Saturation
The point in qualitative research where you are no longer hearing new information or discovering new insights from participants. The signal that you have likely uncovered the most important themes.
Definition: The point in qualitative research where you are no longer hearing new information or discovering new insights from participants. The signal that you have likely uncovered the most important themes.
Saturation is the point in qualitative research where you are no longer hearing new information or discovering new insights from your participants.
Recognizing Saturation
When the eighth user in a row points out the same confusing button, or the tenth interviewee describes the same unmet need, you have likely reached saturation for that specific issue within that target group.
Why It Matters
Saturation is the practical, data-driven signal that tells you it is time to stop recruiting for that segment. Continuing beyond saturation produces diminishing returns—you collect more data but learn nothing new.
The Homogeneity Connection
Saturation relates directly to sample homogeneity. When you test with a single, well-defined user segment:
- Patterns of behavior repeat quickly
- Common issues surface with relatively fewer participants
- Saturation is reached sooner
With heterogeneous samples (mixed user types), patterns are harder to discern and saturation takes longer—or may never be reached for any specific issue.
Important Caveats
Saturation applies to qualitative insight, not quantitative measurement. Reaching saturation means you have identified the themes; it does not mean you can generalize to the population or calculate percentages. That requires larger samples and different methods.
Related Terms
Qualitative Research
Research focused on understanding the 'what' and 'why' through rich stories, observations, and context. Seeks depth of understanding rather than statistical measurement.
User Interview
A Core Method of structured asking designed for deep exploration of user needs, behaviors, and motivations. Distinguished from casual conversation by its defined goals, protocol, and systematic approach.
Sample Size
The number of participants in a research study. Appropriate sample size depends on research goals, method type (qualitative vs. quantitative), the precision required, and the number of distinct user segments being studied.
Mentions in the Knowledge Hub
This term is referenced in the following articles:
Sample Size Calculator — Tool and Explanations
An interactive sample size calculator for UX research, with the statistical foundations explained — from binomial problem discovery to power analysis.
Segmentation and Variables: Finding the Right People
The goal of good research is to define and recruit homogeneous segments. Understanding variables, demographic, behavioral, attitudinal, psychographic, is how you get there.
Sample Sizes: Beyond the Magic Numbers
The idea that you only need five users is one of the most famous, and most misunderstood, heuristics in UX research. Here is what the numbers actually mean and when they apply.