
A 'multiple' is shorthand for risk. When a buyer pays three times earnings instead of two, they are saying your business is safer, more transferable, and more likely to keep performing. Understanding what drives multiples — and why they differ by industry — helps you read your own value realistically.
- A multiple is the market's pricing of risk: stable, transferable earnings earn higher multiples.
- Multiples vary by industry because risk and growth profiles differ.
- Within any industry, recurring revenue, low customer concentration, and low owner-dependence raise your multiple.
- Published industry averages are a starting point, not a price — comparable sales are what matter.
- Real estate and surplus assets are typically valued on top of the earnings multiple.
What a multiple actually represents
Value is earnings multiplied by a number, and that number captures how confident a buyer is in the future of those earnings. Stable, growing, low-risk businesses command higher multiples; volatile, owner-dependent, or declining ones command lower multiples. The multiple is, in essence, the market's price on risk.
Why multiples vary by industry
Different industries carry different risk and growth profiles, so they trade in different ranges. Businesses with recurring or contracted revenue (managed services, maintenance contracts) tend to earn stronger multiples than businesses dependent on daily foot traffic or a single owner's relationships. Capital-intensity, margins, regulation, and how 'sticky' the customers are all feed into the range.
| Business type | Typical basis | General multiple range |
|---|---|---|
| Owner-operated main-street business | SDE | ~2–3.5× SDE |
| Recurring-revenue B2B services | SDE / EBITDA | ~3–5×+ |
| Established manufacturing / distribution | EBITDA | ~4–6×+ |
| Single-location restaurant | SDE | ~1.5–2.5× SDE |
| Healthcare / professional practice | SDE / EBITDA | ~3–5×+ |
Treat the table above as directional only. Two restaurants — or two HVAC companies — can sell at very different multiples based on their specific risk profile, and no table replaces a comparable-based valuation for your actual business.

What lifts your multiple within any industry
- Recurring or contracted revenue instead of one-off sales.
- A diversified customer base with no dominant account.
- A capable team and documented systems that reduce owner dependence.
- Consistent growth, healthy margins, and clean, verifiable financials.
What pulls it down
- Heavy reliance on the owner's personal relationships or skills.
- Customer or supplier concentration.
- Declining or lumpy earnings and thin margins.
- Messy books, pending litigation, or expiring leases and contracts.
Use multiples as a guide, not a guarantee

Industry averages are a starting point for a conversation, not a price tag. The reliable number comes from comparable transactions — businesses like yours, in your market, recently sold — combined with an honest read of your specific risk factors. That is what a broker provides, and what a buyer's lender will ultimately test.
How to move your multiple up
Because the multiple prices risk, the way to raise it is to remove risk: build recurring revenue, diversify customers, document systems, develop a management team, and clean up the financials. These changes take time — which is the strongest argument for starting to prepare a year or more before you intend to sell.
Frequently asked questions
What is a typical multiple for a small business?
Many small, owner-operated businesses trade in a range of roughly two to four times SDE, but it varies widely by industry, size, and risk. Recurring-revenue and larger businesses can command more. A comparable-based valuation is the only reliable guide for your specific business.
Does owning the real estate change the multiple?
Real estate is usually valued separately and added to the business value, rather than baked into the earnings multiple. A listing 'with real estate' reflects both components.
Why did a competitor sell for a higher multiple than I expected?
Likely because their earnings looked less risky — more recurring revenue, less owner dependence, cleaner books, or stronger growth. Multiples reward transferable, predictable cash flow.
Are online multiple calculators accurate?
They can give a rough range, but they cannot see your customer concentration, owner dependence, or the quality of your books — the very factors that set the multiple. Use them for ballpark only.
This article is general information, not legal, tax, or financial advice. Every business and transaction is different — consult your attorney and CPA about your specific situation.