Definition · Healthtech & Telehealth

NRR for Healthtech & Telehealth

Net Revenue Retention — applied to Healthtech & Telehealth. Trust-led acquisition with DPDP/clinical compliance built in.

  1. NRR > 100% means existing cohort grows without new customers (best-in-class).

  2. NRR 90–100% is acceptable; below 90% means leaky bucket.

  3. Healthtech & Telehealth band: CPC 20–200 ₹ · CAC 500–7,500 ₹.

Definition

NRR measures how much revenue a cohort of customers generates today compared to one year ago, accounting for upgrades, downgrades, and churn. It is calculated as starting MRR plus expansion minus contraction minus churn, divided by starting MRR. NRR above 100% means the cohort grew without any new customers. For Healthtech & Telehealth specifically, this metric sits inside the unit-economics envelope of CPC 20–200 ₹ and CAC 500–7,500 ₹, constrained by DPDP compliance and physician outreach.

Formula

NRR equals starting cohort revenue plus expansion revenue minus contraction revenue minus churn, divided by starting cohort revenue, expressed as a percentage.

NRR = (Starting MRR + Expansion - Contraction - Churn) ÷ Starting MRR

India NRR benchmarks

Common NRR mistakes (Healthtech edition)

Context

How NRR actually behaves in healthtech & telehealth

NRR is the SaaS efficiency metric investors care about most after ARR. NRR > 120% indicates the product is hooking customers and they expand spend over time — that compounds. NRR < 90% means the company is replacing churned revenue rather than building on it; that's a leaky bucket no amount of new sales fills profitably. Indian SaaS often optimizes for new-logo growth and ignores NRR — until the renewal cycle hits and churn is structural.

For healthtech & telehealth specifically, NRR is influenced most by these 5 primary channels — each shifts the metric in a different way: SEO Services (compounding organic growth — pillar/cluster, programmatic, and ai-engine-cited.); Google Ads (search, shopping, youtube, and performance max — engineered for indian unit econ); Content Marketing (editorial + programmatic — built to be cited by ai engines.); Meta Ads (facebook + instagram + whatsapp — built for d2c, real-estate, and lead-gen.).

Channel adaptations

How NRR moves per primary channel for healthtech & telehealth

30-min audit

Want this NRR review scoped to your Healthtech business?

30 minutes, no slides. We'll examine your nrr setup against Healthtech-specific benchmarks and tell you the highest-leverage move to make first.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What's a typical NRR for Healthtech & Telehealth?

Healthtech & Telehealth NRR runs in the band 20–200 ₹ CPC / 500–7,500 ₹ CAC. Wider India benchmarks: Top quartile Indian B2B SaaS: 110–130% NRR; Median: 95–105%. Healthtech-specific drivers: DPDP compliance, physician outreach.

How does Healthtech change how you optimize NRR?

Healthtech businesses optimize NRR via seo-services, google-ads, content-marketing primarily. The category's unit economics — average CAC 500–7,500 ₹, repeat-purchase dynamics, and DPDP compliance — constrain which levers move NRR fastest. Generic NRR advice ignores these constraints.

Which Healthtech NRR mistakes does Frameleads see most?

Across Healthtech & Telehealth engagements, the top recurring mistakes are: Confusing NRR with GRR (NRR includes expansion; GRR doesn't).; Calculating NRR cohort-by-cohort instead of company-wide and missing pattern shifts.; and treating NRR as an isolated number rather than connecting it to GRR and MRR.

What's the fastest way to improve NRR for a Healthtech business?

Three levers move NRR for Healthtech: (1) tighter ICP definition so paid spend hits the right audience; (2) creative supply pipelines tuned to Healthtech-specific buyer norms; (3) retention plumbing so each acquired customer compounds the metric. The 30-min audit identifies which of these three is the bottleneck in your specific funnel.

Deeper reading

Long-form guides on related topics

Related terms

Pair this with

Linked content

More Healthtech & Telehealth metrics & definitions

Linked content

NRR for other industries

Sources & references

Cited primary and analyst sources. Independent of Frameleads' own data.

  1. DPDP Act 2023 — Digital Personal Data ProtectionMinistry of Electronics & IT, Government of India

    Patient data, consent flows, and lead handling for healthcare and healthtech.

  2. NMC — National Medical Commission: code of medical ethics & advertisingNMC

    Doctor and clinic advertising rules; testimonial and claim substantiation.

  3. IBEF — India Brand Equity Foundation: Indian Industry ReportsIBEF (Ministry of Commerce & Industry)

    Sector-level market size, growth, and policy context for Indian industries.

  4. IAMAI — Internet & Mobile Association of IndiaIAMAI

    Digital advertising industry body; reports on India internet user base, ad spend, and platform shares.

  5. MoSPI — Ministry of Statistics and Programme ImplementationGovernment of India

    Primary source for India macro-economic indicators (CPI, GDP, household consumption).

  6. ASCI Code for Self-Regulation of Advertising in IndiaAdvertising Standards Council of India

    Mandatory baseline for all advertising claims in India — including digital, influencer, and comparative ads.

Last reviewed: by Frameleads Editorial TeamRefreshed quarterly from live client data