Repeat Purchase Rate Calculator

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Free Repeat Purchase Rate Calculator

Calculate repeat purchase rate, project revenue impact of retention lifts, and benchmark against DTC standards. The metric every retention program lives or dies on.

Use this free Repeat Purchase Rate Calculator to find your true retention rate, model how a 5–15% lift impacts revenue, and benchmark vs DTC standards. Pairs with LTV + Payback Period for full customer-economics picture.

Free to use No signup Built for DTC brands Updates in real time
🔁 Your Customer Numbers
Unique customers in this period
Customers with 2+ orders
Revenue per order
$
Total repeat orders ÷ repeat customers
orders
Project retention improvement impact
%
For benchmark comparison
♻️ Your Retention Picture
Repeat Purchase Rate
25.0%
2,500 repeat ÷ 10,000 total
Industry Benchmark
28%
Revenue from Repeat Customers
$562K
% Revenue from Repeat
42.9%
Projected Rate (+lift)
30.0%
Additional Revenue (+lift)
$112K
Avg LTV Increase
+$45
Repeat purchase rate stuck below 25%?

TGM scales DTC retention to 30–45%+ repeat rate via Klaviyo + retention strategy

We’ve scaled email + retention programs across 200+ DTC brands — flows, segments, subscription, and replenishment. Free retention audit in 30 min.

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Trusted by 200+ DTC brands

Shopify
MyIntent
Home Chef
Fresh Patch
Playboy
Atlas Coffee Club
Taste Salud
Gibson
Walmart
Waterbox Aquariums
Ubersuggest
Hale Bob
Grow and Behold
Hard Rock
Fatburger
Pixi Beauty
BPN
Joovv
MD
Client
Shopify
MyIntent
Home Chef
Fresh Patch
Playboy
Atlas Coffee Club
Taste Salud
Gibson
Walmart
Waterbox Aquariums
Ubersuggest
Hale Bob
Grow and Behold
Hard Rock
Fatburger
Pixi Beauty
BPN
Joovv
MD
Client

On This Page

Key Takeaways
  • Repeat purchase rate formula: Repeat Customers ÷ Total Customers × 100.
  • DTC eCommerce benchmark: 28% median. Top quartile: 40%+. Subscription: 65%+.
  • Doubling repeat rate doubles LTV at near-zero marginal cost. Highest-ROI DTC lever.
  • Email + SMS drives 60%+ of repeat purchases when properly built. Klaviyo flows are the foundation.
  • Subscription is the cheat code: 20% subscriber adoption typically lifts blended repeat rate 30–50%.

DTC Repeat Purchase Rate Benchmarks

Healthy ranges by category. Subscription dramatically outperforms one-time purchase models. Best-in-class subscription brands hit 80%+ repeat rate.

IndustryMedianTop QuartileBest in Class
DTC eCommerce (general)28%40%55%+
Fashion / Apparel25%35%50%+
Beauty / Skincare35%50%65%+
Food & Beverage40%55%70%+
Health / Supplements38%52%68%+
Subscription65%78%85%+

Source: TGM client portfolio + Klaviyo + Shopify benchmarks. 12-month measurement window typical.

Repeat Rate vs. LTV vs. Retention

MetricWhat it measuresTime scopeBest for
Repeat Purchase Rate% customers buying 2+ timesSnapshot (period)Diagnosing retention health
LTV (Lifetime Value)Total $ per customer over lifeLong-termUnit economics decisions
Retention Rate% customers still active over timeCohort over timeCohort-based analysis
Churn Rate% customers leaving (1 - retention)Period rateSubscription decisions

Repeat rate = simplest. LTV = most actionable. Together they reveal where retention efforts pay off.

How Repeat Purchase Rate Works

Repeat Purchase Rate measures the percentage of customers who buy from you 2 or more times. It’s the simplest retention signal: out of everyone who bought, how many came back? While LTV captures the long-term value math, repeat rate captures whether your post-purchase experience is working — the email/SMS flows, product satisfaction, and brand connection.

The Repeat Purchase Rate Formula

Repeat Purchase Rate % = Repeat Customers ÷ Total Customers × 100

Example: 2,500 repeat customers ÷ 10,000 total customers = 25% repeat rate. The calculator above also computes revenue from repeat customers, projected lift impact, and average LTV change from retention improvements.

Why Repeat Rate Is the Highest-Leverage DTC Metric

Acquiring a new customer typically costs 5–10x more than retaining an existing one. Doubling repeat rate doubles LTV at near-zero marginal cost. This is why DTC brands with strong retention (40%+ repeat rate) can afford higher CAC and outscale competitors on the same paid budget. The math compounds: same customer base, more revenue, higher MER, faster payback period, more capital to deploy into acquisition.

What’s a Good Repeat Purchase Rate?

Category-dependent. One-time DTC (fashion, accessories): 25–35% healthy. Beauty/Health/Supplements: 35–50% healthy because product replenishment is natural. Food/Beverage: 40–55% (consumables drive repeat). Subscription: 65%+ should be the floor — below that, the subscription model is broken. Below 15% across any category = retention crisis; you’re running an acquisition treadmill.

Diagnose: why is your repeat rate low?

Run through these in order. The first “yes” usually points at the highest-leverage fix.

If you don’t have a Klaviyo welcome flow

Welcome flow drives 30–50% of 2nd purchase. Build 5–7 email welcome sequence first. Highest-ROI retention move.

If post-purchase flow is missing

Post-purchase email at days 1, 7, 14 educates + drives repeat. Without it, customers churn into the void.

