How is a business valued when you're ready to sell?
Most businesses are valued using a multiple of earnings. Here's how the number gets calculated and what actually moves it up or down.
March 18, 2026
March 25, 2026
Your business is worth what a buyer will pay for it, and that number is determined almost entirely by two things: how much money the business makes, and how confident a buyer is that it will keep making that money after you’re gone. The actual math is straightforward. What makes it complicated is understanding which number to use and what affects the multiplier.
Value = Earnings × Multiple
That’s it. The calculation itself is simple. The work is in figuring out what “earnings” means and what multiple applies.
For most small to mid-size businesses, earnings in a valuation context means Seller’s Discretionary Earnings (SDE), the total financial benefit the owner gets from the business each year.
For larger businesses, typically those with $1 million or more in annual SDE, buyers shift to using EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization). EBITDA is better suited to businesses with management teams and operations that don’t depend on a single owner.
For most owners of trades businesses. HVAC, plumbing, roofing, landscaping. SDE is the right starting point.
This is where most of the variance lives. A business earning $500,000 a year could be worth $1 million or $4 million depending on the multiple, and the multiple is driven by how risky a buyer perceives the business to be.
Lower perceived risk = higher multiple. Higher perceived risk = lower multiple.
These are the main factors that affect where your multiple lands:
What raises your multiple:
What lowers your multiple:
Based on current market data from IBBA, BizBuySell, and industry-specific advisors in roofing, HVAC, plumbing, and electrical:
| Business type | Typical multiple | Basis |
|---|---|---|
| Average Main Street business (any industry) | 2.6× SDE | IBBA Q4 2024 |
| Trades business, owner-dependent | 2–3.5× SDE | BizBuySell / broker consensus |
| HVAC (service/replacement focus) | 4–6× EBITDA | GLBA, ClearlyAcquired |
| Roofing ($5M+ revenue, clean books) | 6–8× EBITDA | Profitability Partners |
| HVAC/plumbing with strong service contracts | 6–8× EBITDA | Selling the Trades, GLBA |
| Any trades business, strong management team, recurring revenue | 7–10× EBITDA | PE buyer consensus |
The gap between the bottom of that table and the top represents the difference between a business that’s owner-dependent with inconsistent financials and one that’s been intentionally built for transferability.
1. Ask a business broker for a Broker Opinion of Value (BOV) A BOV is a documented estimate based on your financials and recent comparable sales in your industry. Cost: $500 to $2,500, sometimes free as part of engaging the broker. Appropriate for: early planning, getting oriented before deciding whether to pursue a sale.
2. Ballpark from a CPA A CPA who works with business sales can give you a rough range quickly. Less formal than a BOV, but useful for planning purposes. Typically low cost or included in an existing advisory relationship.
3. Formal certified business valuation A full report from a credentialed valuation specialist (CVA, ABV, or ASA designation). Cost: $3,000 to $10,000 depending on complexity. Required for: estate planning, partnership buy-sell agreements, divorce proceedings, tax purposes, or when you’re close to a real sale.
Most owners planning more than a year out are well served by a BOV. The formal valuation becomes necessary when legal, tax, or deal purposes require a defensible opinion of value.
According to BizBuySell’s 2024 data, the median sale price for a small business across all industries was $345,000. For building and construction businesses specifically, the median was $760,000.
Those numbers sound low compared to what most owners expect. The reason: they reflect the middle of all transactions, including businesses sold in distress, businesses that were underprepared, and businesses that were sold at below-market multiples due to timing or circumstance.
A well-prepared business in the trades with clean books, recurring revenue, and a capable team is not competing for the median. It’s competing for the top of the range, and the range goes significantly higher than $345,000 for the right business.
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