Cold Email ROI Calculator
Model your cold email campaign — from send volume to closed deals. Estimate revenue, profit, and return on investment in seconds.
Campaign inputs
Monthly funnel
Revenue vs cost
- Deal size has the biggest absolute impact. Move upmarket if you can.
- Reply rate compounds through the funnel — small lifts in copy quality scale up.
- Better targeting (ICP fit) usually beats more volume.
What Is Cold Email ROI & Why It Matters
Cold email ROI is the financial return on your outbound campaign, calculated as (Revenue − Cost) / Cost × 100. Open rates and reply rates are leading indicators; ROI is the lagging indicator that the business actually cares about.
The calculator above runs the full funnel: sends → opens → replies → meetings → closed deals → revenue. Adjust any input and watch how the ROI changes. The biggest movers are usually deal size (linear impact) and reply rate (compounds through the funnel).
Use this for planning campaigns, justifying budget, or pressure-testing existing performance. If your real-world numbers don't match the model, the discrepancy points to where to optimize.
How to Use the ROI Calculator
Four steps from inputs to actionable insight.
1. Pick a preset
Start with a preset that matches your scale: Conservative, Default, Growth, or Scale. Then refine the inputs.
2. Adjust each input
Slide each input to match your real numbers. Be honest about reply, meeting, and close rates — they multiply through the funnel.
3. Read the ROI
The big number is your monthly ROI. Below it: full funnel breakdown plus monthly revenue, cost, and profit.
4. Identify levers
Try increasing deal size by 50% — see the impact. Or boost reply rate by 2 points. The biggest movers reveal where to focus optimization.
The Cold Email Funnel
Six metrics chain together — and each multiplies the next.
Volume → opens
Subject line + sender reputation + send time drive open rate. Target 45–60% for B2B cold email.
Opens → replies
Body copy + value proposition + CTA quality. Reply rate is the most copy-sensitive metric. Target 5–10%; top performers hit 15–25%.
Replies → meetings
Reply quality + follow-up cadence + meeting offer. Convert ~25% of replies to booked meetings.
Meetings → closed
Sales motion + product fit + price-to-value. B2B SaaS averages 15–25% meeting-to-close. Move this lever last.
Closed × deal size
Revenue per deal. The single biggest absolute lever. Moving upmarket beats optimizing the rest of the funnel.
Revenue − cost
Profit and ROI emerge from the whole funnel. Optimize highest-leverage metrics first; revenue compounds.
Realistic Cold Email Benchmarks
What "good" looks like at each funnel stage, by motion.
Conservative (mass outreach, generic list): 30–40% open · 3–5% reply · 15% meeting · 10% close · $1–3K deal · 200–500% ROI.
Default (good list, decent copy): 45–55% open · 5–8% reply · 20–25% meeting · 15–20% close · $3–8K deal · 500–1,000% ROI.
Growth (tight ICP, strong copy, authenticated domain): 55–65% open · 8–12% reply · 25–35% meeting · 18–22% close · $5–15K deal · 1,000–2,000% ROI.
Scale (enterprise targets, dedicated SDR team): 55–70% open · 10–15% reply · 30–40% meeting · 20–25% close · $10–50K deal · 2,000%+ ROI.
The Six Levers That Move ROI
In rough order of impact.
Move upmarket
Doubling deal size doubles revenue with the same effort. Often the highest-leverage change.
Sharpen ICP
Tighter targeting lifts every downstream metric — open, reply, meeting, close. Quality > quantity.
Improve copy
Each 1% reply rate lift compounds to meetings and deals. Run the copy analyzer on every template.
Fix deliverability
If 50% of emails go to spam, your effective volume is half. Authenticate, warm, and clean.
Tighten follow-up
60% of replies come from follow-ups. A weak follow-up sequence hurts more than weak first-touch copy.
Reduce cost
Lowest-impact lever. Tool consolidation helps but rarely moves ROI by an order of magnitude.
Common Mistakes
What we see in models that don't match real-world results.
Optimistic reply rate
Most cold email reply rates are 3–8%, not 15%. Use actual data from your sender, not industry highs.
Forgetting labor cost
If a writer + SDR are spending hours/week on the campaign, that's a real cost. Include it.
Using close rate optimistically
Meeting-to-close is heavily product-fit dependent. Use your actual SQL → close conversion from CRM, not aspirational rates.
Ignoring ramp time
Months 1–2 underperform the steady state because warmup, list, and copy still need iteration. Don't expect full ROI on day 1.
Single-channel ROI attribution
Some closed deals touched multiple channels. Be conservative — discount 20–30% from email-only attribution if you also run paid or events.
Optimizing the wrong lever
Spending three months optimizing copy when the real problem is the list or deliverability is the most common waste.
Frequently Asked Questions
Everything about cold email ROI and campaign profitability.
For B2B cold email, a 5–10x ROI (500–1,000%) is considered good. Top-performing campaigns reach 20x+ when copy, deliverability, and targeting are all dialed in. Below 3x suggests fundamental issues in funnel or list quality.
ROI = (Revenue − Cost) / Cost × 100. Revenue comes from sends × open rate × reply rate × meeting rate × close rate × average deal value. Cost includes tooling, list acquisition, and labor.
ROI is the only metric that matters to the business. Open and reply rates are leading indicators — ROI ties everything together and reveals whether your campaign actually drives revenue.
Deal size has the biggest absolute impact — doubling deal size doubles revenue at the same volume. Reply rate compounds through the funnel, so improving it has multiplicative effect. List quality affects every downstream metric.
Yes. If cost exceeds revenue, ROI is negative. This happens when targeting is weak, deal sizes are small, or campaigns are over-tooled relative to scale. Pause and diagnose — usually the fix is better targeting.
ROI is the return on what you spent (revenue − cost / cost). Margin is what percentage of revenue is profit (profit / revenue). ROI is more useful for campaign decisions; margin matters for unit economics.
Monthly at minimum. After every major change (new copy, new list, new sender), recalculate. Quarterly, review trends across campaigns.
All campaign-attributable costs: email tool subscription, list acquisition (Apollo, ZoomInfo, etc.), warmup services, labor (writer + SDR hours), CRM cost. Exclude general overhead unless you're allocating it for unit economics.
In order of leverage: (1) improve targeting (better list, tighter ICP), (2) increase deal size (move upmarket), (3) lift reply rate (better copy + subject line), (4) reduce cost-per-send (consolidate tools).
Yes — 1,000% ROI (10x) is common for well-executed B2B cold email campaigns. Example: $2,500 spend → $25,000 revenue means 5 deals of $5K average. Across 5,000 sends with reasonable conversion, this is achievable.
Improve The Numbers That Move ROI
Each tool tackles one of the ROI levers above.
Want to ship the ROI you just modeled? We build it.
From list to copy to deliverability to sending — we run cold email for B2B teams targeting 10x+ ROI. Free audit on your current campaign.