If you don’t have replenishment reminders

Time-triggered reminders (“Time to reorder?”) lift repeat rate 15–30% for consumables.

If you don’t offer a subscription option

Even 10–20% subscriber adoption typically lifts blended repeat rate 30–50%. Cheat code for retention.

If your loyalty program is non-existent

Even a simple 5% off after 3 purchases lifts repeat 10–20%. LoyaltyLion / Smile.io easy to plug in.

If product quality / packaging is mediocre

Retention starts in the box. Quality & unboxing > any flow. Audit what arrives at the customer’s door.

10 ways to lift repeat purchase rate this quarter

  • Build Klaviyo welcome flow. Drives 30–50% of 2nd purchase. Highest-ROI move.
  • Build post-purchase flow. Educates + cross-sells at days 1, 7, 14, 30.
  • Add replenishment reminders. Time-triggered. 15–30% repeat lift for consumables.
  • Launch a subscription option. 10–20% adoption lifts blended repeat 30–50%.
  • Add a loyalty program. Even simple points-for-purchase lifts 10–20%.
  • Build a referral program. Referred customers have 25%+ higher repeat rate than direct.
  • SMS abandoned cart + post-purchase. Klaviyo SMS lifts repeat 8–15%.
  • Bundle complements with first order. 2nd product introduced at order 1 increases repeat propensity.
  • Improve product / unboxing experience. 30%+ of churn happens because of the product, not the marketing.
  • Add a community / content layer. Brand affinity drives long-term repeat. Newsletter, community, content.

What this calculator cannot tell you

  • Cohort variance. Different acquisition cohorts have wildly different repeat rates. Track by month-of-acquisition.
  • Channel-level repeat rate. Email-acquired customers repeat differently than paid-acquired. Segment by source.
  • Time to 2nd purchase. 30-day repeat > 365-day repeat. Speed matters as much as %.
  • Quality of repeat. Heavy discounting drives repeat with thin margin. Track AOV-on-repeat.
  • Churn risk. Repeat rate is backward-looking; predictive churn requires cohort analysis.

Repeat purchase rate glossary

Repeat Purchase Rate
Repeat Customers ÷ Total Customers × 100. Snapshot of retention.
Customer Retention Rate
Cohort retention over time. More precise than repeat rate but harder to track.
LTV
Lifetime Value. Use our LTV Calculator.
Time to 2nd Purchase (T2P)
Days from first to second order. Fast T2P (under 60 days) signals strong product-market fit.
Welcome Flow
Klaviyo email sequence for new subscribers/customers. Drives 30–50% of 2nd purchase.
Replenishment Reminder
Time-triggered “reorder?” email. 15–30% lift for consumables.
Subscription
Recurring auto-ship orders. Lifts blended repeat 30–50% with even modest adoption.
Loyalty Program
Points-based or tiered rewards. LoyaltyLion, Smile.io. 10–20% repeat lift.
Post-Purchase Flow
Klaviyo flow triggered after order. Educates + cross-sells at days 1/7/14/30.
Cohort Analysis
Tracking customer groups by acquisition month. Reveals retention trends over time.

Repeat purchase rate is the highest-leverage DTC metric

Doubling repeat rate doubles LTV at near-zero marginal cost. We’ll find your biggest leak — calc-driven, free, no obligation.

Book a Free Retention Audit →

Frequently Asked Questions

How is repeat purchase rate calculated?
Repeat Purchase Rate % = Repeat Customers (2+ orders) ÷ Total Customers × 100. Example: 2,500 repeat ÷ 10,000 total = 25%. The calculator above also models revenue impact and projected retention lifts.
What's a good DTC repeat purchase rate?
Category-dependent. General DTC: 28% median, 40% top quartile. Beauty/health: 35-50%. Food/Bev: 40-55%. Subscription: 65%+. Below 15% = retention crisis.
How do I lift repeat rate fast?
Three highest-leverage moves: (1) build a Klaviyo welcome flow (drives 30-50% of 2nd purchase), (2) add post-purchase flow at days 1/7/14, (3) launch a subscription option (10-20% adoption lifts blended repeat 30-50%).
Why does repeat rate matter more than CAC?
Doubling repeat rate doubles LTV at near-zero marginal cost. Lower CAC by 20% = small win. Double repeat rate = paradigm shift in unit economics + ability to scale.
Should I use repeat rate or retention rate?
Repeat rate for snapshots and dashboards (simpler). Retention rate (cohort-based) for trend analysis. Both should be tracked — they tell different stories.
What's a healthy time-to-second-purchase (T2P)?
Category-dependent. Beauty/Health: 30-60 days. Fashion: 60-120 days. Food/Bev: 14-30 days. T2P under 60 days = strong product-market fit signal.
How does subscription change repeat rate?
Dramatically. Subscription customers have 65-85% repeat rate. Even 10-20% subscriber adoption typically lifts blended repeat 30-50%. Highest-leverage retention lever for most DTC.
Should I segment by acquisition channel?
Yes. Email/organic-acquired customers typically repeat 40-60% better than paid-acquired. Channel-specific repeat rate reveals where to lean acquisition spend.
Does heavy discounting hurt repeat rate?
Mixed. Discounts drive 1st repeat but train customers to wait for sales. Track AOV-on-repeat — if it’s declining, discount-trained customers are hurting margin.

Want a retention program that compounds revenue?

Top Growth Marketing builds DTC retention programs designed to lift repeat purchase rate 50–100% within 90 days.

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