Growth rate %, absolute change, trend, and CAGR where applicable.
Run Calculate to see growth metrics and charts.
About this tool
Revenue growth is one of the most watched metrics in business because it compresses demand, pricing power, retention, and go-to-market execution into a single line that boards, investors, and operators can track over time. Whether you report monthly recurring revenue, booked sales, recognized GAAP revenue, or cash collected, the core question is the same: are we growing versus the last comparable period, by how much in dollars, and by what percentage relative to the prior base?
SynthQuery’s free Revenue Growth Calculator makes that math explicit and fast. Pick a period type—month for month-over-month (MoM), quarter for quarter-over-quarter (QoQ), or year for year-over-year-style (YoY) comparisons—then either enter two revenue figures (previous and current) or add between two and eight chronological periods for a trend view. The tool computes period-over-period growth as a percentage, absolute dollar change, a plain-language trend direction, the arithmetic average of valid step growth rates across the series, and a compound growth interpretation from the first to the last positive endpoint. For month and quarter modes, it also annualizes the implied per-step compound rate so you can speak in “CAGR-like” annual terms when your raw data is sub-annual. Charts include a revenue trend line with growth labels above each step and a bar chart of percentage changes for slide-ready screenshots. Reset clears to sample data; Copy results exports a text brief. Everything runs client-side in English with a responsive layout aligned to SynthQuery’s dark theme.
This calculator is descriptive, not prescriptive: it does not judge whether your growth is “good,” benchmark you against an industry database, or replace audited financial statements. It helps you communicate your own numbers consistently. Pair it with the [Free tools hub](/free-tools) for adjacent utilities, connect acquisition narratives to the [PPC Budget Calculator](/ppc-budget-calculator), and cross-check subscription reporting with the [MRR Calculator](/mrr-calculator) and [ARR Calculator](/arr-calculator).
What this tool does
Dual modes keep the interface fast for the common case—last period versus this period—while still supporting multi-step narratives without forcing spreadsheet charting. Period typing is the differentiator from generic percentage calculators: MoM and QoQ growth percentages are useful on their own, but stakeholders often ask “what would that be annualized?” This tool answers that by compounding the implied per-period rate across twelve months or four quarters when you select month or quarter mode.
Average growth and annualized CAGR answer different questions. Average growth treats each observed step equally and is easy to defend in conversation: “our last three QoQ prints averaged X%.” Annualized CAGR from first to last anchors only the endpoints and the count of steps, so it can diverge meaningfully from the average when growth accelerates or decelerates inside the window. Showing both, as this page does, reduces accidental conflation.
Visualization is built with responsive chart containers so phones can scroll the workspace safely. Tables preserve numeric detail for finance reviewers who distrust charts alone. Client-side execution means revenue figures you type stay in your browser unless you copy them outward; localStorage remembers inputs between visits on the same device for convenience.
Validation rejects empty fields, non-numeric text, and multi-period runs with fewer than two rows. Division-by-zero guards keep percentage growth honest when a period starts from zero revenue—report absolutes instead of infinite rates.
Technical details
For two consecutive revenue observations P (previous) and C (current) with P ≠ 0, growth rate in percent is ((C − P) / P) × 100. Absolute change is C − P in dollars. When P = 0, the relative rate is undefined; the UI reports absolute change and marks the trend accordingly.
For a chronological revenue series with k intervals between n points (k = n − 1), let the first and last positive values be F and L. The constant compound rate per selected period type that connects F to L satisfies L = F × (1 + r)^k, hence r = (L / F)^(1/k) − 1. The per-step compound percentage is r × 100. When the period type is year, the annualized figure equals that per-step rate—the usual CAGR across the window. When the period type is quarter, the annualized figure is (1 + r)^4 − 1 expressed as a percent; when month, (1 + r)^12 − 1. For a single two-period observation, the same annualization applies to the one observed step.
The arithmetic average growth rate is the mean of the finite period-over-period percentages computed between each adjacent pair. It is not generally equal to CAGR unless growth is perfectly steady.
This page does not adjust for leap days, partial months, or 4-4-5 retail calendars; align your inputs off-line if your ERP uses non-standard fiscal weeks. Currency should be consistent within a series.
Use cases
Business reporting and management packs: finance teams paste recognized revenue or billings into the calculator to produce MoM, QoQ, or YoY percentages, dollar deltas, and charts for leadership summaries without rebuilding Excel sparklines each close.
