Selling a Fire Alarm Company in 2026
Quick Answer
A fire alarm company in 2026 typically sells for 4x to 7x EBITDA in the lower-middle market, with companies that carry heavy recurring inspection/testing and central-station monitoring revenue trading at 7x to 10x+ EBITDA, and platform-scale operators reaching well beyond that. The most valuable revenue is recurring and code-mandated: central-station monitoring contracts with automatic renewals are often valued at roughly 35x to 45x monthly recurring revenue (MRR), and multi-year inspection/testing/maintenance (ITM) contracts at roughly 2x to 3.5x annual recurring revenue, because that revenue is sticky, high-margin, and NFPA-mandated. The biggest value driver is the percentage of revenue under recurring monitoring and ITM contracts versus one-off installation work. Active buyers include the PE-backed fire and life safety platforms (Pye-Barker, APi Group, Sciens Building Solutions, and others backed by Apax, Blackstone, KKR), regional consolidators, and individual operators using SBA financing. Most fire alarm company sales close in 90 to 180 days.

A fire alarm company’s value is almost entirely a function of one thing: how much of its revenue is recurring monitoring and inspection contracts versus one-off installs. The same company at $1M EBITDA can be worth 4x with mostly install work, or 9x with a deep central-station monitoring base and multi-year inspection contracts, because buyers value recurring, code-mandated revenue at a premium and project revenue at a discount. This guide covers the multiples, the recurring-revenue math, the PE-backed acquirers, what kills deals, and the process.
We are CT Acquisitions, a buy-side M&A advisory firm with buyers in our network actively acquiring fire alarm and fire and life safety businesses. Sellers pay nothing, the buyer pays our fee at closing. For the broader fire and life safety picture, see our fire protection sale guide; for monitoring specifically, our alarm monitoring company guide.
What this guide covers
- Install-heavy fire alarm company: typically 3x to 5x SDE/EBITDA
- Fire alarm company with recurring inspection + monitoring base: 5x to 8x EBITDA, rising to 7x-10x+ as recurring revenue exceeds 50%
- Central-station monitoring contracts often valued at roughly 35x-45x MRR; multi-year ITM contracts at roughly 2x-3.5x ARR
- Biggest value driver: percentage of revenue under recurring monitoring and ITM contracts vs one-off installation
- Active buyers: Pye-Barker, APi Group, Sciens Building Solutions and other PE-backed fire/life-safety platforms (backers incl. Apax, Blackstone, KKR); regional consolidators; we have buyers in our network
- Free valuation: our 90-second tool applies fire-alarm-specific adjustments for monitoring MRR, ITM contract base, and NICET certification
What fire alarm company buyers actually pay for in 2026
Fire alarm company valuations split sharply on recurring revenue:
Install-heavy fire alarm company
Typical multiples: 3x to 5x SDE/EBITDA. Revenue is mostly new-construction and retrofit fire alarm installation, with limited recurring monitoring or inspection contracts. Buyer pool: regional consolidators and individual operators (SBA-financed). Multiples reach the upper end when there is a meaningful inspection-contract book attached, NICET-certified technicians who stay, and strong AHJ relationships.
Fire alarm company with a recurring base
Typical multiples: 5x to 8x EBITDA, rising to 7x to 10x+ as recurring monitoring and inspection revenue passes 50% of total. PE-backed fire and life safety platforms compete actively at this tier. Multiples reach the upper end when monitoring MRR is substantial, ITM contracts are multi-year, customer concentration is low, EBITDA margins are above 15%, and there is a density-expansion thesis.
