LTV is the number that determines whether your D2C business is fundamentally viable or fundamentally broken. Every other metric is downstream of it. A brand with $50 LTV and $30 CAC can scale. A brand with $50 LTV and $55 CAC cannot. Here is how to calculate it correctly and then improve it deliberately.
The Correct LTV Calculation
Most LTV calculations are wrong because they use revenue instead of gross profit. A customer generating $500 in revenue over 3 years is not worth $500 to you. At 50 percent gross margin, they are worth $250. At 45 percent gross margin after returns, they are worth $225. Use gross profit LTV, not revenue LTV, in every calculation that involves comparing LTV to CAC.
Formula: LTV = (Average Order Value x Gross Margin) x Purchase Frequency x Average Customer Lifespan in years. For a supplements brand: $65 AOV x 58% gross margin x 8 orders per year x 2 years = $604 LTV. With CAC of $45, LTV:CAC ratio is 13:1. Healthy. For a fashion brand: $85 AOV x 48% gross margin x 3 orders per year x 1.5 years = $183 LTV. With CAC of $60, LTV:CAC is 3:1. Acceptable but tight.
The Cohort Method: The Right Way to Track LTV
Simple LTV averages are misleading because they mix customers at different stages of their lifecycle. A 3-year customer with $600 total spend averaged with a 3-month customer with $75 total spend gives you a meaningless $337 average.
Cohort analysis groups customers by when they acquired and tracks their cumulative spend over time. January 2024 cohort: what is their average 3-month, 6-month, 12-month, 24-month cumulative spend? Compare this to February 2024 cohort, March 2024 cohort. This shows you whether LTV is improving or declining over time, which is impossible to see from a blended average.
The 5 Levers That Move LTV
AOV: Increasing average order value through bundles, upsells at checkout, and free shipping thresholds directly improves LTV without changing purchase frequency or customer lifespan. A 20 percent AOV increase translates to a 20 percent LTV increase, all else equal. AOV is often the fastest LTV lever to pull.
Gross margin: Reducing COGS through supplier negotiation, packaging optimization, or product reformulation directly improves the gross profit per order. A 5 percent gross margin improvement on $100 AOV is $5 more gross profit per order. Over a 3-year, 6-order customer lifespan, that is $30 more LTV from a supplier negotiation conversation.
Purchase frequency: The most powerful LTV lever for most D2C brands. Systematic post-purchase flows, win-back campaigns, subscription programmes, and loyalty mechanics all drive purchase frequency. Doubling purchase frequency from 2 to 4 orders per year doubles LTV.
Customer lifespan: How long customers stay active before churning. Win-back campaigns, community building, and subscription programmes extend lifespan. The brands with the longest customer lifespans tend to have the strongest community and the highest product-customer fit.
Reduce returns: In fashion and home goods, high return rates directly depress gross margin. A 10 percent return rate on $85 AOV at 55 percent gross margin costs $4.25 per order in effective margin. Improving size guidance, product descriptions, and packaging to reduce return rate from 20 to 15 percent on 1,000 monthly orders is $2,125 per month in recovered margin, without acquiring a single additional customer.
LTV by Channel: The Insight Most Brands Miss
Calculate LTV separately for customers acquired via each channel. Meta-acquired customers, Google-acquired customers, organic social, and referral. In most D2C brands, organic and referral customers have 30 to 50 percent higher LTV than paid acquisition customers. Knowing this changes your channel investment strategy. The goal is not lowest CAC per channel. It is best LTV:CAC ratio per channel, which often makes organic investment and referral programme investment more valuable than additional paid acquisition.
READY TO GROW YOUR D2C BRAND?
Sorted Agency builds growth systems for D2C brands. Book a free 45-minute strategy call and we will audit your acquisition, retention, and tech stack.
Book Your Free Audit