HomeSelling a Wholesale Electrical Distribution Business in 2026: Multiples, Named Buyers, and the Operator Playbook

Selling a Wholesale Electrical Distribution Business in 2026: Multiples, Named Buyers, and the Operator Playbook

Quick Answer

A US wholesale electrical distribution business in 2026 typically sells for roughly 8x to 14x EBITDA, varying by end-market mix (industrial vs. commercial construction vs. residential vs. utility / data center), branch footprint, supplier authorization breadth, customer concentration, and digital infrastructure. Electrical distribution is one of the most active strategic + PE consolidations because of secular tailwinds (electrification, data center build-out, EV charging infrastructure, grid hardening, IRA / IIJA spend, manufacturing reshoring). By profile: a single-branch independent ($300k-1M SDE) goes 4x-6x SDE; a small multi-branch regional ($1-4M EBITDA) goes 6x-8x EBITDA; a mid-size regional ($4-15M EBITDA) goes 8x-11x EBITDA; a multi-state regional with industrial / utility / data center mix ($15-50M EBITDA) goes 10x-13x; a premium scale regional platform ($50M+ EBITDA, multi-state, deep industrial / utility / data center customer base, robust digital infrastructure) reaches 12x-14x+. Active buyers include Sonepar (private French global, ~$32B+ revenue, the largest global electrical distributor with US operations as Sonepar USA / Vallen / Codale / Capital Electric / OneSource / North Coast Electric), Rexel SA (Euronext: RXL, ~$22B+ revenue, second-largest global), WESCO International (NYSE: WCC, ~$22B+ revenue, the largest US-headquartered electrical distributor post-2020 Anixter acquisition), Graybar Electric (private employee-owned, ~$11B+ revenue), Consolidated Electrical Distributors / CED (private, ~$8B+ revenue, the largest US private electrical distributor by branch count with ~700+ branches), Border States Industries (private employee-owned, ~$4B+ revenue), Crescent Electric Supply Company (private, ~$1.4B+ revenue), Mayer Electric Supply (private), Standard Electric (private), Independent Electric Supply, plus PE sponsors (Clayton Dubilier & Rice on prior WESCO investments, Advent International, Bain Capital, Apollo, KKR, Blackstone Tactical Opportunities). The biggest multiple drivers are end-market mix (industrial / utility / data center premium), supplier authorization breadth (Eaton, Schneider Electric, ABB, Siemens, Square D, Hubbell, nVent, Legrand), customer concentration profile, and digital infrastructure (e-commerce platform, EDI integration, mobile pricing). Buyer-paid M&A advisory (CT Strategic Partners) costs the seller nothing.

A wholesale electrical distribution warehouse at golden hour

If you own a US wholesale electrical distribution business in 2026, the M&A market is one of the most active strategic + PE consolidations. Sonepar (~$32B+ revenue, the largest global electrical distributor) competes against Rexel SA (Euronext: RXL, ~$22B+), WESCO International (NYSE: WCC, ~$22B+), Graybar Electric (employee-owned, ~$11B+), and Consolidated Electrical Distributors / CED (private, ~$8B+, ~700+ branches). Border States Industries (employee-owned, ~$4B+), Crescent Electric Supply, Mayer Electric Supply, and Standard Electric compete in the regional / multi-state tier. Secular tailwinds (electrification, data center build-out, EV charging, grid hardening, IRA / IIJA, manufacturing reshoring) are driving sustained demand.

What the asset is worth depends on three things: (1) end-market mix (industrial / utility / data center is the premium vs. commercial construction vs. residential), (2) supplier authorization breadth and named-supplier rebate income, and (3) digital infrastructure (e-commerce platform, EDI integration, mobile pricing, ERP modernization). This guide covers real multiples by profile, the named buyers transacting, and the operator-level diligence buyers will run.

What this guide covers

  • Wholesale electrical distribution multiples 2026: 4x-6x SDE for single-branch independent, 6x-8x EBITDA for small multi-branch regional, 8x-11x EBITDA for mid-size regional, 10x-13x for multi-state regional with industrial / utility / data center mix, 12x-14x+ for premium scale regional platforms.
  • Active buyers: Sonepar (~$32B+ revenue, the largest global), Rexel SA (Euronext: RXL, ~$22B+ revenue), WESCO International (NYSE: WCC, ~$22B+ revenue, the largest US-headquartered post-Anixter 2020 acquisition), Graybar Electric (employee-owned, ~$11B+ revenue), CED / Consolidated Electrical Distributors (private, ~$8B+ revenue, ~700+ branches), Border States Industries (employee-owned, ~$4B+ revenue), Crescent Electric Supply Company (~$1.4B+ revenue), Mayer Electric Supply, Standard Electric, Independent Electric Supply.
  • PE sponsor activity: Clayton Dubilier & Rice (prior WESCO investments), Advent International, Bain Capital, Apollo, KKR, Blackstone Tactical Opportunities, plus multiple industrial-distribution PE funds.
  • Multiple drivers: end-market mix (industrial / utility / data center premium), supplier authorization breadth (Eaton, Schneider Electric, ABB, Siemens, Square D, Hubbell, nVent, Legrand), customer concentration profile, digital infrastructure (e-commerce, EDI, mobile pricing, ERP modernization), private-label / kitting / value-add services, gross margin discipline.
  • Things that compress: residential / small-commercial customer concentration, narrow supplier authorization, weak digital infrastructure, single-branch operations, owner-operator dependence, weak rebate / co-op income capture, lumpy customer concentration above 15%.
  • Sellers pay nothing on CT Strategic Partners’ buyer-paid advisory.