The recurring-revenue math for fire alarm companies
| Revenue type | How it is valued | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Central-station monitoring (automatic renewals) | Roughly 35x-45x monthly recurring revenue (MRR) in larger deals | Very low attrition, high margin, automatic renewal, the monitored account is the stickiest asset a fire alarm company has |
| Recurring inspection/testing/maintenance (ITM) contracts, multi-year preferred | Roughly 2x-3.5x annual recurring revenue (ARR) | NFPA-mandated periodic inspection/testing; high renewal rates; platform cross-sells repairs and upgrades |
| Service/repair (non-contract) | Folded into EBITDA multiple; valued moderately | Somewhat recurring (existing customers call back) but not contracted |
| Installation / project revenue | Folded into EBITDA multiple; valued lowest per dollar | Lumpy, lower-margin, requires constant pipeline |
If you own a fire alarm company and want to maximize your sale price, the move is to grow the monitored-account base and convert customers to multi-year ITM contracts. Monitoring accounts in particular compound, every monitored panel you add is a recurring, high-margin annuity that a buyer will pay 35x-45x MRR for.
The PE-backed platforms buying fire alarm companies
- Pye-Barker Fire & Safety, building a national fire, life safety, security, and monitoring footprint; closed roughly 41 acquisitions in 2025; actively acquires fire alarm companies with recurring monitoring and inspection bases.
- APi Group, public company with a large life-safety inspection-services segment; acquires regional fire alarm and life safety companies.
- Sciens Building Solutions, PE-backed national fire and life safety platform.
- Other PE-backed platforms, more than a dozen active in fire and life safety; 2024 brought multiple new large-cap PE firms into the space (Apax, Blackstone, KKR), and PE platform transactions rose roughly 33% year over year.
- Regional consolidators and individual operators, for smaller companies, faster close, lower multiple, less transition.
How to prepare a fire alarm company for sale
- Grow the monitored-account base. Every monitored panel is a recurring annuity valued at 35x-45x MRR. This is the single highest-leverage thing you can do.
- Convert inspection customers to multi-year ITM contracts. Multi-year is valued higher and reduces churn.
- Retain NICET-certified technicians. Put your key 3-5 technicians and supervisors on stay bonuses pre-listing; certified labor is scarce and a top diligence concern.
- Document AHJ relationships and the institutional knowledge of local code interpretation.
- Clean the financials. Accrual accounting, documented add-backs, 2-3 year review, and clearly separate monitoring MRR, ITM ARR, service revenue, and project revenue.
- Diversify customer concentration below 15-20%; confirm licenses and bonding are current and transferable.
What kills fire alarm company deals in diligence
- Install-heavy revenue with a thin recurring base, no monitoring MRR, no multi-year ITM contracts
- High customer concentration (one GC, property manager, or campus over 20% of revenue)
- Owner-dependency for AHJ relationships, design, and key customers
- Technician turnover or worker-classification issues
- Monitored accounts not properly contracted or with high attrition
- Lapsed/non-transferable licenses, bonding issues, open code-compliance disputes
- Sloppy financials that do not separate recurring from project margin
The process: first conversation to close
Off-market to PE-backed or regional consolidator buyers: roughly 90-180 days, days 1-14 conversation/valuation/fit, days 14-30 buyer introductions, days 30-60 LOI, days 60-150 diligence (financials, monitoring-MRR and ITM analysis, technician retention, license review, customer contracts) and definitive agreement, days 120-180 close and transition. Traditional broker listings take 9-18 months. See our broker alternative guide.
Related: selling a fire protection business, selling a fire alarm company, selling an alarm monitoring company, selling a security integration company, selling an AV integration company, selling a low-voltage company, electrical contractor sale, how PE roll-ups unlock value, private equity value creation, the buyer-paid broker alternative.
Fire Alarm Company Valuation
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How much is my fire alarm company worth?
Install-heavy fire alarm companies typically sell for 3x to 5x SDE/EBITDA. Companies with a recurring inspection and central-station monitoring base: 5x to 8x EBITDA, rising to 7x-10x+ as recurring revenue passes 50% of total. Central-station monitoring contracts are often valued at roughly 35x-45x monthly recurring revenue and multi-year inspection/testing/maintenance contracts at roughly 2x-3.5x annual recurring revenue. The biggest multiple driver is the percentage of revenue under recurring monitoring and ITM contracts versus one-off installation. Use our free valuation tool for a sector-adjusted estimate.
