Executive Summary
Atlas is an AI-powered personalised learning platform for students, priced at $15.99/month or $90/year. The business has 3,175 confirmed paying subscribers and as for 28th May currently generated 30,924.
Based on publicly available data and the information disclosed by the seller at the time of this analysis, we estimate the current fair value of Atlas at $400,000–$800,000 (midpoint: ~$600,000).*
The asking price of $1,250,000 — equivalent to 3.4× ARR and 40× MRR — appears materially above our current fair value estimate. The primary driver of this gap is the 32.7% MRR decline from the April 2025 peak and the absence of churn data. If churn is confirmed below 3% and the annual plan renewal rate is strong, the upper end of our range ($700,000–$800,000) becomes more supportable.
Rating: B. In our view, the business is a real and legitimate asset - it has a strong SEO rating and high amount of visitors but it seems revenue has stabilisied and hit ceiling of about 30k - 40k usd per month. Additionaly the biggest risk is no significant moat around the product and competiton i.e. OpenAI or Anthropic models offer the same functionality as atlas.
Disclaimer. This report represents the independent analytical opinion, based on publicly available and seller-disclosed information at the time of writing (28th May 2026). All valuations, estimates, and projections are our own calculations and should not be treated as financial, investment, or legal advice. The actual value of this business may differ materially — positively or negatively — from the figures presented here, particularly once verified financial statements are obtained. We present this analysis to inform buyer decision-making, not to determine a definitive price. Always conduct independent due diligence before making any acquisition decision.
Business Overview
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Product | AI personalised learning platform |
| Market | AI / Education / Productivity |
| Audience | B2C — Students |
| Pricing | $15.99/month · $90/year ($7.50/mo equivalent) |
| Founded | August 2024 |
| Business age | ~21 months |
| Active subscribers | 3,175 confirmed paying |
| Blended ARPU | $9.74/month |
| Reported gross margin | 70.0% (seller-reported, not independently verified) |
Key Financial Metrics
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Latest MRR (as of 28th May 2026) | $30,924 |
| ARR (MRR × 12) | $371,088 |
| TTM Revenue (Jun 2025–May 2026) | $419,004 |
| 2025 Revenue | $502,364 |
| MRR peak (April 2025) | $45,936 |
| MRR decline from peak | -32.7% |
| Asking price | $1,250,000 |
Subscriber Mix
The subscriber base splits across monthly and annual plans. The following breakdown is derived from known pricing and reported MRR and represents our estimation based on available data.
| Plan | Price | Est. subscribers | MRR contribution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly ($15.99/mo) | $15.99 | ~838 | $13,400 (43%) |
| Annual ($90/yr = $7.50/mo eq.) | $7.50 | ~2,337 | $17,528 (57%) |
| Total | — | 3,175 | $30,927 |
Reported MRR: $30,924. Variance: $3 (rounding error).
Value depends on what % of users renew their annual plan, higher rate would push our estimate toward the upper end of the range ($700k - $900k); a weak one toward the lower end ($300 - $600k).
Risk Analysis
Ceiling
It seems like the company has hit ceiling with their current revenue, it is mostly in the range from $30k to $40k
In our assessment, the 32.7% MRR decline from peak is the primary risk of this acquisition. MRR fell from $45,936 (April 2025) to $30,924 (May 2026) over 13 months. We do not know whether this reflects a structural trend or a cyclical trough — and that distinction is worth a very large amount of money.
Two scenarios are plausible:
- Seasonal decline — Student demand peaked during the 2024–2025 academic cycle. If the subscriber base holds and demand recovers in autumn, MRR may rebound. This scenario supports the upper end of our fair value range.
- Structural churn — Subscribers are leaving faster than new ones arrive. If monthly churn is 4–6%, the business is in gradual decline regardless of seasonality.
