Free guide

Runway and forecasting: know your zero-cash date

Startups rarely die of bad ideas. They die of running out of cash with no warning. One number — your zero-cash date — turns that ambush into a plan.

Runway, calculated honestly

Net burn = cash out minus cash in, per month. Runway = cash in bank ÷ net burn. Simple — and almost everyone calculates it wrong, because they use last month's burn as if it were constant. Real burn is lumpy: VAT quarters, annual insurance, corporation tax nine months after year-end, that hire starting in September. The honest version projects burn forward month by month, with the lumps in.

The difference between “we have about eight months” and “our zero-cash date is 14 March” is the difference between anxiety and management. Fundraising takes 3–6 months; the founders who start raising six months out do it from strength, not desperation.

The full guide builds the two forecasts every startup needs, lists the assumptions investors test hardest, and gives five runway levers that don't involve firing anyone.

Read the full guide free

Tell us where to send updates and the full guide unlocks instantly — plus you'll get our best startups tax tips by email. Unsubscribe any time.

  • Burn rate and runway, calculated properly (not the naive way)
  • The 13-week + 18-month forecasting rhythm
  • The assumptions investors actually interrogate
  • Five levers that extend runway before you cut anything painful

The two-forecast rhythm

1. The 13-week cashflow (weekly, tactical)

Every expected receipt and payment, week by week, 13 weeks out. This is the tool that catches “we're fine on paper but payroll lands three days before that big invoice clears”. Update it in 20 minutes each Monday from your bank feed. When cash is tight this forecast is the difference between managing and hoping.

2. The 18-month monthly model (strategic)

Monthly P&L and cashflow, built on stated assumptions, with the tax lumps in (VAT quarters, corporation tax, payroll costs at their true loaded rate — salary × roughly 1.15+ once employer NI and pension join). This is the model that answers “when do we need to raise, and how much?” — and the one investors will pull apart.

The assumptions that get interrogated

  • Revenue timing, not just amount. Sales aren't cash — a deal signed in March at 60-day terms is May's cash, later if the customer pays like a plc.
  • Growth rate vs evidence. A hockey stick needs a mechanism (pipeline, conversion data), not vibes. Show the downside case unprompted; it builds more confidence than the upside one.
  • Hiring dates. The single biggest burn lever. Every hire in the model should have a start month and a loaded cost.
  • Churn/repeat rates if you're recurring-revenue. Investors test this line first.
Rule A forecast no one compares to actuals is decoration. Each month, put actuals beside the forecast, explain the three biggest gaps in one sentence each, and re-forecast the zero-cash date. That habit — not the spreadsheet — is the skill.

Five runway levers (before anything painful)

  1. Collect faster. Invoice on signature not month-end, take card/direct debit, automate reminders (FreeAgent does this), ask for deposits. Days matter.
  2. Time your VAT position. Cash accounting for VAT, a separate tax pot, and reclaiming everything you're entitled to — see our VAT guide.
  3. Turn capex into opex. Asset finance on equipment instead of cash purchases keeps months of runway in the bank — see funding routes.
  4. Claim what you're owed. R&D relief for genuine innovation can return a meaningful percentage of dev spend; grants don't dilute. Both take months — start early.
  5. Arrange credit before you need it. Lenders fund businesses with six months of runway, not six weeks. Our portal shows what you'd qualify for today, soft-search only.

What good looks like monthly

A one-page pack: cash position, zero-cash date, actual vs forecast with three variance notes, and one decision to make. That's what our management-accounts clients get — and for founders raising, it's the difference between an investor update that builds confidence and one that burns it. From £375 + VAT per cycle on top of any compliance band.

Quick answers

From this guide

How do I calculate my startup's runway?

Project cash in minus cash out forward month by month — including lumpy items like VAT quarters and corporation tax — and find the month the balance hits zero. Cash ÷ last month's burn is only a rough shortcut.

What's a 13-week cashflow forecast?

A weekly view of every expected receipt and payment for the next 13 weeks. It catches timing crunches (like payroll landing before a big invoice clears) that monthly forecasts hide.

How much runway should a startup keep?

Enough to complete your next milestone plus the time to raise on the back of it — commonly 12–18 months post-raise, and never start a raise with less than six.

What is a loaded salary cost?

Salary plus employer National Insurance, pension contributions and related costs — typically 1.15× the headline salary or more. Forecasts that use bare salaries understate burn.

Want this handled for you instead?

Accreditations & Partnerships
Get startedBook a call