We pulled the data. All of it. From Statista, Gartner, IDC, Forrester, McKinsey, and dozens of independent research sources. This is the most complete data picture of the SaaS market as it stands in 2025 — what it means for founders, resellers, and anyone building a business around software distribution.
The Market Size: From $31B to $317B in a Decade
The global SaaS market was worth approximately $31 billion in 2015. In 2025, it stands at an estimated $317 billion, according to Statista's most recent figures. That's roughly 10x growth in 10 years — a compound annual growth rate of approximately 26%.
More striking: analysts at Grand View Research project the market will reach $1.25 trillion by 2032 at current growth trajectories. Even accounting for the typical analyst optimism discount, we're looking at a market that will be 3-4x its current size within 7 years.
The key drivers of continued growth:
- AI integration: Every major SaaS platform is embedding AI features, increasing both value and price points. The average enterprise SaaS ACV increased 18% in 2024 primarily due to AI feature pricing.
- SMB digitization: Small businesses globally are still in the early stages of SaaS adoption. According to BDC research, only 38% of SMBs with under 50 employees have adopted more than 3 SaaS tools. The runway for growth is enormous.
- Geographic expansion: SaaS penetration in Southeast Asia, Latin America, and Africa is still in early innings, representing multi-billion dollar expansion opportunities for existing platforms.
The 30,800 Company Problem (and Opportunity)
Statista counts approximately 30,800 SaaS companies globally as of 2025. The United States accounts for roughly 17,000 of these. Crunchbase data suggests approximately 2,100 new SaaS companies are formed each year.
For buyers — enterprises and SMBs trying to build technology stacks — this creates a genuine discovery and evaluation crisis. The number of tools is growing faster than anyone's ability to evaluate them. This is a direct structural tailwind for the SaaS reseller, who serves as a trusted filter and guide through the landscape.
With 30,800 SaaS companies globally and 2,100 new ones added each year, software buyers cannot keep up. Trusted resellers and advisors who have done the evaluation work become essential intermediaries — not despite market fragmentation, but because of it.
Enterprise Software Sprawl: 106 Apps Per Company
The average enterprise now runs 130+ SaaS applications according to Blissfully's SaaS Trends report — up from 80 in 2020 and 40 in 2015. For mid-market companies (100-999 employees), the average is 106 applications.
The financial implications of this sprawl are significant:
- Average enterprise SaaS spend: $1,040 per employee per year (Flexera 2024)
- Percentage of SaaS licenses that go unused: 28-35% (Torii, 2024)
- Annual wasted spend on unused SaaS per enterprise: estimated $135,000-$430,000
This creates two opportunity vectors for resellers: (1) helping companies buy the right tools the first time, reducing waste; and (2) SaaS optimization consulting — auditing existing stacks and recommending consolidations. The second is emerging as a premium service offering for sophisticated resellers.
The Channel Economics: Where Resellers Fit
Partner channels are not a niche distribution strategy. They are the dominant distribution strategy for B2B SaaS at scale.
- Salesforce: 40% of revenue flows through partner channel (Salesforce Partner Program data)
- Microsoft: 95% of commercial revenue goes through partners (Microsoft Partner Network)
- HubSpot: 40%+ of revenue through Solutions Partners (HubSpot)
- Average for high-growth B2B SaaS: Partners account for 30-50% of new ARR by year 3 (Forrester Research)
According to Forrester's 2024 Channel Program Benchmark, the typical SaaS company with a mature partner program generates $1.8-2.4 million in partner-sourced revenue per partner manager per year. The economics strongly favor channel over direct sales for most SaaS companies beyond initial product-market fit.
SaaS Growth Rates by Segment (2025)
Not all SaaS is growing at the same rate. Here's the breakdown by segment that matters most for resellers choosing where to focus:
- AI/ML-powered SaaS: 35-45% CAGR (the fastest-growing segment, period)
- Vertical SaaS (industry-specific): 28-32% CAGR — outpacing horizontal platforms as buyers seek purpose-built solutions
- CRM/Sales Tech: 14-16% CAGR — mature but still significant at $100B+ market size
- HR/People Ops: 18-22% CAGR — driven by remote work infrastructure needs
- Finance/Fintech SaaS: 20-24% CAGR — driven by AP automation, expense management, FP&A tools
- Customer Success platforms: 25-30% CAGR — as companies double down on retention in tighter markets
The SMB Opportunity: Still Massively Underserved
Much of the research on SaaS focuses on enterprise. But the largest addressable market for independent resellers is the SMB segment — companies with 10-500 employees — and it remains dramatically underserved.
Key SMB data points:
- There are approximately 33 million small businesses in the United States alone (SBA data)
- Average SMB SaaS spend: $12,000-45,000 per year, depending on headcount
- SMB SaaS adoption rate growth: 14% year-over-year
- Only 23% of SMBs with under 20 employees have a formal software evaluation process
The last data point is critical. The overwhelming majority of SMBs lack the expertise to evaluate software independently. They rely heavily on word of mouth, review sites, and increasingly on trusted advisors. A reseller who earns that trusted advisor status in a specific vertical owns that segment.
Commission Market Data: What Resellers Are Earning
Aggregate data on reseller commission structures is hard to come by, but based on available market research and our own platform data:
- Industry average recurring commission rate: 20-25% of MRR
- High-performing resellers (top quartile): 25-35% recurring + expansion commissions
- Average reseller revenue at 12 months: $4,500-8,000/month MRR for focused operators
- Commission payback period: Typically 6-8 months of recurring payments to recover CAC per customer
The most important trend: commissions are becoming more complex and more favorable for high-performing resellers. Top vendors are offering tiered commission structures, where resellers who hit quarterly targets unlock higher rates. This means the reseller who invests seriously in a vendor relationship can see effective commissions of 30-40% when tier bonuses are included.
What the Numbers Mean for You
The macro picture is clear: a $317B market growing at 26% annually, still massively underpenetrated in SMB, with partner channels responsible for 30-70% of revenue at the world's fastest-growing SaaS companies.
The micro implication: the best time to build a SaaS reseller business was five years ago. The second best time is right now, before AI SaaS fully matures, before vertical specialization becomes crowded, and before the independent reseller infrastructure that's being built now becomes table stakes.
The data is not ambiguous. The market is real, it's large, and it's growing. The only question is whether you're going to participate in it.