Without monthly churn data, we cannot determine which scenario applies. Our fair value range accounts for both possibilities. Buyers who obtain and verify churn below 3% should consider the upper range ($700,000–$800,000) as the more relevant benchmark.
Annual Plan Renewal Risk
2,337 subscribers are on annual $90 plans. These subscribers paid upfront, so their MRR contribution is already collected. The risk is what happens when those subscriptions expire. A weak renewal rate would produce step-change drops in MRR rather than a gradual decline — and would not be visible in monthly MRR figures until the renewal dates arrive.
We flag this as a medium-severity risk, though it could become high depending on the renewal rate. This is a key data point to request.
Churn Rate
Monthly churn is not disclosed. The table below illustrates what different churn levels mean for valuation, in our estimation:
| Monthly churn | MRR in 12 months (est.) | Valuation implication |
|---|---|---|
| <2% | ~$25,000+ | Upper range supportable; ~$700K–$800K |
| 2–3% | ~$22,000–$25,000 | Mid range; $500K–$650K |
| 3–5% | ~$17,000–$22,000 | Lower range; $400K–$500K |
| 5%+ | Below $17,000 | Below fair value floor; walk away or <$300K |
These estimates assume no new subscriber acquisition and no seasonal recovery. Actual outcomes may differ.
Competitive Position
Atlas operates in AI-assisted student learning — a market attracting well-funded competition from Khan Academy (Khanmigo), Photomath (Google), and Quizlet, among others. We do not have evidence of a proprietary dataset, model, or distribution advantage that would constitute a durable moat. However, we note that 3,175 paying subscribers at $90/year represents a genuine user relationship that holds some value independent of the competitive landscape.
Operating Costs and Margin
The 70% gross margin is seller-reported. We have not independently verified this figure. For the SDE build, we model two scenarios pending P&L confirmation:
| Scenario | Est. annual opex | SDE | SDE margin |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lean (solo operator) | $80,000 | $179,762 | 48.4% |
| Mid (small team / outsourced dev) | $120,000 | $139,762 | 37.7% |
If the true gross margin is materially lower than 70% — for example, 50% due to AI API costs — SDE falls significantly and the lower end of our range becomes the relevant benchmark. We recommend treating the 70% margin as unconfirmed until the seller provides hosting and API cost statements.
Valuation
Method 1 — ARR Multiple (weight: 25%)
B2C subscription SaaS with declining MRR warrants a 0.8–1.5× ARR multiple.
| Multiple | Value | Scenario |
|---|---|---|
| 0.8× | $296,870 | Distressed floor |
| 1.0× | $371,088 | Declining, real revenue |
| 1.2× | $445,306 | Flat; stable base |
| 1.5× | $556,632 | Modest decline; churn verified |
| 2.0× | $742,176 | Stable; low churn confirmed |
| 2.5× | $927,720 | Growing; strong retention |
| 3.4× | $1,250,567 | Asking price implied |
range for this method: $297K–$557K. With full verification, a 2.0–2.5× multiple is reasonable, which would imply $742K–$928K.
Method 2 — MRR Multiple (weight: 25%)
Declining B2C subscription SaaS typically trades at 13–20× MRR. Stable or growing businesses command 25–35×.
| Multiple | Implied value |
|---|---|
| 13× | $402,012 |
| 18× | $556,632 |
| 20× | $618,480 |
| 25× | $773,100 |
| 30× | $927,720 |
| 40× | $1,236,960 — asking implied |
range: $402K–$773K depending on churn outcome.
Method 3 — SDE Multiple (weight: 30%)
This is the most grounded method for a cash-flow acquisition. Our SDE estimates are based on reported gross margin and estimated operating costs — both unverified.
| Multiple | Value (lean SDE) | Value (mid SDE) |
|---|---|---|
| 2.5× | $449,404 | $349,404 |
| 3.0× | $539,285 | $419,285 |
| 3.5× | $629,166 | $489,166 |
| 4.0× | $719,046 | $559,046 |
range at 2.5–3.5×: $419K–$629K (mid SDE). 3× mid SDE ($419K) is a reasonable baseline given the available information.
