How much is my business actually worth to a buyer?
Most businesses are valued using a multiple of earnings. Here's what that means in plain English and what actually drives the number.
March 25, 2026
April 30, 2026
EBITDA is a measure of what a business actually earns before accounting decisions and financing choices distort the picture. It stands for earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization. Buyers use it because it makes businesses easier to compare, but for most small business owners, a related number called SDE is more relevant and usually produces a higher valuation.
The problem with net profit is that it’s affected by decisions that vary from owner to owner. How much debt you carry affects interest expense. Your tax strategy affects taxes. How aggressively you depreciate equipment affects depreciation charges. Two businesses with identical operations can show very different net profits based on these decisions.
EBITDA strips all of that out to show what the underlying business generates from operations.
Earnings. Start with net profit, the bottom line on your income statement.
+ Interest. Add back any interest you paid on business loans. This represents a financing decision, not an operational one. A buyer might finance the acquisition differently, so they strip this out.
+ Taxes. Add back income taxes. Tax strategy varies by owner and structure; buyers exclude it to compare businesses on equal terms.
+ Depreciation. Add back depreciation charges. Depreciation is a non-cash expense, it reduces profit on paper, but no money actually leaves the business in that amount. A trades business with significant truck and equipment fleets often has large depreciation charges that dramatically reduce net profit but don’t represent real cash outflow.
+ Amortization. Add back amortization of intangible assets (licenses, customer lists, goodwill from prior acquisitions). Also non-cash.
The result: EBITDA. A number that, in theory, represents what the business generates from its core operations before owner-specific financial decisions.
This is a practical question with a practical answer.
SDE (Seller’s Discretionary Earnings) is used for smaller businesses, typically those with under $1 million in annual earnings. It starts with EBITDA and then adds back the owner’s compensation, salary, personal expenses, and benefits run through the business. SDE assumes the new owner will be actively running the business, so all the financial benefit they’d receive is included.
EBITDA is used for larger businesses, those with professional management teams where the owner’s personal compensation is separate from what the business needs to operate. The logic: if someone pays $5 million for your business, they’re going to hire a manager to run it. EBITDA (not SDE) reflects what the business earns when a market-rate manager is in place.
For most owners of trades businesses under $3 million in annual earnings, SDE is the more appropriate measure and usually produces a higher number.
| Situation | Use this metric |
|---|---|
| Owner-operated, under $1M earnings | SDE |
| Owner-operated, $1M–$3M earnings | Either; ask your broker |
| Professional management in place | EBITDA |
| Business over $3M earnings | EBITDA |
| Buyer is private equity or institutional | EBITDA |
When sellers (and their brokers) present earnings to buyers, they typically present adjusted EBITDA. EBITDA plus additional add-backs specific to the owner’s situation.
Common adjustments in a trades business:
These adjustments are legitimate, they reflect the true owner earnings. But they need to be documented and defensible. Every add-back will be scrutinized by the buyer’s accountant in due diligence.
Here’s how the numbers work for a hypothetical plumbing business:
| Amount | |
|---|---|
| Net profit (as reported) | $180,000 |
| + Interest on equipment loans | $28,000 |
| + Income taxes | $42,000 |
| + Depreciation (trucks, equipment) | $95,000 |
| + Amortization | $5,000 |
| = EBITDA | $350,000 |
| + Owner salary (above market replacement cost of $90K) | $110,000 |
| + Owner personal vehicle | $14,000 |
| + Owner health insurance | $18,000 |
| + One-time equipment repair | $22,000 |
| = Adjusted SDE | $514,000 |
The difference between the $180,000 net profit and the $514,000 adjusted SDE is real. A buyer paying a 4x SDE multiple on $514,000 pays $2.056 million. A buyer who only saw net profit might have offered far less.
This is why having the right accountant represent your financials in a sale matters.
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