HomeProfessional Business Valuation in 2026: When You Need One

Professional Business Valuation in 2026: When You Need One

Quick Answer

A professional business valuation is a formal analysis of a business’s value performed by a credentialed valuation professional, holding a designation such as ASA, ABV (AICPA), CVA (NACVA), or CBA, conducted under recognized standards (USPAP, the AICPA’s SSVS, or NACVA standards), and documented in a written report built to withstand scrutiny. You need one for estate and gift tax, divorce, shareholder or partner disputes, ESOPs, certain SBA loans, and litigation, situations where the value must hold up before a court, the IRS, the DOL, or an opposing party. It typically costs $1,500-$8,000 for a calculation engagement and $5,000-$15,000+ for a full valuation engagement. For a sale, you generally do not need a professional certified valuation, a free sector-adjusted estimate or a sell-side advisor’s indicative valuation is enough, because the actual price is set by what qualified buyers will pay through a competitive process.

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‘Professional business valuation’ means a credentialed appraiser, recognized standards, and a formal report, the kind of valuation that holds up when a court, the IRS, the DOL, or an opposing party is going to scrutinize it. That’s different from a free online estimate or a broker’s opinion of value, which are useful for setting expectations but carry no professional standing. This page covers what a professional valuation actually is, when you need one, what it costs, what the report contains, and how to choose the right professional.

We are CT Acquisitions, a buy-side M&A advisory firm, not a credentialed appraisal firm. This is general orientation; engage a credentialed appraiser for a professional valuation. For a free market check before a sale, use our 90-second valuation tool.

What this guide covers

  • A professional business valuation = a credentialed appraiser (ASA, ABV, CVA, CBA) + recognized standards (USPAP, SSVS, NACVA) + a formal report
  • You need one for: estate/gift tax, divorce, shareholder disputes, ESOPs, certain SBA loans, litigation, anything that must withstand scrutiny
  • Cost: $1,500-$8,000 for a calculation engagement; $5,000-$15,000+ for a full valuation engagement; more for complexity and litigation
  • The report contains: purpose and standard of value, the methods used, financial analysis and normalizations, discounts, the conclusion, the appraiser’s certification
  • Not the same as a free online estimate or a broker’s opinion of value, those set expectations but carry no professional standing
  • For a sale, you usually don’t need one, a free sector-adjusted estimate or a sell-side advisor’s indicative valuation is enough

What makes a valuation ‘professional’

Three things, together: a credentialed appraiser, recognized standards, and a formal report.

When you need a professional valuation

SituationWhy you need a professional valuation
Estate and gift tax (transfers, inheritance, gifting shares)The IRS can challenge the value; you need a ‘qualified appraisal’ following Rev. Rul. 59-60
DivorceThe business is often the largest marital asset; courts expect a credentialed expert’s report (sometimes one per side)
Shareholder or partner disputes / buyoutsAn independent valuation resolves what the interest is worth; buy-sell agreements often require one
ESOP formation and annual updatesERISA/DOL require an independent appraisal; scrutiny is intense
SBA financing above a thresholdSBA rules require an independent valuation for certain loan sizes and changes of ownership
Litigation (damages, dissenting shareholders, breach)You need an expert who can testify and withstand cross-examination
Certain tax elections (C-to-S conversion built-in gains, etc.)Requires a contemporaneous, defensible valuation

For simply selling your business, you usually don’t need a professional certified valuation, you need a market-grounded expectation and a competitive process. A sell-side advisor’s indicative valuation or our free tool is typically enough.

What it costs

What the report contains

How to choose the right professional

See our full guide to choosing a valuation professional for the detailed checklist.

How we know this: the ranges, timelines, and patterns on this page reflect the transactions we work on and the buyer mandates in our network of 100+ active capital partners. They are informed starting points, not guarantees, your actual outcome depends on the specifics. For a sector-adjusted estimate, use our free 90-second valuation tool.