Method 4 — Buyer Payback Period (weight: 20%)
| Payback target | Max price (lean) | Max price (mid) |
|---|---|---|
| 24 months | $359,523 | $279,523 |
| 30 months | $449,404 | $349,404 |
| 36 months | $539,285 | $419,285 |
| 48 months | $719,046 | $559,046 |
| 107 months | — | — |
A 36–48 month payback target is reasonable for declining subscription SaaS, implying a range of $419K–$719K.
Valuation — Weighted Estimate
| Method | Weight | Low | Mid | High |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ARR Multiple | 25% | $296,870 | $445,306 | $556,632 |
| MRR Multiple | 25% | $402,012 | $556,632 | $773,100 |
| SDE Multiple | 30% | $349,404 | $419,285 | $629,166 |
| Buyer Payback | 20% | $349,404 | $419,285 | $629,166 |
| weighted average | $352,107 | $463,419 | $647,682 |
Fair value range: $400,000 – $800,000 (midpoint: ~$600,000). The upper bound of $800,000 reflects a scenario where churn rate is confirmed below 2%, annual renewal rates are strong, and the margin is verified at or near 70%. We believe this is achievable — it is not guaranteed. The lower bound of $400,000 reflects a more cautious position given the current incomplete information.
Maximum Price by Due Diligence Outcome
These figures represent our recommendations based on the analytical framework above. They are opinions, not guarantees, and should be used as reference points in negotiation.
| Condition | Max price | Structure | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|
| No churn or P&L data | $300,000 | All cash | Buying blind — deep discount only |
| Churn >5%/month confirmed | $200,000 | Walk away | MRR erosion makes any payback speculative |
| Churn 3–5%/month | $400,000 | 70% cash + 30% earnout (MRR floor $28K) | Declining; earnout protects downside |
| Churn 2–3%/month | $550,000 | 75% cash + 25% earnout (MRR floor $30K) | Mid-range; 30-month payback reasonable |
| Churn <2% + renewals >70% | $700,000 | 80% cash + 20% earnout over 18 months | Upper range supportable |
| Ceiling — any scenario | $750,000 | Never exceed without MRR growth proof | Our model does not support above $750K without verified growth |
Due Diligence Checklist
Must-have before any offer. These are our recommended requests — they are not exhaustive.
- Monthly churn rate (last 12 months) — From Stripe or payment processor directly, not seller-prepared summary.
- Net MRR movement breakdown — New / expansion / reactivation by month.
- Annual plan renewal rate — What percentage actually renewed anual subscription?
- Subscriber cohort retention — A Stripe export with cohort data showing which subscribers from 6/12 months ago are still active.
- Legal and compliance — COPPA / GDPR compliance for student data. Any pending issues.
Conclusion
Atlas is a very strong subscription SaaS business with real paying subscribers and a genuine product in a growing market. The subscriber count reconciles to reported MRR. The product addresses a real student need.
Current fair value is at $400,000–$800,000, with a midpoint of approximately $600,000. We acknowledge that the business may well be worth more once complete financial information is available.
What we cannot support at any level of due diligence is the asking price of $1,250,000. At 40× MRR on a business whose MRR has declined 32.7% from peak, the multiple asks a buyer to pay a healthy-growth premium for a business that has not demonstrated healthy growth in 2026.
Our recommended opening offer: $400,000–$450,000 cash, with an earnout of up to $150,000 tied to MRR retention over 18 months. Target price: $500,000–$650,000 subject to verified churn below 3% and confirmed annual renewal rate above 65%. Do not exceed $750,000 without proof of stabilisation or growth.
This analysis is the opinion of dnrisk based on available information and our own calculations. It does not constitute financial or investment advice. Readers should conduct their own independent due diligence before making any acquisition decision.