CSAT Calculator

Quickly measure your Customer Satisfaction Score (CSAT) with our free online calculator. Instantly understand how happy your customers are.

Your Customer Satisfaction Score

Enter your number of responses:

Very dissatisfied
Dissatisfied
Neutral
Satisfied
Very satisfied
0 50 100

CSAT score

0.00

0.00%
0.00%
0.00%
0.00%
0.00%

What is Customer Satisfaction (CSAT) Score?

Customer Satisfaction Score (CSAT) is a widely used metric that reflects how satisfied your customers are with a particular product, service or interaction. Typically, after a purchase, service request, support call, or any customer‑facing event, you ask a simple question such as:

“How satisfied are you with our product/service/support?”

Respondents select a rating (for example, on a five‑point scale from “Very Dissatisfied” to “Very Satisfied”). Based on their answers, CSAT gives you a quick, clear snapshot of how happy your customers are.

Because it measures satisfaction immediately after an interaction or transaction, CSAT helps you understand short-term customer happiness rather than long-term loyalty or purchase intent.

How CSAT Is Calculated (and How This Calculator Works)

Using this calculator is simple:

  • You collect the number of responses for each rating: e.g. “Very Dissatisfied,” “Dissatisfied,” “Neutral,” “Satisfied,” “Very Satisfied.”
  • The calculator aggregates those responses, computes the average (or top‑box score, depending on your chosen scale), and converts it into a percentage between 0 and 100.

Internally, the math works like this: for a typical 5‑point scale, “Satisfied” and “Very Satisfied” are counted as positive responses. Then:

CSAT (%) = (Number of positive responses ÷ Total number of responses) × 100

As a result:

  • CSAT = 100% means all respondents were positive (maximum satisfaction).
  • CSAT = 0% means no one was satisfied (all negative/neutral or dissatisfied).
  • Any value in between gives you a relative measure of how many customers are happy.

Why CSAT Matters

  • Quick feedback on specific interactions. Because CSAT surveys are often triggered right after a customer action a purchase, support resolution, or service delivery, you can catch immediate reactions. This helps you identify issues or successes early.
  • Simple and easy to interpret. The percentage format is intuitive: higher means happier customers. No complex calculations or statistical knowledge required.
  • Benchmarking & trend tracking. When you collect CSAT over time or across different touchpoints, you can compare results and see how changes in your services or processes impact customer happiness.
  • Identifies where you need improvement. Low CSAT scores signal dissatisfaction, which gives a clear prompt to investigate root causes and improve.

What’s a “Good” CSAT Score?

While what counts as “good” can vary by industry, a few general guidelines are common in many CSAT‑focused frameworks:

  • 75%–85% and above: Often considered a strong score, indicating most customers are satisfied.
  • 50%–75%: Mixed zone some customers happy, but enough dissatisfaction or neutrality that you should examine what’s holding satisfaction back.
  • Below 50%: A signal that many customers are unhappy or neutral. This usually points to areas needing urgent attention.