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For a Sale, This Is Enough

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If you’re preparing to sell, a free sector-adjusted estimate is usually all you need, no email gate, no obligation. Only escalate to a professional valuation if your situation actually requires one.

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Frequently asked questions

What is a professional business valuation?

A formal analysis of a business’s value performed by a credentialed valuation professional (holding a designation such as ASA, ABV, CVA, or CBA), conducted under recognized standards (USPAP, the AICPA’s SSVS, or NACVA standards), and documented in a written report built to withstand scrutiny from a court, the IRS, the DOL, or an opposing party. It’s distinct from a free online estimate or a broker’s opinion of value, which set expectations but carry no professional standing.

When do I need a professional business valuation?

When the value must hold up under scrutiny: estate and gift taxes, divorce, shareholder or partner disputes and buyouts, ESOP formation and annual updates, certain SBA loans and changes of ownership, litigation (damages, dissenting shareholders), and certain tax elections. For simply selling your business on the open market, you usually don’t need a professional certified valuation, a free sector-adjusted estimate or a sell-side advisor’s indicative valuation is enough, because the price is set by what buyers will pay through a competitive process.

How much does a professional business valuation cost?

Roughly $1,500-$8,000 for a calculation engagement (a limited analysis yielding a ‘calculated value’) and $5,000-$15,000 for a full valuation engagement (a comprehensive analysis yielding a detailed ‘conclusion of value’ report), more for complex businesses, multiple entities, or specialized industries ($10,000-$30,000+). Litigation/expert-witness work adds hourly deposition and trial-testimony fees on top, often pushing the all-in cost to $15,000-$50,000+.

Is a professional business valuation the same as a broker’s opinion of value?

No. A broker’s or sell-side advisor’s ‘opinion of value’ is typically free, follows no formal standard, and is intended to set a realistic asking range before a sale, it carries no professional standing and won’t hold up in court or with the IRS. A professional business valuation is produced by a credentialed appraiser under recognized standards, documented in a formal report, and built to withstand scrutiny. Use the broker opinion to prepare to sell; use a professional valuation when a court, the IRS, or a regulator is involved.

What’s in a professional business valuation report?

The purpose and standard of value (fair market value, fair value, or investment value); a description of the business and its industry; the financial analysis including normalization of earnings (add-backs for owner compensation, personal expenses, one-time items); the valuation approaches considered (income/DCF, market/multiple, asset/adjusted net asset value); any discounts applied (for lack of control and lack of marketability); the reconciliation to a concluded value or range; and the appraiser’s certification, qualifications, and the standards followed.

Who can perform a professional business valuation?

A credentialed valuation professional, someone holding ASA (American Society of Appraisers), ABV (AICPA, held by CPAs), CVA (NACVA), or CBA. The credential signals training, testing, experience, and ethics requirements. For the highest-stakes work (IRS disputes, ESOPs, contested litigation), ASA and ABV are the designations most often seen on the witness stand. A business broker, an accountant without a valuation credential, or an online tool cannot produce a ‘professional’ valuation in this sense, though they can produce useful estimates for non-scrutiny purposes like preparing for a sale.

Do I need a professional valuation to sell my business?

Usually not. To sell on the open market you need a market-grounded expectation of value, which a free sector-adjusted estimate or a sell-side advisor’s indicative valuation provides, and a competitive process that produces real offers. The actual price is set by what qualified buyers will pay, not by an appraisal. You’d want a professional certified valuation only if your sale intersects a situation that requires one, a partner buyout, a divorce, or estate planning happening alongside the sale.

How do I choose a professional for my business valuation?

Match the credential to the stakes (ASA or ABV for high-scrutiny matters; CVA or CBA acceptable for many engagements); match the experience to the situation (tax, divorce, ESOP, and litigation are different specialties) and your industry; require expert-witness experience if litigation is possible; ask about methodology, the standard of value, the engagement type, the fee structure (push for fixed or capped), the timeline, and references; and avoid red flags like no recognized credential, a number quoted before analysis, or a percentage-of-value fee structure.

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