Named M&A transactions (2021-2025)

Target Buyer Year What it tells us
Rexel USA acquired Mayer Electric Supply Rexel SA (Euronext: RXL) 2024 Rexel USA acquired Mayer Electric Supply (Southeast distributor), expanding US footprint substantially.
Sonepar continued US tuck-in expansion Sonepar (private French) 2022-2025 Largest global electrical distributor continues US regional tuck-ins via Sonepar USA / Vallen / Codale / Capital Electric / OneSource / North Coast Electric.
WESCO continued integration post-Anixter WESCO International (NYSE: WCC) 2022-2025 Continues integration and selective tuck-ins post 2020 Anixter acquisition.
CED continued branch expansion Consolidated Electrical Distributors / CED (private) 2022-2025 Largest US private electrical distributor by branch count continues organic branch expansion (~700+ branches).
Multiple regional electrical distribution tuck-ins Various PE-backed and strategic platforms 2022-2025 PE sponsors (Clayton Dubilier & Rice, Advent International, Bain Capital, Apollo, KKR, Blackstone Tactical Opportunities) continue selective regional consolidation.
Wholesale Electrical Distribution Multiples by Profile US, 2026 conditions, SDE/EBITDA basis 0x 5x 10x 15x Single-branch independent ($300k-1M SDE) 4x-6x SDE Small multi-branch regional ($1-4M EBITDA) 6x-8x EBITDA Mid-size regional ($4-15M EBITDA) 8x-11x EBITDA Multi-state regional with industrial mix ($15-50M EBITDA) 10x-13x EBITDA Premium scale regional platform ($50M+ EBITDA) 12x-14x+ EBITDA x EBITDA · bars show typical transaction ranges · Multiples observed in 2023-2026 US wholesale electrical distribution M&A. Premium for industrial / utility / data center mix + supplier authorization breadth + digital infrastructure.

The named buyer landscape

Global / US national consolidators (the dominant capital)

Regional / multi-state consolidators

PE sponsors active in this space

What each buyer will pay for vs. what they reject

Named Global / US Electrical Distributors by Revenue 2026, approximate revenue ($B, public/disclosed) 0 10 20 30 40 $32B+ revenue Sonepar (private French) $22B+ revenue Rexel SA (RXL) $22B+ revenue WESCO Int’l (NYSE: WCC) $11B+ revenue Graybar Electric (EO) $8B+ revenue, ~700 branches CED (private) $4B+ revenue Border States (EO) Revenue ($B, approx). EO = Employee-owned. Sonepar is the largest global distributor; WESCO is the largest US-headquartered post 2020 Anixter acquisition.

The operator-level KPI playbook buyers will diligence

End-market mix

Supplier and product mix

Customer concentration

Digital infrastructure

Margin and working capital

Dangers and traps

1. Residential / small-commercial customer concentration

Industrial / utility / data center customers are the multiple-builder.

2. Narrow supplier authorization

Eaton, Schneider, ABB, Siemens, Square D, Hubbell, nVent, Legrand authorizations unlock premium customers.

3. Weak digital infrastructure

Paper-based or weak e-commerce platforms compress.

4. Single-branch operations

Multi-state platforms achieve premium multiples.

5. Owner-operator dependence

Build the branch-manager / outside-sales / digital bench.

6. Weak rebate / co-op capture

Supplier rebate / co-op income is a meaningful margin driver.

7. Lumpy customer concentration above 15%

Top-10 customer concentration is a hard diligence focus.

8. Weak working-capital discipline

Inventory turnover and DSO are key valuation drivers.

Our POV in 2026

Wholesale electrical distribution M&A is one of the most active strategic + PE consolidations, driven by electrification, data center build-out, EV charging infrastructure, grid hardening, IRA / IIJA spend, and manufacturing reshoring. Sonepar (~$32B+ revenue, the largest global), Rexel SA (Euronext: RXL, ~$22B+), WESCO International (NYSE: WCC, ~$22B+), Graybar Electric (employee-owned, ~$11B+), and CED (private, ~$8B+, ~700+ branches) anchor the consolidation. Border States, Crescent Electric, Mayer Electric (now Rexel USA post 2024), Standard Electric, and Independent Electric Supply compete in the regional / multi-state tier.

The right time to prepare is 12-18 months before going to market — build industrial / utility / data center end-market revenue mix, broaden supplier authorization, modernize digital infrastructure (B2B e-commerce, EDI, mobile pricing, ERP), and improve working-capital discipline.

