Last updated: 2026-04-13
“`html
How Much Is a Plumbing Business Worth?
A typical plumbing business sells for 2.4x to 6.5x EBITDA, with most transactions clustering around 3.5x to 5x. A $500,000 EBITDA plumbing company might fetch $1.75M to $3.25M. The spread depends on workforce quality, customer concentration, recurring revenue, and multi-trade capability. Established operations with licensed technicians and commercial contracts command the high end; smaller, owner-dependent shops with residential-only work trade closer to 2.4x.
Why the Wide Range?
Valuation multiples in plumbing aren’t one-size-fits-all because buyers—PE firms, strategic acquirers, and search funds—assess risk and growth potential differently.
- Workforce quality drives value. A company with 12 licensed plumbers and an apprenticeship pipeline trades at 5.5x+. One where the owner is the only licensed plumber trades at 2.8x or less. Buyers are paying for human capital they can scale.
- Revenue mix matters. Service/maintenance contracts (recurring, predictable) command higher multiples than one-off repair work. A shop with 40% recurring revenue might hit 5x; 10% recurring drops it to 3.2x.
- Geographic footprint and customer base. Concentrated customer lists or geographic saturation cap upside. Diversified commercial and residential across multiple markets supports 5.5x+ multiples.
- Multi-trade potential. Plumbing shops that cross-sell HVAC, electrical, or water treatment to the same customer base are worth 15-25% more. This signals operational sophistication and customer stickiness.
Real Example
A 15-person plumbing operation in Denver with $1.2M EBITDA, 50% recurring maintenance contracts, and 8 licensed techs sold for $5.8M in 2023—4.8x multiple. The buyer (a regional HVAC-plumbing roll-up) valued the licensed workforce and commercial customer relationships. Compare that to a 6-person shop in Oklahoma with $300K EBITDA, mostly emergency calls, one licensed plumber: $720K sale price, 2.4x multiple.
What Drives Multiples Higher
Buyers reward:
- EBITDA growth trends (year-over-year improvement)
- Low customer concentration (top 10 customers under 30% of revenue)
- Documented operational systems and management team beyond the owner
- Backlog of contracted work
- Licensed technicians with low turnover
What This Means for You
If you own a plumbing business, your valuation hinges on how much of your revenue walks out the door if you do. Build a licensed workforce, document your systems, and diversify your customer base—these moves can add $500K to $2M+ to your sale price. Whether you’re ready to sell now or in five years, understanding these value drivers helps you make smarter operational decisions today. If you’re exploring options, firms like CT Acquisitions can show you exactly where your business sits in the market and what changes drive the biggest valuation gains.
FAQ
Do seasonal plumbing businesses sell for less?
Yes. Winter-heavy operations (frozen pipes, heating) create revenue volatility that buyers penalize. A business with flat monthly revenue across all seasons trades at 4.5x-5.5x; one with 60% of revenue in Q4 might trade at 3.2x-3.8x. Buyers want predictable cash flow. If your business is seasonal, showing a 3-5 year revenue trend helps normalize expectations.