Investor updates and fundraising: founders quote growth alongside runway and margins. Multi-period mode shows whether acceleration is recent or sustained—useful when a single strong prior period flatters or depresses the latest percentage.
Performance tracking for revenue teams: sales operations compare quota attainment, pipeline conversion, or regional totals period over period. Pair growth outputs with the [Operating Margin Calculator](/operating-margin-calculator) or [EBITDA Calculator](/ebitda-calculator) when profitability context must accompany top-line momentum.
Forecasting hygiene: before you publish a forecast, sanity-check implied growth rates from historical baselines using the same period grain as your model. A dedicated “sales forecast” page is not required to stress-test assumptions—use this tool on realized history, then layer scenarios in your spreadsheet or the [DCF Calculator](/dcf-calculator) for discounted multi-year cash sketches.
Marketing and growth operations: when acquisition spend moves, tie growth reads to the [PPC Budget Calculator](/ppc-budget-calculator) so leadership sees both demand creation and revenue outcomes. For average order value angles, explore the broader catalog from the [Free tools hub](/free-tools).
How SynthQuery compares
Revenue growth calculators overlap with dashboards in accounting and billing systems, yet a focused browser tool still earns a bookmark when you need transparent formulas, quick screenshots, and copy-friendly summaries without granting another login.
Purpose-built for quick communication and education; no ERP integration or role-based access controls.
Accounting / BI dashboards
Shows formulas openly and exports a plain-text brief; good for ad hoc board slides and investor emails.
Often faster once wired to GL, but definitions hide in calculated fields; harder to share externally without exporting.
Spreadsheet templates
Fewer formula mistakes for standard growth and CAGR annualization patterns; charts render consistently on mobile.
Infinitely flexible, but easy to mislabel CAGR vs average growth or mix period grains accidentally.
YoY-only tooling
Supports month and quarter modes with annualization, plus multi-period trends up to eight rows.
Annual-only tools omit MoM/QoQ annualization unless you rebuild compounding manually.
How to use this tool effectively
Step one: choose the period type that matches how you closed your books. Month is appropriate for operating reviews and early-stage SaaS dashboards where leadership watches MoM net new. Quarter fits many public companies, PE portfolio reporting, and seasonal businesses that still compare aligned fiscal quarters. Year reduces noise from seasonality when you want YoY-style headlines. The period type controls how a single observed jump is annualized and how multi-step compound growth is translated into an annualized CAGR-style figure—it does not change the basic formula between two adjacent numbers.
Step two: decide between two periods and multi-period trend. Two periods is ideal when you only need the latest comparison: enter Previous period revenue and Current period revenue in dollars, with optional comma thousands separators. Click Calculate to read growth rate, absolute change, annualized compound growth (where defined), and trend. Multi-period trend is for storylines: enter labels such as Jan–Mar, Q1–Q4, or 2021–2024, always oldest first and newest last. Use Add period until your history is captured (up to eight rows) and remove mistaken rows with the trash control while keeping at least two.
Step three: interpret the summary tiles. In multi-period mode, Average growth is the simple mean of each finite period-over-period percentage between neighbors—transparent for meetings, sensitive to volatility. CAGR annualized smooths the path from first to last using compound math per your period type, then steps that rate up to an equivalent yearly rate when you selected month or quarter. Per-step compound is the constant growth rate per month, quarter, or year that would connect the first and last values across the observed intervals; for year mode it matches classic CAGR across the span.
Step four: read the transition table for auditability. Each row shows from-label, to-label, the growth percentage when the prior revenue was non-zero, and absolute dollar delta. Prior-period zeros yield “N/A” for percentage growth because relative change is undefined; absolute dollars still matter and the trend may read as indeterminate for that step.
Step five: use the charts in decks. The line chart plots revenue levels and prints growth percentages above points after the first. The bar chart encodes each step’s growth rate with color for positive versus negative and numeric labels on top. Export via screenshot or use Copy results for email and tickets.
Step six: iterate responsibly. Change period type when you switch datasets—do not mix monthly and quarterly rows in one run without converting them to a common grain first. When you need strict calendar YoY with only annual totals, the dedicated [YoY Growth Calculator](/yoy-growth-calculator) is a focused sibling. For two-endpoint CAGR without intermediate points, the [CAGR Calculator](/cagr-calculator) remains the classic tool.
Limitations and best practices
Small denominators inflate percentages: going from $50k to $150k is a 200% jump that may mislead if you omit absolute dollars. Pair rates with the change in revenue, which this tool surfaces.