Preparing your business for sale: 12-18 months out

  1. Get multi-year audited or reviewed financials with detailed product / customer / supplier reporting.
  2. Build industrial / utility / data center end-market revenue mix.
  3. Broaden supplier authorization (Eaton, Schneider Electric, ABB, Siemens, Square D, Hubbell, nVent, Legrand, Acuity, Cooper).
  4. Modernize ERP (Eclipse, Epicor Prophet 21, SAP, Microsoft Dynamics).
  5. Deploy B2B e-commerce platform with EDI integration.
  6. Roll out mobile pricing app for outside sales.
  7. Improve gross margin discipline (target 24-30%+).
  8. Improve inventory turnover discipline (target 4-6x).
  9. De-concentrate top-10 customer exposure (target under 15% per customer).
  10. Run a competitive process. Sonepar (private French global), Rexel SA (Euronext: RXL), WESCO International (NYSE: WCC), Graybar Electric (employee-owned), Consolidated Electrical Distributors / CED (private), Border States Industries (employee-owned), Crescent Electric Supply Company, Standard Electric, Independent Electric Supply, plus PE sponsors directly (Clayton Dubilier & Rice, Advent International, Bain Capital, Apollo Global Management, KKR, Blackstone Tactical Opportunities).

Christoph Totter, Founder of CT Acquisitions

About the Author

Christoph Totter is the founder of CT Acquisitions, a buy-side partner headquartered in Sheridan, Wyoming. We work directly with 76+ buyers, search funders, family offices, lower middle-market PE, and strategic consolidators, including direct mandates with the largest home services consolidators that other intermediaries can’t access. The buyers pay us when a deal closes, not the seller. No retainer, no exclusivity, no contract until close. Connect on LinkedIn · Get in touch

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Frequently asked questions

What is the typical multiple for a wholesale electrical distribution business in 2026?

Single-branch independents ($300k-1M SDE) typically sell at 4x-6x SDE. Small multi-branch regionals ($1-4M EBITDA) go 6x-8x EBITDA. Mid-size regionals ($4-15M EBITDA) go 8x-11x EBITDA. Multi-state regionals with industrial / utility / data center mix ($15-50M EBITDA) go 10x-13x. Premium scale regional platforms ($50M+ EBITDA, multi-state, deep industrial / utility / data center customer base, robust digital infrastructure) reach 12x-14x+.

Who are the active buyers of wholesale electrical distribution businesses right now?

Global / US national consolidators: Sonepar (private French global, ~$32B+ revenue, the largest global), Rexel SA (Euronext: RXL, ~$22B+ revenue), WESCO International (NYSE: WCC, ~$22B+ revenue), Graybar Electric (private employee-owned, ~$11B+ revenue), Consolidated Electrical Distributors / CED (private, ~$8B+ revenue, ~700+ branches). Regional / multi-state: Border States Industries (employee-owned, ~$4B+ revenue), Crescent Electric Supply Company (~$1.4B+ revenue), Mayer Electric Supply (Rexel USA post 2024), Standard Electric, Independent Electric Supply, Womack Electric Supply, City Electric Supply, Elliott Electric Supply. PE sponsors: Clayton Dubilier & Rice, Advent International, Bain Capital, Apollo Global Management, KKR, Blackstone Tactical Opportunities.

What hurts a wholesale electrical distribution business’s valuation most?

Residential / small-commercial customer concentration (industrial / utility / data center customers are the multiple-builder), narrow supplier authorization (single-supplier dependence), weak digital infrastructure (paper-based or weak e-commerce), single-branch operations, owner-operator dependence, weak supplier rebate / co-op income capture, lumpy customer concentration above 15%, weak inventory turnover (under 4x), weak working-capital management.

Why is end-market mix so important?

Industrial customers (industrial OEMs, manufacturing reshoring under CHIPS Act / IRA), utility customers (grid hardening, IRA spend), data center customers (hyperscaler build-out), and EV charging infrastructure are premium multi-year, high-spend, low-credit-risk end markets vs. residential / small-commercial. Distributors with 50%+ industrial / utility / data center mix achieve premium multiples. Secular electrification tailwinds are sustaining premium-customer demand through 2030.

Do I have to pay a broker fee?

No. CT Strategic Partners runs a buyer-paid M&A advisory model. The seller pays nothing. The buyer pays the success fee at closing.

How long does it take to sell a wholesale electrical distribution business?

Once you go to market with a buyer-paid advisor, a typical process runs 5-9 months from initial outreach to closing. Add 12-18 months of preparation work before going to market — especially around supplier authorization breadth, digital infrastructure deployment, and end-market mix shift.

Should I modernize ERP before selling?

Yes — if you have 18+ months of runway. Modern ERP (Eclipse, Epicor Prophet 21, SAP, Microsoft Dynamics) is essential for diligence efficiency and post-close integration with national platforms. If selling within 12 months, focus instead on documenting customer concentration, supplier authorization, rebate / co-op income capture, and end-market mix.

When should I start preparing if I plan to sell in 2027 or 2028?

12-18 months before going to market is the right window. Highest-leverage pre-sale work: build industrial / utility / data center end-market revenue mix, broaden supplier authorization, modernize ERP and B2B e-commerce, improve gross margin and inventory turnover discipline, de-concentrate top-10 customer exposure.