The Difference Between ARR, MRR, and Revenue — and Why the Gap Matters at Tax Time
Sam's List Editorial | 2026-06-06
The Difference Between ARR, MRR, and Revenue — and Why the Gap Matters at Tax Time SaaS founders speak fluent ARR. It's how they report to investors, how they benchmark against competitors, and often how they gauge their own company's health. What ARR is not: an accounting entry. It doesn't appear on your income statement. It doesn't determine your taxable income. And using it as a proxy for either of those things — which many founders do, even subconsciously — will consistently produce the wrong answers at tax time. Here's the full picture of how these metrics relate to each other and where the gaps create real financial exposure. ARR: A Forecast, Not a Financial Statement Annual Recurring Revenue is the annualized run-rate of your current subscription contracts. If you have 100 customers each paying