Keep definitions stable. Switching between recognized revenue, billings, and cash receipts breaks comparability even if the math still runs. Document currency, consolidation scope, and whether numbers are audited, pro forma, or management estimates.
Negative prior-period revenue (credits, clawbacks) makes intuitive “percent growth” awkward; rely on absolute storytelling or restate baselines before comparing.
SynthQuery does not store calculator inputs server-side. Use private browsing on shared machines when figures are sensitive. Bookmark the [Free tools hub](/free-tools) and keep the [PPC Budget Calculator](/ppc-budget-calculator) nearby when growth and paid acquisition are discussed together.
Revenue with COGS and operating expenses for margin context beside growth.
Frequently asked questions
Subtract previous period revenue from current period revenue for the absolute dollar change. For percentage growth, divide that change by previous period revenue and multiply by 100, provided previous revenue was not zero. SynthQuery automates both, shows trend direction, and—when you add multiple chronological periods—charts the series with stepwise growth labels and bar heights for each interval.
There is no universal threshold: “good” depends on company stage, industry gross margins, competitive intensity, capital efficiency, and macro conditions. Early-stage companies often post high percentage growth from small bases while mature firms may target steady single-digit growth with strong cash conversion. Use this calculator to quantify your own history, then compare responsibly to peers with matching definitions—GAAP revenue versus billings, logo count versus expansion, and constant currency if applicable. Pair growth with profitability tools such as the Operating Margin Calculator when judging quality.
Pre-revenue and seed-stage teams may emphasize pilot traction or first dollars with volatile MoM prints. Growth-stage SaaS often balances net new ARR with retention and expansion, making QoQ and YoY-style reads common in board packs. Public and mature businesses frequently highlight YoY on aligned fiscal periods to smooth seasonality. The period type selector here lets you mirror the grain your stage already uses in meetings—just keep labels and accounting definitions consistent across periods.
MoM reacts fastest but is noisy for seasonal products, short campaigns, or small denominators. QoQ is a middle ground for many B2B closes and quarterly board cycles. YoY-style annual comparisons reduce seasonality when fiscal years align. Pick the mode that matches how your data is collected and how your audience expects to hear the story; avoid switching grains inside one series unless you normalize externally first.
In finance textbooks, sustainable growth often ties retention and reinvestment—how fast a firm can expand without exhausting capital structure assumptions. In everyday operator language, “sustainable” sometimes just means growth that does not rely on one-time spikes, channel stuffing, or unsustainable discounting. This calculator does not compute textbook sustainable growth formulas; it measures realized revenue growth so you can discuss sustainability alongside margins, churn, and cash conversion elsewhere.
Average growth is the arithmetic mean of each period-over-period percentage you actually observed between neighbors. CAGR-style annualized growth uses compounding from the first to the last positive revenue point across the whole span, and—for month or quarter inputs—annualizes the implied per-step compound rate. They diverge when growth speeds up or slows inside the window. Reporting both keeps conversations precise.
Relative change divides by the prior value. When prior revenue is zero, that ratio is undefined, so a percentage is misleading even if absolute dollars grew. The tool still shows absolute change and flags the trend as indeterminate for that step. Once you have a non-zero baseline in an earlier period, percentages become meaningful again.
Yes, if values are nonnegative dollars or consistent countable units and labels stay honest—for example pipeline dollars, active customers, or units sold. Do not mix unlike measures in one series. Percent swings on tiny bases can look dramatic without being material in absolute terms, so always read dollars alongside percentages.
There is not a standalone page with that exact name today. Teams often combine historical growth checks on this calculator with spreadsheet forecasts or the [DCF Calculator](/dcf-calculator) for multi-year discounted cash sketches, and the [Marketing Budget Allocation](/marketing-budget-allocation) tool when spend splits matter. Watch the [Free tools hub](/free-tools) as the catalog expands.
Open the [Free tools hub](/free-tools) for the full directory. For annual YoY-focused workflows, use the [YoY Growth Calculator](/yoy-growth-calculator). For classic two-point CAGR in years, use the [CAGR Calculator](/cagr-calculator). Subscription businesses pair this page with the [MRR Calculator](/mrr-calculator) and [ARR Calculator](/arr-calculator). For daily pacing, try the [Daily Sales Revenue Calculator](/daily-sales-revenue-calculator). Connect acquisition to growth with the [PPC Budget Calculator](/ppc-budget-calculator).