Buying an Electrical Contractor: The 2026 Buyer’s Playbook
Quick Answer
Electrical contractors are valued between 4x and 9x EBITDA in 2026, with pricing determined by service mix and specialization: residential service-only commands 4 to 6x multiples, commercial service with maintenance contracts reaches 6 to 8x, and specialty work in data centers, EV charging, solar, and industrial controls achieves 7 to 9x or higher. The service-to-project revenue mix is the primary valuation driver, with commercial maintenance contracts alone adding 0.5 to 0.8 turns. PE consolidation is active but earlier than HVAC, creating a seller-friendly pricing window.
Updated April 2026 · Christoph Totter, CT Acquisitions
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Key takeaways
- Electrical M&A has three distinct buy-boxes: residential service, commercial service, specialty.
- Specialty work (data center, EV charging, solar, industrial controls) commands 7–9x multiples.
- Service-to-project revenue mix is the single largest valuation driver.
- PE consolidation in electrical is active but earlier than HVAC — seller-friendly pricing window.
- Master electrician license transition is a critical diligence item.
- Commercial maintenance contract revenue (20%+) adds 0.5–0.8 turns.
Table of contents
Electrical contractor M&A is entering an interesting moment in 2026. PE consolidation is active but earlier than HVAC, meaning pricing is supportive without being at peak levels. The structural tailwinds — data center buildout, EV charging infrastructure, grid modernization, commercial solar integration — are creating specialty premiums that didn’t exist three years ago. For buyers, the category has three distinct buy-boxes depending on which sub-segment you target.

The four electrical sub-segments
- Residential service and repair. 4–6x multiples. Steady cash flow, non-cyclical, lower-margin.
- Commercial service and maintenance. 6–8x. Premium segment due to multi-year contract revenue.
- Specialty (data center, EV, solar, industrial controls). 7–9x+. Technical barriers and demand tailwinds.
- New construction. 3–4.5x. Cyclical, margin-compressed, treated as contractor business.
What buyers pay in 2026
| Operator profile | Multiple |
|---|---|
| New construction focus, <20% service revenue | 3.5–4.5x |
| Balanced service + construction | 5–6x |
| Commercial service-led, documented ops | 6–7.5x |
| Specialty (data center, EV, solar) with management team | 7–9x |
| Regional platform with multi-segment scale | 8.5–11x+ |

The electrical-specific diligence
Service vs. project revenue mix
Service work (customers calling for help, maintenance, repairs) vs. project work (bids for new construction or major installations). Target >60% service for premium multiples.
Specialty segment exposure
Data center electrical work commands premium margins. Certified data center capability (documented project history, key customer relationships) adds 0.7–1.5 turns over general commercial.
Workforce composition and licensing
Journeyman-to-apprentice ratio, master electricians on staff (required for business license in most states), technician turnover, specialty certifications (data center, PV, industrial controls). Union vs. non-union status is a modeling factor, not a quality judgment.
Backlog quality
For project-led operators, signed contracts with deposits vs. vague pipeline. Clean backlog supports higher multiples.
Commercial maintenance contract book
For commercial-led operators, rebuild the contract book. 20%+ contract revenue at 90%+ renewal is premium.
Bonding capacity
For commercial and industrial project work, surety relationship and single-project/aggregate limits matter. Strong bonding supports growth thesis.
Customer concentration
Industrial-heavy operators often have concentrated customer bases. >15% from one customer is a risk; >25% often kills the deal.
EMR and workers’ comp
Arc flash, falls, electrocution exposure. EMR < 1.0 supports margin; > 1.2 creates ongoing cost burden.
Red flags that kill electrical deals
- >70% project revenue (cyclical, margin-compressed)
- Single master electrician who is the owner (license risk)
- Single large customer > 25% of revenue
- Vague backlog with no signed contracts
- Specialty capability claims without certifications or project history
- Spreadsheet-based project management
- High technician turnover (> 20%)
The electrical buyer landscape
- National platforms: Comfort Systems USA and several PE-backed specialty contractor consolidators
- Data center specialists: Platforms focused on hyperscale and enterprise data center electrical
- EV/solar specialists: Emerging segment with IRA-driven capital
- Regional commercial consolidators: Active in $2M–$8M EBITDA range
- Independent sponsors and family offices: Target residential-service-led operators
- Search funders: $500K–$2M SDE, residential service
Deal structure
- Cash at close: 65–75%
- Earnout: 15–25% over 18–24 months, typically tied to revenue retention or backlog conversion
- Escrow: 10% for 12–18 months
- Seller rollover: 0–15% in platform deals

How CT Acquisitions works with electrical buyers
Our electrical contractor network spans residential service, commercial service/maintenance, specialty (data center / EV / solar / controls), and industrial. For buyers with mandates in electrical:
- Sub-segment-specific buy-box matching
- Pre-LOI diligence on backlog quality, workforce composition, and specialty credentials
- Sequential introductions — no auctions
- Paid by the buyer at close as % of enterprise value
Frequently asked questions
What’s an electrical contractor worth?
General commercial service: 6–7.5x EBITDA. Specialty (data center, EV, solar): 7–9x. New-construction-heavy: 3.5–5x. Your specific multiple depends on sub-segment mix more than on size.
Does data center capability add to valuation?
Materially. Data center electrical has premium margins, high technical barriers (certifications, references), and strategic buyer interest. Operators with 15%+ data center revenue trade 0.7–1.5 turns above general commercial peers.
Is electrical consolidation as active as HVAC?
Earlier in the cycle. PE consolidation is active but not at HVAC’s 30%+ deal share yet. This is a seller-friendly window: pricing is supportive without being peak.
Should I buy an electrical contractor with significant new construction exposure?
Proceed carefully. New construction is cyclical, margin-compressed, and competitive. >40% new construction exposure compresses multiples. Service-led operators consistently outperform.
Union vs. non-union — which is more valuable?
Neither is inherently better. Union has structured labor costs and trained workforce but less pricing flexibility. Non-union has more flexibility but recruiting challenges. Clean execution of either model is what matters.
Related resources
- Electrical seller hub
- Electrical contractor valuation
- Buying an HVAC business
- Buying a pest control business
- Deal origination for home services
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