How are monitored accounts valued when selling a fire alarm company?
Central-station monitoring contracts with automatic renewals are typically valued at roughly 35x to 45x monthly recurring revenue (MRR) in larger deals, sometimes lower for smaller portfolios or higher for very clean, low-attrition books. So a monitoring book generating $50,000/month of MRR might be worth roughly $1.75M-$2.25M on its own. Buyers pay that premium because monitored accounts have very low attrition, high margins, automatic renewals, and code-mandated demand. Growing your monitored-account base is the highest-leverage way to increase your sale price.
Who is buying fire alarm companies in 2026?
The PE-backed fire and life safety platforms are the most active: Pye-Barker Fire & Safety (which closed roughly 41 acquisitions in 2025), APi Group (its life-safety inspection-services segment), Sciens Building Solutions, and more than a dozen other PE-backed platforms, with large-cap firms including Apax, Blackstone, and KKR having entered the space. Also: regional consolidators adding density (fast close, lower multiple), and individual operator-buyers using SBA financing for smaller companies. CT also has buyers in its network actively acquiring fire alarm businesses.
Should I separate my monitoring revenue from my installation revenue before selling?
Yes, absolutely. Buyers value recurring monitoring MRR and multi-year inspection contracts at a premium and project/installation revenue at a discount, so you want your financials to clearly break out monitoring MRR, ITM ARR, service revenue, and project revenue, with margins for each. A blended P&L undersells the recurring portion. Clean the books on accrual accounting and present the recurring base prominently, it is the most valuable part of the business and you want the buyer to see it clearly.
How do I increase the value of my fire alarm company?
Grow the monitored-account base (each monitored panel is a recurring annuity valued at 35x-45x MRR); convert inspection customers to multi-year ITM contracts (valued higher than annual or one-off); build a management team so the business runs without you; retain your NICET-certified technicians with stay bonuses; diversify customer concentration below 15-20%; improve and document EBITDA margins; and get clean accrual financials that separate recurring from project revenue. The recurring-base growth is a 12-24 month project but it is the biggest multiple lever.
How long does it take to sell a fire alarm company?
Traditional broker-listed fire alarm companies typically take 9-18 months. Off-market sales to PE-backed fire and life safety platforms or regional consolidators typically take 90-180 days, because the buyer is pre-qualified and actively looking to acquire in your region and size range rather than the broker having to market to a large unqualified pool.
What happens to my technicians when I sell my fire alarm company?
Most buyers want to retain the technician team, NICET-certified labor is scarce and part of what makes the business valuable. Technician retention is a top diligence concern, so structure stay bonuses for your key 3-5 technicians and supervisors pre-listing. Buyers will ask for proof these people will stay; without it, they will discount or kill the deal.
Do I need a broker to sell my fire alarm company?
For smaller owner-operated companies, a traditional broker can work but charges 8-15% commissions. For companies with a meaningful recurring base, working with a buyer-paid sell-side advisor that has relationships with the PE-backed fire and life safety platforms often produces better outcomes, higher multiples, faster close, no seller fee (the buyer pays at closing). Some sellers also sell directly to a known consolidator with just a transactional attorney.
Related research
- Free Business Valuation Tool, your business is worth in 90 seconds
- The Business Broker Alternative Guide (national pillar)
- Business Brokers by State, with a free alternative
- The Complete Guide to Selling Your Business in 2026
- What’s My Business Worth? Founder’s Valuation Guide
- Who Buys These Companies? Buyer Types Explained
- How to Sell to Private Equity, A Founder’s Walkthrough
- Owner’s Pre-Exit Checklist, 90 Days Before You List
- CT Commentary, Founder & M&A Insights