What is EBITDA and what does it mean for your sale price?
Buyers talk about EBITDA constantly. Here's what it actually means for a business owner, when it matters, and when SDE is the right number instead.
April 30, 2026
April 10, 2026
An add-back is an expense on your books that gets added back to your net profit to show what the business truly earns. The idea is straightforward: some expenses reduce your reported profit on paper, but a new owner either wouldn’t have them or wouldn’t have them at the same level. Adding them back gives buyers a clearer picture of the real earnings they’re purchasing.
[INTERNAL-LINK: understand how EBITDA and SDE are built → valuation/what-is-ebitda-for-a-business-owner]
Your tax return is designed to minimize taxable income, not to present your business in the best light for a sale. Owners routinely run legitimate personal expenses through the business, pay themselves above-market salaries, and expense items that won’t exist under new ownership. All of that reduces net profit on paper without reflecting a real reduction in what the business produces.
The recasting process takes your net profit and adds these items back to arrive at SDE (Seller’s Discretionary Earnings) or adjusted EBITDA. That recasted figure is what buyers and their accountants use to calculate a sale price. A well-supported recast can make a significant difference in what your business is worth.
[INTERNAL-LINK: see how the earnings number drives your sale price → valuation/what-is-my-business-actually-worth]
Owner salary above replacement cost. If you pay yourself $300,000 a year but a qualified general manager would cost $100,000, the $200,000 difference is an add-back. You’re adding back the portion of your salary that exceeds what the business actually needs to spend on management under new ownership.
Personal expenses run through the business. A personal vehicle, mobile phone, meals, and travel expenses that benefit you personally but are paid by the business are add-backs. These need to appear on bank statements or invoices and be clearly personal rather than operational.
Above-market family member compensation. If a family member is on payroll at a rate above what the role would pay on the open market, the excess is an add-back. If they’re genuinely doing the job at market rate, there’s nothing to add back.
One-time, non-recurring expenses. A major equipment repair that won’t happen again, a one-time legal settlement, or COVID-era relief funds received are examples. The key word is genuinely non-recurring. If it could happen again in two years, it probably doesn’t qualify.
Owner’s health insurance and retirement contributions. These are owner-specific benefits that a new owner might not structure the same way. They’re typically added back as part of the SDE calculation.
Depreciation. Depreciation is a non-cash accounting charge that reduces profit on paper without money actually leaving the business. It’s added back as part of the standard EBITDA calculation.
Every add-back you present will be reviewed by the buyer’s accountant during due diligence. This review is called a Quality of Earnings analysis. Each adjustment gets checked against real documentation. If the documentation isn’t there, the add-back gets removed.
The math on removals is unforgiving. Every dollar of earnings removed gets multiplied by the full sale multiple. If you’re selling at a 4x multiple and the buyer removes $40,000 in add-backs they can’t verify, your sale price drops by $160,000. Not $40,000. That’s the real cost of an add-back that doesn’t hold up.
[INTERNAL-LINK: learn how the QoE process works → selling/what-is-a-quality-of-earnings-report]
Work with an accountant who has experience in business sales, not just tax preparation, before you list your business. They can identify every legitimate add-back you’re entitled to claim, help you gather the supporting documentation, and present the recast in a format buyers and their accountants recognize.
Owners who go to market with a properly prepared and fully documented recast tend to get through due diligence faster, with fewer late-stage surprises. The cost of a good accountant at this stage is small compared to the value of a sale price that holds up.
Buyers talk about EBITDA constantly. Here's what it actually means for a business owner, when it matters, and when SDE is the right number instead.
April 30, 2026
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