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Sell Your Environmental Services Business
We make direct introductions to 100+ active buyers, including PE platforms, family offices, and search funders. Complete confidentiality. No fees to sellers, no exclusivity, walk away anytime.
Quick Answer
If you are looking to sell your environmental services business, most operators trade at roughly 4x to 9x EBITDA, with the highest multiples reserved for businesses with strong regulatory permitting and well-developed infrastructure. Specializing in niches such as PFAS remediation, hazardous waste, or medical waste can significantly boost buyer interest. The biggest drivers are recurring revenue, regulatory permits and barriers to entry, and specialized capability. Private equity has aggressively targeted the sector, with PE buyers often paying about three turns of EBITDA more than strategic acquirers.
Updated May 2026 · 11 min read
Environmental services M&A has been active, with deals clearing at aggressive multiples. Most operators trade at roughly 4x to 9x EBITDA, with the highest multiples for businesses with strong regulatory permitting and developed infrastructure.
| Profile | Typical multiple | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Generalist, project-driven | 4x to 6x | Lumpier revenue, fewer barriers |
| Recurring + permitted | 6x to 8x | Recurring revenue, regulatory barriers |
| Specialized niche (PFAS, hazmat) | 8x to 9x+ | Scarce capability, infrastructure |
Specialization in niches like PFAS remediation or hazardous waste can significantly lift buyer interest. Use our valuation calculator to see where your numbers land.
What Is Your Environmental Services Business Actually Worth?
Regulatory permits, recurring revenue, specialized niches, and infrastructure all move your multiple. Run the calculator for a quick valuation range, or send us a note for a personalized response.
2-minute calculator. No email required to see your range.
Private equity has aggressively targeted environmental services for its recurring revenue and high regulatory barriers to entry. Deal volume has risen sharply for both platform formations and add-ons, and PE sponsors are paying roughly three turns of EBITDA more than strategic buyers, a notable feature of the current cycle.
Buyers are not just buying revenue; they are buying permits, infrastructure, and specialized capability. An environmental services business with regulatory permitting, recurring revenue, and niche expertise is exactly what the most active acquirers target.
Regulatory permitting and barriers to entry are the number one driver. A business with hard-to-obtain permits and developed infrastructure commands a premium because it is difficult for a buyer to replicate.
The same issues come up in nearly every environmental services deal that stalls or trades low:
Most environmental services acquisitions pay 60% to 80% cash at close, with the balance in an earnout and, with platform buyers, rollover equity.
The environmental services buyer universe is deep:
Private-equity-backed environmental platforms acquiring operators as add-ons, paying a premium over strategics.
Larger environmental and industrial services companies expanding capability and geography.
Mid-size operators rolling up a single region or specialty.
Individual buyers acquiring an environmental services business as a platform.
Curious what your environmental services business would sell for?
A 15-minute confidential call gives you a real valuation range and tells you which buyers would compete for your business. No cost, no obligation, no pressure to sell.
If you are researching how to sell your environmental services business, the process is more controlled than most owners expect. It is not a public listing. It is a confidential, competitive process run directly with the buyers most likely to pay the most:
CT Acquisitions is paid by the buyer at close, so there is no cost to you as the seller.
Most owners assume selling means hiring a business broker, signing a 12-month exclusive listing agreement, and paying a hefty success fee out of their proceeds. CT Acquisitions works differently. We are a buy-side M&A partner, not a seller’s broker:
For a well-prepared environmental services business, a typical sale runs four to seven months from first conversation to close: a few weeks to organize financials, several weeks to run a confidential buyer process, a couple of weeks to negotiate a letter of intent, and six to ten weeks of due diligence and legal work to closing. Clean financials speed diligence; owner dependence and customer concentration are the most common reasons a deal stalls. Our owner’s exit checklist walks through what to have ready.
The best time to sell is when buyer demand, your financial trajectory, and your personal readiness line up, and right now the first of those is unusually strong. Consolidation in this sector is at a multi-year peak. Buyers pay the most for a business on an upward trend, so the strongest outcomes come from selling after two to three years of steady growth. If you expect to exit within two to three years, the most valuable move today is a confidential conversation about where your business stands.
The owners who get the strongest outcomes start preparing well before they go to market. If you are thinking about how to sell your environmental services business, these are the steps that move your valuation the most and make the process faster:
You do not have to do all of this alone. A confidential conversation early gives you a clear, honest read on where your business stands and exactly what to fix before you go to market. Our owner’s exit checklist covers the full pre-sale preparation list.
Thinking About Selling? Let’s Talk.
15 minutes, confidential, no contract, no cost, no fees to sellers. You leave with a clear sense of what your environmental services business is worth, who would compete to buy it, and whether now is the right time. If selling is not the right move, we will tell you that directly.
Start with a confidential conversation, not a public listing. To sell your environmental services business on the best terms, you want to reach the buyers most likely to pay the most, PE-backed environmental platforms, strategic acquirers, and regional consolidators. CT Acquisitions introduces you directly to active buyers, runs a competitive process, and is paid by the buyer at close, so there are no fees to you as the seller.
Most environmental services businesses sell for 4x to 9x EBITDA, with the highest multiples for businesses with strong regulatory permitting and specialized niches. Recurring revenue, permits, and infrastructure are the biggest factors.
The process is the same whether you run an environmental services business, an environmental remediation business, a hazmat business, or an environmental consulting firm. What matters to buyers is regulatory permitting, recurring revenue, and specialized capability. We position those strengths and introduce you to the most active acquirers.
No. The process is fully confidential. Your environmental services business is never publicly listed. Employees and customers are not informed unless and until you decide to tell them, typically after a deal is signed.
Nothing. CT Acquisitions is paid by the buyer at close, so there is no cost to you as the seller. No retainer, no listing fee, no success fee.