Business Valuation Calculator
A more useful calculator than the generic EBITDA multiple tools online.
- Normalize reported earnings for owner compensation, personal expenses, rent, and one-time items.
- Separate enterprise value from likely equity value after debt, surplus cash, and non-operating assets.
- Keep the most important judgment call where it belongs: the valuation multiple.
Financial Basis
Enter EBITDA directly, or build it from underlying financial statement lines.
Normalization Adjustments
Convert reported earnings into a more realistic normalized EBITDA.
Balance Sheet & Deal Adjustments
Move from enterprise value toward a more realistic equity value.
Industry & Risk Profile
Select your industry and review the factors that typically influence valuation multiples.
Valuation Multiples
Enter the low and high EBITDA multiple you want to test.
The industry ranges shown on the previous step are broad reference points only. They are not a recommendation and should not be treated as a conclusion.
The correct multiple depends on company-specific factors such as size, risk, customer concentration, quality of earnings, growth, management depth, and transaction structure.
Your Indicative Valuation
This is an indicative range based on your inputs. The math is useful, but the output remains highly sensitive to the multiple selected and is not a substitute for professional valuation judgment.
| Multiple | Enterprise value | Equity value |
|---|
Why the multiple deserves real judgment
Changing the multiple by even 0.5× can shift value by tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars. That is why the multiple should not be guessed.
Need a real valuation — or the right multiple?
This calculator helps organize the math. It does not determine the right multiple — and that is the variable that usually has the biggest impact on value.
- Selecting defensible valuation multiples using market evidence
- Preparing professional CBV valuation reports
- Pressure-testing value before a sale, purchase, or reorganization
How to use a business valuation calculator properly
Most online tools oversimplify the process by applying a generic multiple to EBITDA and stopping there. A more useful approach is to understand what reported EBITDA really means, how normalization works, and why enterprise value is not the same as equity value.
What is a good EBITDA multiple?
A good EBITDA multiple depends on the business, not just the industry. Size, growth, customer concentration, recurring revenue, management depth, capital intensity, and earnings quality can all move the right multiple meaningfully.
How do you normalize earnings?
Normalizing earnings means adjusting reported results to reflect what a buyer would view as maintainable. Common examples include owner compensation differences, personal expenses, unusual one-time costs, and rent that is above or below market.
What is the difference between enterprise value and equity value?
Enterprise value reflects the value of the operating business before financing and surplus assets. Equity value is what remains for shareholders after adjusting for debt, surplus cash, redundant assets, and working capital items.
Can two businesses with the same EBITDA have very different values?
Yes. One may have better recurring revenue, stronger systems, better financial records, lower owner dependence, or less customer concentration. Those differences often justify very different valuation multiples.
Why do buyers care about normalization adjustments?
Because buyers are purchasing future maintainable cash flow, not just historical accounting results. Reported earnings often need adjustments before they represent the economics of the business on a stand-alone basis.
Is a calculator enough for selling or buying a business?
No. A calculator can organize the mechanics, but it cannot replace transaction evidence, normalization review, and professional judgment around the multiple. Those factors usually have the biggest impact on value.
