Ramen Profitable
Definition
Generating just enough revenue to cover founders' basic living expenses (ramen noodles), without external funding.
What is Ramen Profitable? | early.tools Glossary
Coined by Paul Graham, ramen profitability is the bootstrap milestone where founders can pay themselves enough to survive. It doesn't mean the business is highly profitable — just that it covers rent, food, and basic expenses. Ramen profitability gives founders leverage: you're no longer desperate for funding, so you can negotiate better terms or skip fundraising altogether. It's common in service businesses, consulting, and SaaS with early customers. The goal: reach ramen profitability fast (under 6-12 months) to extend runway indefinitely. Many successful companies (Basecamp, Mailchimp, ConvertKit) stayed ramen profitable for years before scaling. The trade-off: slower growth than VC-backed competitors, but more control and less dilution.
Related Terms
Bootstrapping
Bootstrapping means building your company with personal savings, revenue from customers, or small loans—without taking venture capital. You own 100% and answer to customers, not investors.
Burn rate
Your "burn rate" represents your monthly expenses relative to your available capital. Calculate your company's potential runway by dividing your total funds by your burn rate.
Runway
Runway is how many months your startup can survive before running out of cash. It's calculated by dividing your current cash balance by your monthly burn rate.