway Estimate Summary
- Estimated Runway
- Based on your inputs, here's how long your cash might last.
- Cash Runway
- 20 months
Understanding Cash Runway
Cash runway is a crucial metric for startups and businesses, representing the amount of time (usually in months) a company can continue operating before it runs out of cash, assuming current income and expenses remain constant.
Why is it important?
- Financial Planning: It helps you understand when you might need to raise additional funding, cut costs, or increase revenue.
- Investor Confidence: Demonstrates financial awareness and planning to potential investors.
- Decision Making: Informs strategic decisions about hiring, spending, and growth initiatives.
How it’s Calculated
The calculation is straightforward:
Cash Runway (in months) = Current Cash Balance / Monthly Net Burn Rate
Where:
- Current Cash Balance: The total liquid cash the company has readily available (e.g., in bank accounts).
- Monthly Net Burn Rate: The net amount of cash the company spends each month. It’s calculated as:
Total Monthly Expenses - Total Monthly Revenue
. If you are profitable (revenue exceeds expenses), your burn rate is negative, and your cash runway is technically infinite (or increasing).
Using the Estimator
-
Enter Current Cash Balance: Input the total amount of cash your company currently possesses.
-
Enter Monthly Net Burn: Input the net amount of cash your company is spending per month. Ensure this is a positive number representing cash outflow.
- Example: If your monthly expenses are $70,000 and your monthly revenue is $20,000, your net burn is $50,000.
The estimator will then calculate how many months you can operate before exhausting your cash reserves.
Assumptions & Limitations
- Constant Burn Rate: This calculator assumes your monthly net burn rate will remain constant. In reality, revenue and expenses fluctuate.
- No Additional Funding: It doesn’t account for any potential incoming funding rounds or unexpected cash inflows.
- Simple Calculation: This is a basic estimate. More detailed financial modeling would consider factors like accounts receivable, accounts payable, seasonality, and growth projections.
Use this tool as a starting point for financial planning and conversation, not as a definitive financial forecast.