Pulse ← Library
Knowledge Library · snowflake

What does Snowflake churn math look like under AI pressure?

👁 1 view📖 1,125 words⏱ 5 min read📅 Published · Updated

Direct Answer

Snowflake's churn math has three distinct buckets that AI pressure hits asymmetrically: logo churn (low, ~3-5% annually for $1M+ accounts), downsell/optimization (the headwind that crushed NRR from ~131% in FY24 to ~126% in FY25 and continues bleeding through FY26), and consumption-shrink (the AI-specific risk where Cortex agents and Iceberg substitution erode existing warehouse compute).

The countervailing tailwind is real but unevenly distributed: Cortex consumption per AI query is genuinely additive, and AI-driven new workloads are widening seat-equivalent consumption across customer orgs. Net-net, the FY26 CFO commentary frames this as a battle between optimization-driven shrink and AI-driven expansion, with the long-term NRR floor model settling somewhere in the 110-115% range by FY28 if AI substitution accelerates faster than Cortex monetization.

Operators modeling this need to stop treating NRR as monolithic and decompose it into the three buckets — because the defense plays differ wildly per bucket.

The Three Churn Buckets

What AI Pressure Adds in 2026-28 (Headwinds)

What AI Pressure Subtracts (the Tailwind)

The Math: 3 NRR Scenarios FY27-FY28

Operator Moves to Defend NRR

  1. Consumption-tier guarantees: Offer customers a credit-rebate if their optimized spend drops below a floor — trade margin for retention math.
  2. Cortex bundling discount: Price Cortex credits at a discount when bundled with multi-year warehouse commits — shifts mix toward AI without leaving warehouse on the table.
  3. Multi-year commit pricing: Push 3-year deals with usage ramps that bake in expected optimization — locks in NRR floor regardless of per-quarter consumption variance.
  4. Named-account swat teams: ServiceNow-style strategic-account program for top-50 customers — embedded SAs, quarterly business reviews, AI workload roadmapping.
  5. Iceberg-defensive product moves: Make Snowflake the *best* Iceberg query engine, not just a participant — turn the substitution risk into a moat.
  6. AI co-development credits: Give top accounts free Cortex credits to build production AI workloads — seed consumption that compounds.
  7. Optimization-as-a-service: Pre-emptively offer Snowflake-led optimization (with floor commitments) before customers hire third parties to do it for them.

Customer Cohort Risk Matrix

CohortCurrent Consumption PatternAI ExposureChurn RiskDefense Play
Top 100 ($5M+ ARR)Mature, optimizing aggressivelyHigh Cortex pilot rateLow logo, high downsellSwat team + multi-year commit + Cortex bundle
Mid-Market ($500K-$5M)Growing, less mature optimizationModerate Cortex curiosityMedium downsell, low logoOptimization-as-a-service + tier guarantees
SMB (<$500K)Variable, price-sensitiveLow Cortex (cost barrier)High logo, low downsellSelf-serve Cortex credits + simpler pricing
New ARR (FY26 cohort)AI-native workloads from day oneCortex-led adoptionUnknown, watch retentionLand-with-Cortex motion, expand-to-warehouse

Churn Driver Flow

graph LR A["Snowflake Account"] --> B["Optimization Program"] A --> C["Iceberg Migration"] A --> D["Cortex Adoption"] A --> E["AI Workload Growth"] B --> F["Downsell -10 to -25 pct"] C --> G["Substitution Risk"] D --> H["Consumption Tailwind"] E --> H F --> I["NRR Headwind"] G --> I H --> J["NRR Tailwind"] I --> K["Net NRR FY27-28"] J --> K K --> L["Bear 115 pct"] K --> M["Base 120 pct"] K --> N["Bull 125 pct"]

Bottom Line

Snowflake's NRR isn't dying — it's *rebalancing*. The optimization headwind is real and structural; the Cortex tailwind is real but immature. By FY28, expect NRR to settle in a 115-125% band depending on how aggressively Cortex monetizes versus how fast Iceberg substitution erodes warehouse lock-in.

The operator job is to decompose churn into the three buckets and defend each one with a different play — treating NRR as monolithic is how you miss the structural shift. (see also: q1572, q1587, q1594)

Keep reading
Was this helpful?  
Sources cited
investors.snowflake.comhttps://investors.snowflake.com/news/news-details/2025/Snowflake-Reports-Financial-Results-for-the-Fourth-Quarter-and-Full-Year-of-Fiscal-2025/default.aspxsec.govhttps://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?action=getcompany&CIK=0001640147&type=10-Kbvp.comhttps://www.bvp.com/atlas/state-of-the-cloud-2024databricks.comhttps://www.databricks.com/company/newsroom/press-releasesinvestors.mongodb.comhttps://investors.mongodb.com/news-releasessoftwareequity.comhttps://www.softwareequity.com/research/saascapital.comhttps://www.saascapital.com/research/chartmogul.comhttps://chartmogul.com/reports/saas-benchmarks/
⌬ Apply this in PULSE
Industry KPIs · SaaSThe 9 sales KPIs that matter for SaaS
Related in the library
More from the library
franchise · franchisesShould I open or buy a UPS Store franchise in 2027?franchise · franchisesShould I open or buy a Kona Ice franchise in 2027?revenue-architecture · gtm-designHow to build customer-segment-specific GTM playbooks in 2027franchise · franchisesShould I open or buy a Servpro franchise in 2027?electronic-review · top-10Top 10 Comfortable Dress Shoes for All-Day Sales Reps in 2027franchise · franchisesShould I open or buy a Mac Tools franchise in 2027?electronic-review · top-10Top 10 Leather Padfolios for Sales Meetings in 2027revenue-architecture · gtm-designHow to build a buyer-persona-driven GTM playbook in 2027franchise · franchisesShould I open or buy a Goddard School franchise in 2027?franchise · franchisesShould I open or buy an Ace Hardware franchise in 2027?revenue-architecture · gtm-designCustomer Health Score Design for SaaS CS in 2027electronic-review · top-10Top 10 Fountain Pens for Sales Executives in 2027