Financial Toolset

Business Valuation Calculator

Calculate business valuation using revenue and EBITDA multiples.

Compare industry-specific multiples for accurate company valuation.

Free business valuation tool.

Calculator

$1000$100000000
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$-1000000$50000000
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0.120
0.130

Results

Revenue-Based Valuation
$0.00
EBITDA-Based Valuation
$0.00
Average Valuation
$0.00
EBITDA Margin
0.00%
Valuation Range Spread
$0.00

Valuation Comparison

Revenue Method$0.00
EBITDA Method$0.00
Average$0.00

How Business Valuation Works

Business valuation uses multiples of key financial metrics.

Revenue multiples are common for high-growth companies, while EBITDA multiples are standard for mature, profitable businesses.

The right multiple depends on industry, growth rate, profitability, and market conditions.

Choosing the Right Multiple

SaaS/Software: 8-15x revenue for fast growth, 4-8x EBITDA for mature.

E-commerce: 0.5-3x revenue, 3-6x EBITDA.

Professional Services: 0.5-2x revenue, 4-8x EBITDA.

Manufacturing: 0.3-1.5x revenue, 4-7x EBITDA.

Higher multiples apply to companies with strong growth, high margins, recurring revenue, and competitive moats.

Why Valuations Vary

The same business can have different valuations based on the method used.

Revenue-based valuations favor high-growth companies even if unprofitable.

EBITDA-based valuations favor profitability and cash flow.

Strategic buyers may pay more for synergies.

Financial buyers focus on cash flow returns.

Market conditions, deal structure, and buyer type all affect final valuation.

Understanding Business Valuation Multiples

Business valuation multiples provide quick estimation methods for determining company worth based on financial metrics like revenue, EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization), or profit. These multiples vary dramatically by industry, company size, growth rate, and market conditions. Technology companies might trade at 5-10x revenue, while traditional retail businesses typically sell for 0.3-0.8x revenue or 3-5x EBITDA. Understanding which multiples apply to your industry and business characteristics is essential for realistic valuation expectations.

The most common valuation approaches use either revenue multiples or EBITDA multiples, each with distinct applications. Revenue multiples work best for high-growth businesses where profitability is less important than market position and scale, common in technology and SaaS businesses. EBITDA multiples better suit mature, profitable businesses where earnings stability matters more than growth, typical in manufacturing, services, and traditional industries. Small businesses (under $5 million value) often sell at lower multiples (2-4x EBITDA) than mid-market companies ($5-50 million) which command 4-8x EBITDA due to better systems, diversification, and buyer pool.

Multiple factors beyond financial metrics affect actual valuation multiples. High-growth businesses (20%+ annual revenue growth) command premiums of 30-50% over industry averages. Strong customer diversification (no customer exceeding 10% of revenue) increases multiples by 10-20%. Recurring revenue models (subscriptions, contracts) add 20-40% valuation premiums over transaction-based businesses. Conversely, customer concentration, owner dependency, industry decline, or regulatory risks significantly depress multiples below industry norms.

Market conditions and buyer availability dramatically impact achievable multiples. During strong economic periods with active buyer markets, businesses sell at the high end of typical ranges or above. During recessions or industry downturns, multiples contract by 20-40%. Strategic buyers (companies in your industry) typically pay 20-40% more than financial buyers (private equity, individual buyers) due to synergy value. However, strategic buyers scrutinize businesses more carefully and often find issues that reduce offers. Understanding your likely buyer pool and current market conditions is essential for setting realistic sale expectations.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about the Business Valuation Calculator

A business valuation multiple is a way to estimate the value of a business based on its earnings or revenue. It helps you understand how much your business might be worth compared to similar businesses.

Industry Valuation Multiples

Valuation ranges based on business broker transaction data, private equity deal reports, and public company trading multiples. Actual multiples vary significantly by specific industry subsector, company size, growth rate, profitability, and market conditions. Data represents general industry ranges, not specific valuations.

Multiple-Based Valuation

Valuations calculated by multiplying revenue or EBITDA by industry-typical multiples. This is a screening method, not comprehensive valuation. Actual business values depend on due diligence revealing quality of earnings, customer concentration, owner dependency, competitive position, and growth prospects. Professional appraisals recommended for significant transactions.

Valuation Complexity

This tool provides rough estimates only. Actual business valuations require comprehensive analysis including financial quality of earnings, customer concentration, competitive moats, management team, growth prospects, working capital needs, and industry trends. Hire qualified business appraisers or M&A advisors for significant transactions. Multiples shown are general industry ranges—your specific business may vary significantly.

⚠️ Valuation Complexity