Burn rate

Burn rate is the rate at which a company consumes its cash.[1] It is typically expressed in monthly terms and used for startups. E.g., "the company's burn rate is currently $65,000 per month." In this sense, the word "burn" is a synonymous term for negative cash flow. It is also a measure of how fast a company will use up its shareholder capital.[2] If the shareholder capital is exhausted, the company will either have to start making a profit, find additional funding, or close down.

Burn rate can also refer to how quickly individuals spend their money, particularly their discretionary income. For example, Mackenzie Investments commissioned a test to gauge the spending and saving behavior of Canadians to determine if they are “Overspenders.”[3]

Burn rate is also used in project management to determine the rate at which hours (allocated to a project) are being used, to identify when work is going out of scope, or when efficiencies are being lost. The term is also used in biology, to refer to a person's basic metabolic rate; in rocketry, it refers to the rate at which a rocket is burning fuel; and in chemistry.

  1. ^ "Burn Rate: What It Is, 2 Types, Formula, and Examples". Investopedia. January 18, 2023. Retrieved December 2, 2023.
  2. ^ Ehrenberg, David. "Is Your Company Dangerously Rushing To Scale?" Forbes.com January 4, 2013. Retrieved on May 20, 2014.
  3. ^ Financial Post Story Archived February 5, 2009, at the Wayback Machine