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Sell Your Water and Wastewater Business

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Sell Your Water and Wastewater 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.

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Quick Answer

If you are looking to sell your water and wastewater business, most operators trade at roughly 4x to 8x EBITDA, with specialty contractors and infrastructure-focused operators commanding the higher end. The biggest drivers are recurring municipal and utility contracts, long-term agreements, bonding capacity, and specialized capability. Water and sewer infrastructure is essential, regulated work with durable demand, which is why private equity and strategic infrastructure buyers actively compete to acquire water services, wastewater, sewer, and underground utility businesses.

Updated May 2026 · 11 min read

4x to 8x
EBITDA range, general contractor to specialty operator
Recurring
Municipal and utility contracts drive value
Essential
Regulated, durable-demand infrastructure work

What Is My Water and Wastewater Business Worth, and How Do I Sell It?

Water and wastewater infrastructure is essential, regulated work with durable demand, and valuations reflect it. Most operators trade at roughly 4x to 8x EBITDA, with specialty contractors and infrastructure-focused operators at the higher end.

ProfileTypical multipleWhy
General contractor3x to 5xBid-driven, lumpier revenue
Recurring municipal work5x to 7xContracted, repeat utility revenue
Specialty / infrastructure6x to 8x+Specialized capability, bonding, scale

Recurring contracts and specialized capability drive the top of the range. Use our valuation calculator to see where your numbers land.

Water & Wastewater business operations

What Is Your Water and Wastewater Business Actually Worth?

Recurring municipal contracts, long-term agreements, bonding capacity, and specialized capability all move your multiple. Run the calculator for a quick valuation range, or send us a note for a personalized response.

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2-minute calculator. No email required to see your range.

Why Buyers Compete for Water and Wastewater Businesses

Water and wastewater work is essential and regulated, with durable demand driven by aging infrastructure and ongoing municipal investment. That makes it attractive to both private equity and strategic infrastructure buyers seeking recurring revenue and barriers to entry.

Buyers are not just buying revenue; they are buying municipal relationships, bonding capacity, and specialized crews. A water and wastewater business with recurring utility contracts and specialized capability is exactly what the most active acquirers target.

Water & Wastewater business operations

What Separates a 4x Water and Wastewater Business From an 8x Business

Recurring municipal and utility contracts are the number one driver. Long-term agreements and repeat utility work give buyers predictable revenue, far more valuable than one-off bid jobs.

Water & Wastewater business operations

Red Flags That Lower Water and Wastewater Business Valuations

The same issues come up in nearly every water and wastewater deal that stalls or trades low:

Water & Wastewater business operations

Typical Water and Wastewater Business Deal Structure

Most water and wastewater acquisitions pay 60% to 80% cash at close, with the balance in an earnout and, with platform buyers, rollover equity.

Who Is Actually Buying Water and Wastewater Businesses?

The water and wastewater buyer universe is deep:

PE-Backed Infrastructure Platforms

Private-equity-backed infrastructure platforms acquiring operators as add-ons.

Strategic Infrastructure Acquirers

Larger utility and infrastructure services companies expanding capability and geography.

Regional Consolidators

Mid-size operators rolling up a single region.

Search Funds and Independent Sponsors

Individual buyers acquiring a water and wastewater business as a platform.

Curious what your water and wastewater 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.

Get My Confidential Valuation

How to Sell a Water and Wastewater Business: The Process

If you are researching how to sell your water and wastewater 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:

  1. Confidential consultation. We learn about your water and wastewater business, your goals, and your timeline, and give you an honest read on your valuation range.
  2. Valuation and positioning. We help you present your strengths to maximize the multiple.
  3. Targeted introductions. We introduce you directly to PE-backed infrastructure platforms, strategic acquirers, and regional consolidators mandated to buy these businesses.
  4. Deal support through closing. We stay involved through LOI, due diligence, and closing so the final terms reflect what your business is worth.

CT Acquisitions is paid by the buyer at close, so there is no cost to you as the seller.

Why We’re Different From a Traditional Business Broker

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:

How Long Does It Take to Sell a Water and Wastewater Business?

For a well-prepared water and wastewater 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.

When Is the Best Time to Sell a Water and Wastewater Business?

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.

How to Prepare Your Water And Wastewater Business for Sale

The owners who get the strongest outcomes start preparing well before they go to market. If you are thinking about how to sell your water and wastewater 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 water and wastewater 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.

Talk to Us About Your Water and Wastewater Business Get Your Water and Wastewater Business Valuation
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 100+ buyers: search funders, family offices, lower middle-market PE, and strategic consolidators. 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

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I sell my water services business?

Start with a confidential conversation, not a public listing. To sell your water and wastewater business on the best terms, you want to reach the buyers most likely to pay the most, PE-backed infrastructure 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.

What is my water and wastewater business worth?

Most water and wastewater businesses sell for 4x to 8x EBITDA, with specialty and infrastructure-focused operators at the higher end. Recurring municipal contracts, long-term agreements, and bonding capacity are the biggest factors.

How do I sell my wastewater, sewer, or underground utility business?

The process is the same whether you run a water services business, a wastewater business, a sewer business, a pipeline business, or an underground utility operation. What matters to buyers is recurring municipal contracts and specialized capability. We position those strengths and introduce you to the most active acquirers.

Will my employees know I am selling?

No. The process is fully confidential. Your water and wastewater 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.

How much does CT Acquisitions charge?

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.

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