Runway — the number of months a startup can operate before it runs out of cash — is the most fundamental metric in startup survival. Every strategic decision a founder makes is constrained by runway: when to hire, when to fundraise, whether to pursue growth or efficiency, and when to pivot. Yet many founders track their runway only loosely, relying on back-of-the-envelope calculations that miss critical variables. This guide provides a rigorous framework for calculating, extending, and managing your startup’s runway.
Understanding runway is not just about knowing when the money runs out. It is about making better decisions every month — decisions that optimise the balance between growth and survival, between ambition and prudence.
How to Calculate Startup Runway
The basic runway formula is straightforward: Runway (months) = Cash Balance / Monthly Net Burn Rate. If a company has €1.2 million in the bank and spends a net €100,000 per month more than it earns, it has 12 months of runway.
However, the simplicity of this formula masks important nuances. The first is the distinction between gross burn and net burn. Gross burn is the total monthly expenditure — salaries, rent, software, marketing, everything. Net burn subtracts revenue from gross burn. A company with €150,000 in monthly expenses and €50,000 in monthly revenue has a gross burn of €150,000 and a net burn of €100,000.
The second nuance is that burn rate is rarely constant. Hiring plans, seasonal revenue patterns, one-off expenses (office moves, conference sponsorships, equipment purchases), and annual payments (insurance, software licenses) all cause the burn rate to fluctuate month to month. A more accurate runway calculation uses a forward-looking cash flow model that projects monthly inflows and outflows for the next 12-24 months, accounting for planned hires, known commitments, and expected revenue growth.
The Runway Framework: Red, Amber, Green
Experienced operators and investors use a traffic-light framework to assess runway health. The thresholds below are guidelines, not rigid rules, but they reflect the consensus among European VCs and CFOs.
Green (18+ months). The company is in a strong position. There is ample time to execute on the current plan, hit milestones, and fundraise from a position of strength. Strategic hiring and growth investments can proceed with confidence.
Amber (9-18 months). The company should be actively planning its next fundraise. If the plan is to raise equity, the process should begin when runway hits 12 months — fundraising typically takes 3-6 months, and you want to close with at least 6 months of cash remaining. If the plan is to reach profitability, the path must be clearly mapped with specific milestones.
Red (under 9 months). Urgent action is required. If a fundraise is not already in progress, the company should immediately reduce burn rate (hiring freezes, discretionary spending cuts) and explore all capital options — equity, venture debt, bridge loans, or revenue-based financing. Fundraising from a position of desperation leads to unfavourable terms, down rounds, or failure.
Building a Cash Flow Model
A proper runway model goes beyond the simple division formula. It is a month-by-month projection of all cash inflows and outflows, typically built in a spreadsheet with three scenarios: base case, optimistic case, and conservative case.
Revenue projections should be based on current run rate, pipeline, and historical conversion rates — not aspirational targets. For the conservative case, assume flat or modest growth. For the optimistic case, assume your sales targets are met. The base case should be your honest best estimate.
Expense projections should include every committed cost: current salaries (including employer taxes and benefits, which in Europe can add 25-45% to the gross salary), rent, software subscriptions, professional services, and planned hires with their expected start dates. Do not forget one-off costs: VAT payments, annual insurance renewals, equipment purchases, and conference or travel budgets.
Working capital effects matter for companies with significant accounts receivable or accounts payable. A company that invoices enterprise customers on net-60 terms may show strong revenue on the P&L but experience cash inflows 60-90 days after the sale. The cash flow model must account for this timing gap.
Strategies to Extend Runway
When runway is shorter than desired, founders have several levers to extend it — each with different trade-offs.
Reduce burn rate. The most direct approach. Common measures include slowing or freezing hiring, renegotiating vendor contracts, reducing discretionary spending (travel, events, marketing experiments), and in severe cases, salary reductions or layoffs. The key is to cut without destroying the company’s ability to hit the milestones needed for the next round.
Accelerate revenue. Offering annual prepayment discounts (pay 12 months upfront for a 15-20% discount), launching a new pricing tier, or focusing sales efforts on quick-close deals can bring cash forward. For SaaS companies, shifting from monthly to annual billing can dramatically improve cash flow.
Raise non-dilutive capital. European founders have access to a rich ecosystem of grants, subsidies, and tax incentives that US companies do not. Government innovation grants (Bpifrance, Innovate UK, EIC Accelerator), R&D tax credits (the French CIR, the UK R&D tax relief), and regional development funds can provide meaningful capital with zero dilution. The trade-off is time — grant applications can take months to process.
Revenue-based financing. For companies with predictable recurring revenue, revenue-based financing (RBF) provides capital in exchange for a percentage of future revenue until a predetermined amount is repaid. European providers include Capchase, Re:cap, and Uncapped. RBF is non-dilutive and faster than equity fundraising, but the effective cost of capital can be high.
Venture debt. As covered in our separate venture debt guide, adding a debt facility alongside or after an equity round can extend runway by 6-12 months with minimal dilution (typically 0.5-2% in warrants).
Runway and Fundraising Timing
The relationship between runway and fundraising timing is critical. Starting a fundraise too late — with less than 6 months of runway — forces founders into a weak negotiating position. Investors can sense desperation, and they either extract aggressive terms or pass entirely.
The optimal time to begin fundraising is when you have 12-15 months of runway remaining. This provides a 3-6 month window to run the process properly (building the investor pipeline, conducting meetings, negotiating terms, completing legal documentation) while retaining 6-9 months of comfortable operating cash if the process takes longer than expected.
Founders should also consider the seasonality of fundraising. European VC activity typically dips in August (summer holidays) and late December (year-end). Starting a process in June with the intention of closing in August is risky; starting in September with a target close in November or December is more realistic.
Communicating Runway to Your Board and Investors
Transparent communication about runway is essential for maintaining trust with your board and investors. Include runway as a standing item in monthly board updates, showing the current cash balance, trailing three-month net burn rate, and projected runway under base and conservative scenarios.
Early warning is always better than late surprises. If your runway is moving from green to amber, flag it proactively and present a plan — whether that plan involves fundraising, cost reduction, revenue acceleration, or a combination. Investors and board members can be powerful allies in extending runway through introductions, bridge financing, or strategic advice, but only if they are informed early enough to act.